Re: [PATCH 1/3 v4] drivers/bus: Added Freescale Management Complex APIs

From: Alexander Graf
Date: Thu Nov 27 2014 - 11:14:09 EST




On 13.11.14 18:54, J. German Rivera wrote:
> APIs to access the Management Complex (MC) hardware
> module of Freescale LS2 SoCs. This patch includes
> APIs to check the MC firmware version and to manipulate
> DPRC objects in the MC.
>
> Signed-off-by: J. German Rivera <German.Rivera@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Signed-off-by: Stuart Yoder <stuart.yoder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>

[...]

> +/**
> + * Creates an MC I/O object
> + *
> + * @dev: device to be associated with the MC I/O object
> + * @mc_portal_phys_addr: physical address of the MC portal to use
> + * @mc_portal_size: size in bytes of the MC portal
> + * @flags: flags for the new MC I/O object
> + * @new_mc_io: Area to return pointer to newly created MC I/O object
> + *
> + * Returns '0' on Success; Error code otherwise.
> + */
> +int __must_check fsl_create_mc_io(struct device *dev,
> + phys_addr_t mc_portal_phys_addr,
> + uint32_t mc_portal_size,
> + uint32_t flags, struct fsl_mc_io **new_mc_io)
> +{
> + struct fsl_mc_io *mc_io;
> + void __iomem *mc_portal_virt_addr;
> + struct resource *res;
> +
> + mc_io = devm_kzalloc(dev, sizeof(*mc_io), GFP_KERNEL);
> + if (mc_io == NULL)
> + return -ENOMEM;
> +
> + mc_io->dev = dev;
> + mc_io->flags = flags;
> + mc_io->portal_phys_addr = mc_portal_phys_addr;
> + mc_io->portal_size = mc_portal_size;
> + res = devm_request_mem_region(dev,
> + mc_portal_phys_addr,
> + mc_portal_size,
> + "mc_portal");
> + if (res == NULL) {
> + dev_err(dev,
> + "devm_request_mem_region failed for MC portal %#llx\n",
> + mc_portal_phys_addr);
> + return -EBUSY;
> + }
> +
> + mc_portal_virt_addr = devm_ioremap_nocache(dev,
> + mc_portal_phys_addr,
> + mc_portal_size);

While I can't complain about the device itself, I will note that I think
it's a pretty bad design decision to expose actual host physical
addresses in the protocol.

Basically this means that you won't be able to pass a full MC complex
into a guest, even if you could virtualize IRQ and DMA access unless you
map it at the exact same location as the host's MC complex.

Could we at least add a "ranges" property to the MC device description
and check whether the physical addresses we get are within that range -
if nothing else, at least as sanity check? Then maybe add some calls in
the next version that act on that range rather than actual host physical
addresses?


Alex
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