On Mon, 13 Nov 2017 09:44:06 +0000 Radu Andrei Alexe <radu.alexe@xxxxxxx> wrote: > On 11/10/2017 6:44 PM, Kim Phillips wrote: > > On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 08:02:01 +0000 > > Radu Andrei Alexe <radu.alexe@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >> On 11/9/2017 6:34 PM, Kim Phillips wrote: > >>> On Thu, 9 Nov 2017 11:54:13 +0000 > >>> Radu Andrei Alexe <radu.alexe@xxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>> The next patch version will create the platform device dynamically at > >>>> run time. > >>> > >>> Why create a new device when that h/w already has one? > >>> > >>> Why doesn't the existing crypto driver register dma capabilities with > >>> the dma driver subsystem? > >>> > >> I can think of two reasons: > >> > >> 1. The code that this driver introduces has nothing to do with crypto > >> and everything to do with dma. > > > > I would think that at least a crypto "null" algorithm implementation > > would share code. > > > >> Placing the code in the same directory as > >> the caam subsystem would only create confusion for the reader of an > >> already complex driver. > > > > this different directory argument seems to be identical to your 2 below: > > > >> 2. I wanted this driver to be tracked by the dma engine team. They have > >> the right expertise to provide adequate feedback. If all the code was in > >> the crypto directory they wouldn't know about this driver or any > >> subsequent changes to it. > > > > dma subsystem bits could still be put in the dma area if deemed > > necessary but I don't think it is: I see > > drivers/crypto/ccp/ccp-dmaengine.c calls dma_async_device_register for > > example. > > > > I also don't see how that complicates things much further. > > > > So who made their review? The guys from crypto? Don't see how that's relevant here, but people applying patches should solicit acks from the appropriate sources, esp. if a patch is across multiple subsystems. > If someone wants to enable only the DMA functionality of the CCP and not > the crypto part how do they do it? Look for it in the crypto submenu? Why would they want to do that? In any case, I suspect you're thinking about cross-subsystem Kconfig entries, which is common, but something like that can be a module parameter, too. I would say that maybe CRYPTO_DEV_FSL_CAAM should be made to not depend on CRYPTO_HW, but I think that's overkill for the addition of this minor feature. > > What is the rationale for using the crypto h/w as a dma engine anyway? > > Are there supporting performance figures? > > We have a platform that doesn't have a dedicated DMA controller but has > the CAAM hardware block that can perform dma transfers. We have a OK, please mention that next time. > use-case where we need to issue large transfers (hundred of MBs) > asynchronously, without using the core. Curious: what subsystem does that? Thanks, Kim -- 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