Hi Masahiro, On Fri, 10 Mar 2017 20:00:03 +0900 Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi Boris, > > I am almost getting v2 done, > and now I am testing it. > > I am having one problem. Please teach me. > > > 2016-11-30 17:17 GMT+09:00 Boris Brezillon <boris.brezillon@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > >> [2] > >> Remove driver-internal bounce buffer. > >> The current Denali driver allocate DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL buffer > >> to use it as a driver-internal bounce buffer. > >> > >> The hardware transfer page data into the bounce buffer, > >> then CPU copies from the bounce buffer to a given buf (and oob_poi). > >> This is not efficient. > >> > >> So, I want to set NAND_USE_BOUNCE_BUFFER flag > >> and do dma_map_single directly for a given buffer. > > > > Sounds good. Be careful though, when you use the generic bounce buffer > > interface you might have to clear the page cache info (->pagebuf = -1). > > > Instead of memcpy() of the whole page, > I am trying to use dma_map_single() in ecc->read_page() / ecc->write_page(). > This will allow direct transfer between the buffer and the device by DMA. > > But, this does not work for Denali if use_bufpoi is set in nand_do_read_ops(). > > > In the following code in nand_scan_tail(), > > if (!(chip->options & NAND_OWN_BUFFERS)) { > nbuf = kzalloc(sizeof(*nbuf) + mtd->writesize > + mtd->oobsize * 3, GFP_KERNEL); > if (!nbuf) > return -ENOMEM; > nbuf->ecccalc = (uint8_t *)(nbuf + 1); > nbuf->ecccode = nbuf->ecccalc + mtd->oobsize; > nbuf->databuf = nbuf->ecccode + mtd->oobsize; > > chip->buffers = nbuf; > > > chip->buffers->databuf has no guarantee for DMA'able alignment. > (actually it has unwanted offset 0xc because sizeof(*nbuf) == 0xc on > 32bit systems) Well, I think the DMA alignment requirement is a platform/controller specific (some controllers are fine with this 32bits alignment), but I get your point. > > If we could change the code as follows, > > nbuf->ecccalc = kmalloc(mtd->oobsize, GFP_KERNEL); > nbuf->ecccode = kmalloc(mtd->oobsize, GFP_KERNEL); > nbuf->databuf = kmalloc(mtd->writesize + mtd->oobsize, > GFP_KERNEL); > > chip->buffers->databuf would have DMA'able alignment in most cases > without NAND_OWN_BUFFERS. (but, I am not sure if this is a good idea) I'm fine with this change. I don't know what are the guarantees in term of alignment when you use kmalloc, but I guess the size you're allocating (writesize + oobsize) kind of guarantees that the alignment is rather big (because the SLAB caches are organized by power-of-2 chunk sizes, and for allocations >PAGE_SIZE the page allocator will be used). > > > So, the idea of NAND_OWN_BUFFERS is that > drivers should allocate own buffers if they need to perform DMA-mapping > in read_page(), write_page(), right? Right. > > > However, "git grep NAND_OWN_BUFFERS" shows > cafe_nand.c is the only driver that does so. > > On the other hand, "git grep dma_map_single" has more hits, > i.e. some drivers perform dma_map_single() for read/write without > NAND_OWN_BUFFERS. > > I have no idea how they are working. Probably because the controllers and/or DMA engines have no alignment constraints. Anyway, the change you're proposing is rather simple, so go ahead. Regards, Boris -- 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