Re: [PATCH] powerpc/mm: setting mmaped page cache property through device tree

From: Segher Boessenkool
Date: Tue Dec 01 2009 - 09:28:51 EST


The scenario for the first case is that in a multicore system running
ASMP which means different OS runs on different cores. They might
communicate through a shared memory region. The region on every OS
need to be mapped with the same cache perperty to avoid cache paradox.

This isn't true. In ASMP, you cannot usually do coherency between
the different CPUs at all. Also, in most PowerPC implementations,
it is fine if one CPU maps a memory range as coherent while another
maps it as non-coherent; sure, you have to be careful or you will
read stale data, but things won't wedge.

The scenario for the second case is to pre-allocate some memory to a
certain application or device (probably through mem=XXX kernel
parameter or limit through device tree). The memory is not known to
kernel, but fully managed by the application/device. We need being
able to map the region cachable for better performance.

So make the memory known to the kernel, just tell the kernel not to
use it. If it's normal system RAM, just put it in the "memory" node
and do a memreserve on it (or do something in your platform code); if
it's some other memory, do a device driver for it, map it there.


Segher

--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/