Re: Regarding AHCI_MAX_SG and (ATA_HORKAGE_MAX_SEC_1024)
From: Tom Yan
Date: Wed Aug 10 2016 - 15:16:06 EST
On 10 August 2016 at 11:26, Tejun Heo <tj@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Hmmm.. why not? The hardware limit is 64k and the driver is using a
Is that referring to the maximum number of entries allowed in the
PRDT, Physical Region Descriptor Table (which is, more precisely,
65535)?
> lower limit of 168 most likely because it doesn't make noticeable
> difference beyond certain point and it determines the size of
> contiguous memory which has to be allocated for the command table.
> Each sg entry is 16 bytes. Pushing it to the hardware limit would
> require an order 9 allocation for each port.
That makes sense to me, and I didn't have the intention to push it to
the limit anyway.
> Not necessarily. A single sg entry can point to an area larger than
> PAGE_SIZE.
You mean the 4MB limit of "Data Byte Count" in "DW3: Description
Information" of the PRDT? Is that what max_segment_size (which is set
to a general fallback of 65536:
http://lxr.free-electrons.com/ident?i=dma_get_max_seg_size) is about
in this case?
And my point was, it will be a multiple of 168 anyway, if 1344 is just
an example.
> As written above, that probably makes the ahci command table size
> nicely aligned.
I think that's what bothers me ultimately, cause I don't see how 168
makes it (more) nicely aligned (or even, aligned to what?).
I even checked out the AHCI driver of FreeBSD
(https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/blob/master/sys/dev/ahci/ahci.h):
...
#define MAXPHYS 512 * 1024
...
#define AHCI_SG_ENTRIES (roundup(btoc(MAXPHYS) + 1, 8))
...
#define AHCI_CT_SIZE (128 + AHCI_SG_ENTRIES * 16)
...
Couldn't get the sense out of the `+ 1` and round up to 8 thing either.