Re: [RFC 3/5] dma-mapping: Enable global non-coherent pool support for RISC-V

From: Christoph Hellwig
Date: Tue Jul 27 2021 - 04:52:49 EST


On Mon, Jul 26, 2021 at 03:47:54PM -0700, Atish Patra wrote:
> arch_dma_set_uncached works as well in this case. However, mips,
> niops2 & xtensa uses a
> fixed (via config) value for the offset. Similar approach can't be
> used here because the platform specific
> offset value has to be determined at runtime so that a single kernel
> image can boot on all platforms.

Nothing in the interface requires a fixed offset. And using the offset
has one enormous advantage in that there is no need to declare a
statically sized pool - allocations are fully dynamic. And any kind of
fixed pool tends to cause huge problems.

> 1. a new DT property so that arch specific code is aware of the
> non-cacheable window offset.

Yes.

> individual device if a per-device non-cacheable
> window support is required in future. As of now, the beagleV memory

If you require a per-device noncachable area you can use the per-device
coherent pools. But why would you want that?

> region lies in 0x10_0000_00000 - x17_FFFF_FFFF
> which is mapped to start of DRAM 0x80000000. All of the
> non-coherent devices can do 32bit DMA only.

Adjust ZONE_DMA32 so that it takes the uncached offset into account.

> > > - mem = dma_init_coherent_memory(phys_addr, phys_addr, size, true);
> > > + if (phys_addr == device_addr)
> > > + mem = dma_init_coherent_memory(phys_addr, device_addr, size, true);
> > > + else
> > > + mem = dma_init_coherent_memory(phys_addr, device_addr, size, false);
> >
> > Nak. The phys_addr != device_addr support is goign away. This needs
>
> ok.
>
> > to be filled in using dma-ranges property hanging of the struct device.
>
> struct device is only accessible in rmem_dma_device_init. I couldn't
> find a proper way to access it during
> dma_reserved_default_memory setup under global pool.
>
> Does that mean we should use a per-device memory pool instead of a
> global non-coherent pool ?

Indeed, that would be a problem in this case. But if we can just
use the uncached offset directly I think everything will be much
simpler.