Hi Arnd, Thanks for replying :-) On Sunday 22 September 2013 03:33 AM, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > On Saturday 21 September 2013, Kishon Vijay Abraham I wrote: >> { >> u32 val; >> void __iomem *val1; >> void __iomem *dbi_base = pp->dbi_base; >> >> /* Program viewport 0 : INBOUND : MEMORY*/ >> val = PCIE_ATU_REGION_INBOUND | (0 & 0xF); >> dw_pcie_writel_rc(pp, val, dbi_base + PCIE_ATU_VIEWPORT); >> val1 = ioremap(0x80000000, 0x5fffffff); > > The ioremap here makes no sense at all, and I suspect it will fail anyway, > because you exhaust the vmalloc area size, but since the value is not > used anywhere, it won't matter. > >> dw_pcie_writel_rc(pp, 0x80000000, dbi_base + PCIE_ATU_LOWER_BASE); >> dw_pcie_writel_rc(pp, 0, dbi_base + PCIE_ATU_UPPER_BASE); >> /* in_mem_size must be in power of 2 */ >> dw_pcie_writel_rc(pp, 0x5FFFFFFF, dbi_base + PCIE_ATU_LIMIT); >> dw_pcie_writel_rc(pp, 0x80000000, dbi_base + PCIE_ATU_LOWER_TARGET); >> dw_pcie_writel_rc(pp, 0, dbi_base + PCIE_ATU_UPPER_TARGET); > > These numbers need to come from somewhere, you shouldn't just hardcode them, right. I'm still in the process of getting it work ;-) > > I guess you should either program an inbound window covering the entire 64-bit > address space, or you should look at the top-level "memory" nodes to find > the location of physical RAM. > > I can't see anything wrong with the way it's set up though, unless you have > an IOMMU. Can you confirm that there is no IOMMU (aka SMMU) in your system > that handles the PCIe root complex? There is a MMU for PCIe root complex but that's disabled. > >> I somehow starting to doubt the DMA address programmed in the ethernet card >> which is in my RAM address range (0x80000000 to 0xBFFFFFFF). Should this >> address be programmed in the BAR of the ethernet card? How should it be done? > > No, it should not be in the BAR. The ethernet device driver calls dma_map_* > or pci_map_* interfaces to get a valid token that can be passed into the > device registers that are starting the DMA. You have to ensure that the > dma_map_ops for the device return the value that is set up in the translation. > > The normal case is an identity mapping between device DMA space and host > memory space, i.e. PCIE_ATU_LOWER_TARGET == PCIE_ATU_LOWER_BASE, so > in the dma_map_single implementation, phys_addr_t == dma_addr_t. > > If you set up the dma_addr_t space to start at 0 instead, you have to add > the offset in the dma_map_ops. My DMA address is in 0x80000000 to 0xBFFFFFFF range and I program my inbound translation for this range. Not sure what is missing still :-( Thanks Kishon -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html