On Sun, 19 Jan 2020 11:14:56 +0100, Keyon Jie wrote: > > On 2020/1/19 下午5:04, Takashi Iwai wrote: > > On Sun, 19 Jan 2020 09:11:17 +0100, > > Keyon Jie wrote: > >> On 2020/1/19 下午3:09, Takashi Iwai wrote: > >> It varies for each stream, most of them are 65536 Bytes only, whereas > >> one for Wake-On-Voice might need a > 4 Seconds buffer could be up to > >> about 1~2MBytes, and another one for deep-buffer playback can be up to > >> about 8MBytes. > > Hm, so this varies so much depending on the use case? > > I thought it comes from the topology file and it's essentially > > consistent over various purposes. > > Yes, we add different buffer_bytes_max limitation to each stream > depending on its use case, basically we set it to the maximum value we > claim to support only, we don't want to waste any of the system > memory. > > > > >>> I think we can go for passing zero as default, which means skipping > >>> preallocation. In addition, we may add an upper limit of the total > >> Just did an experiment and this works for me, I believe we still need > >> to call snd_pcm_set_managed_buffer() though the preallocation is > >> skipped in this, right? > > No, snd_pcm_set_managed_buffer() is the new PCM preallocation API. > > The old snd_pcm_lib_preallocate*() is almost gone. > > What I asked is actually that since the preallocation will be > skipped(with passing size=0), can we just not calling > snd_pcm_set_managed_buffer() or snd_pcm_lib_preallocate*() in our SOF > PCM driver? I believe no(we still need the invoking to do > initialization except buffer allocating)? You still need to call it. Otherwise the PCM core doesn't know what kind of buffer type has to be allocated. Basically snd_pcm_set_managed_buffer() or snd_pcm_lib_preallocate*() does two things: set the buffer type and its preallocation (default and max size). The latter default size can be 0, meaning that no default preallocation is performed. Also the max can be 0, i.e. no preallocation is needed at all for the buffers (e.g. vmalloc buffers). Meanwhile the buffer type and its device pointer are mandatory and can't be skipped. > > > >>> amount of allocation per card, controlled in pcm_memory.c, for > >>> example. This logic can be applied to the legacy HDA, too. > >>> > >>> This should be relatively easy, and I'll provide the patch in the next > >>> week. > >> OK, that's fine for me also, thank you. > > Below is a quick hack for HDA. We still need the certain amount of > > preallocation for non-x86 systems that don't support SG-buffers, so > > a bit of trick is applied to Kconfig. > > > > Totally untested, as usual. > > Did a quick test(plus passing 0 size for preallocate in SOF PCM > driver) and it works for my use case(no regression comparing that > without applying this patch), Thank you. OK, will tidy up and submit later. Takashi _______________________________________________ Alsa-devel mailing list Alsa-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://mailman.alsa-project.org/mailman/listinfo/alsa-devel