On Thu, Apr 6, 2017 at 1:37 PM, Frank Rowand <frowand.list@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 04/06/17 07:03, Rob Herring wrote: >> On Thu, Apr 6, 2017 at 1:18 AM, <frowand.list@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> From: Frank Rowand <frank.rowand@xxxxxxxx> >>> >>> of_dma_get_range() has workaround code to fixup a device tree that >>> incorrectly specified a mask instead of a size for property >>> dma-ranges. That device tree was fixed a year ago in v4.6, so >>> the workaround is no longer needed. Leave a data validation >>> check in place, but no longer do the fixup. Move the check >>> one level deeper in the call stack so that other possible users >>> of dma-ranges will also be protected. >>> >>> The fix to the device tree was in >>> commit c91cb9123cdd ("dtb: amd: Fix DMA ranges in device tree"). >> >> NACK. >> This was by design. You can't represent a size of 2^64 or 2^32. > > I agree that being unable to represent a size of 2^32 in a u32 and > a size of 2^64 in a u64 is the underlying issue. > > But the code to convert a mask to a size is _not_ design, it is a > hack that temporarily worked around a device tree that did not follow > the dma-ranges binding in the ePAPR. Since when is (2^64 - 1) not a size. It's a perfectly valid size in DT. And there's probably not a system in the world that needs access to that last byte. Is it completely accurate description if we subtract off 1? No, but it is still a valid range (so would be subtracting 12345). > That device tree was corrected a year ago to provide a size instead of > a mask. You are letting Linux implementation details influence your DT thinking. DT is much more flexible in that it supports a base address and size (and multiple of them) while Linux can only deal with a single address mask. If Linux dealt with base + size, then we wouldn't be having this conversation. As long as Linux only deals with masks, we're going to have to have some sort of work-around to deal with them. >> Well, technically you can for the latter, but then you have to grow >> #size-cells to 2 for an otherwise all 32-bit system which seems kind >> of pointless and wasteful. You could further restrict this to only >> allow ~0 and not just any case with bit 0 set. >> >> I'm pretty sure AMD is not the only system. There were 32-bit systems too. > > I examined all instances of property dma-ranges in in tree dts files in > Linux 4.11-rc1. There are none that incorrectly specify mask instead of > size. Okay, but there are ones for ranges at least. See ecx-2000.dts. > #size-cells only changes to 2 for the dma-ranges property and the ranges > property when size is 2^32, so that is a very small amount of space. > > The patch does not allow for a size of 2^64. If a system requires a > size of 2^64 then the type of size needs to increase to be larger > than a u64. If you would like for the code to be defensive and > detect a device tree providing a size of 2^64 then I can add a > check to of_dma_get_range() to return -EINVAL if #size-cells > 2. > When that error triggers, the type of size can be changed. #size-cells > 2 is completely broken for anything but PCI. I doubt it is easily fixed without some special casing (i.e. a different hack) until we have 128-bit support. I hope to retire before we need to support that. Rob -- 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