From: Roland Dreier <roland@topspin.com>
Date: 08 Jun 2002 13:38:53 -0700
The USB stack was doing PCI DMA into buffers that were
allocated on the stack
This is illegal.
which causes stack corruption: on the PPC
440GP, pci_map_single() with PCI_DMA_FROMDEVICE just invalidates the
cache for the region being mapped. However, if a buffer is smaller
than a cache line, then two bad things can happen.
There is no allocation scheme legal for PCI DMA which gives you
smaller than a cacheline of data, this includes SLAB. This is why
stack buffers and the like are illegal for PCI DMA.
The solution to this was simply to use kmalloc() to allocate buffers
instead of using automatic variables.
Right.
However, this leads to my first question: is this safe on all
architectures?
It must be. If the architecture allows SLAB to give smaller than
cacheline sized data, it must handle PCI DMA map/unmap flushing
in an appropriate fashion (ie. handle sub-cacheline buffers).
DMA-mapping.txt says kmalloc()'ed memory is OK for DMAs and does not
mention cache alignment.
It doesn't mention cache alignment because that is an implementation
specific issue. The user of the interfaces need not be concerned
about any of this.
There need be no changes to the documentation. If you do as the
documentation states (use kmalloc or get_free_page to get your
buffers) then it will just work.
Franks a lot,
David S. Miller
davem@redhat.com
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sat Jun 15 2002 - 22:00:13 EST