On Fri, Oct 30, 2015 at 02:08:07PM -0400, Sinan Kaya wrote: > > > On 10/30/2015 1:59 PM, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > >On Fri, Oct 30, 2015 at 5:00 PM, Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@xxxxxxx> wrote: > >>On Thu, Oct 29, 2015 at 11:08:12PM -0400, Sinan Kaya wrote: > >>>The Qualcomm Technologies HIDMA device has been designed > >>>to support virtualization technology. The driver has been > >>>divided into two to follow the hardware design. The management > >>>driver is executed in hypervisor context and is the main > >>>managment for all channels provided by the device. The > >>>channel driver is exected in the guest OS context. > >>> > > > >>>+#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ACPI) > >>>+static const struct acpi_device_id qcom_hidma_mgmt_acpi_ids[] = { > >>>+ {"QCOM8060"}, > >>>+ {}, > >>>+}; > >>>+#endif > >> > >>How do DMA engines work with ACPI? > >> > >>How are client relationships defined? > > > >The ACPI tables DSDT and CSRT (more info here: > >http://www.acpi.info/links.htm) defines properties. > > > >DSDT: > > per DMAC: the resources > > per client: FixedDMA descriptor that contains channel / request line pair. > > > >CSRT: > > necessary table to map which DMAC provides which request line, thus > >request line numbering are global on platform. > > > >When DMAC driver is probed in the running system it should call as > >well registration function from acpi-dma.c. > > > >All clients when use new DMA slave API gets channel automatically > >based on their FixedDMA property. > > > >So, above is how it should be done. Didn't actually checked what this > >driver does. > > > I was going to reply to all the questions in one pass but let me > handle piece by piece. > > Here are some facts. > - This hardware supports memcpy and memset only. > - Memset feature was removed from the kernel sometime around 3.14. > So no memset support in this driver either. > - The hardware does not support DMA slave support This point is what I'd missed when reviewing. Apologies for that. > - The goal is to provide an interface to DMA engine framework for > memcpy optimization so that the rest of the kernel drivers and > applications make use of the hardware. > > CSRT is an Intel specific ACPI table for slave devices. It was > decided by Linaro that CSRT will not be supported for ARM64. > > There were some discussions in ACPI forums to define a similar table > for ARM64 but we are not there today and this hardware does not > support slave interface. Ok. Thanks for the info! > ACPI enumeration is just like any other platform device. The driver > gets looked up by a QCOM specific HID and the driver gets probed > with the rest of the arguments in DSM object similar to device-tree > attributes. The code uses device functions so the driver is not > aware of where the parameters are coming from. Ok. So far the properties look device-internal, so I'm ok with thoses properties being uniform and parsed in the manner that they are, though I'm worried about the way the device description is split over two nodes. Thanks, Mark. -- 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