Re: [PATCH V2 1/2] Documentation: DT: Add binding documentation for NVIDIA ADMA

From: Jon Hunter
Date: Wed Oct 07 2015 - 12:20:10 EST



On 07/10/15 17:09, Stephen Warren wrote:
> On 10/07/2015 02:43 AM, Jon Hunter wrote:
>>
>> On 07/10/15 00:04, Stephen Warren wrote:
>>> On 10/05/2015 06:10 AM, Jon Hunter wrote:
>>>> Add device-tree binding documentation for the Tegra210 Audio DMA
>>>> controller.
>>>
>>>> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/dma/tegra210-adma.txt
>>>> b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/dma/tegra210-adma.txt
>>>
>>>> +- #dma-cells : Must be <2>. The first cell denotes the transmit or
>>>> + receive request number and should be between 1 and the maximum
>>>> number
>>>> + of requests supported (see properties "dma-rx-requests" and
>>>> + "dma-tx-requests"). This value corresponds to the
>>>> RX/TX_REQUEST_SELECT
>>>> + fields in the ADMA_CHn_CTRL register. The second cell denotes
>>>> whether
>>>> + the channel is a receive or transmit channel and must be either 2
>>>> for
>>>> + a receive channel and 4 for a transmit channel. These values
>>>> correspond
>>>> + to the TRANSFER_DIRECTION field of the ADMA_CHn_CTRL register.
>>>
>>> Is it typical to encode the direction into the dma cells? I would have
>>> thought the client would provide that information at run-time when
>>> requesting a DMA channel.
>>
>> I have seen other dma bindings that do [0]. If we don't put the
>> direction in the client binding, then it would appear as ...
>>
>> tegra_admaif: admaif@0x702d0000 {
>> ...
>> dmas = <&adma 1>, <&adma 1>, <&adma 2>, <&adma 2>,
>> <&adma 3>, <&adma 3>, <&adma 4>, <&adma 4>,
>> <&adma 5>, <&adma 5>, <&adma 6>, <&adma 6>,
>> <&adma 7>, <&adma 7>, <&adma 8>, <&adma 8>,
>> <&adma 9>, <&adma 9>, <&adma 10>, <&adma 10>;
>> dma-names = "rx1", "tx1", "rx2", "tx2", "rx3", "tx3",
>> "rx4", "tx4", "rx5", "tx5", "rx6", "tx6",
>> "rx7", "tx7", "rx8", "tx8", "rx9", "tx9",
>> "rx10", "tx10";
>> ...
>> };
>>
>> ... where "rxN" and "txN" appear to use the same request, but the
>> reality is that "rxN" is using rx-request-N and "txN" is using
>> tx-request-N. Arnd questioned this before. Obviously I can explain this
>> in the binding document if the above is preferred. However, given that
>> they are named "rx1", "rx2", etc, why not put the direction in the
>> binding?
>
> Why would we need to duplicate the request IDs? I'd expect to have the
> following property content:
>
> dmas = <&adma 1>, <&adma 2>, <&adma 3>, ...;
> dma-names = "1", "2", "3"...;
>
> *and* not have a cell to represent the direction in DT. After all, the
> direction of the channel is 100% implied by the use-case (and hence
> defined by the DMA client's own DT binding); it is known by the client
> driver and can be supplied at run-time.

Right, but what does the 1, 2, 3, etc in the specifier represent? If it
is the request signal then I don't see how this would work because there
are 10 rx request signals and 10 tx requests signal and both are 1-10.
If you look at the ADMA_CH<n>_CTRL_0 register you will see there are a
fields for the TX_REQUEST_SELECT, RX_REQUEST_SELECT and
TRANSFER_DIRECTION. It seems a bit silly to have both TX_REQUEST_SELECT
and RX_REQUEST_SELECT as the channel can only work with one direction at
any given time.

> Perhaps the core DMA DT bindings are not designed that way though, in
> which case I suppose the patch you sent makes sense. If so though, that
> seems like a bug in the core DMA DT bindings.

I think it is more of a nuance in how this DMA controller is configured.

Jon
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