On Thu, 24 May 2018 13:09:53 +0200 Stefan Agner <stefan@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 24.05.2018 10:56, Boris Brezillon wrote: > > On Thu, 24 May 2018 10:46:27 +0200 > > Stefan Agner <stefan@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >> Hi Boris, > >> > >> Thanks for the initial review! One small question below: > >> > >> On 23.05.2018 16:18, Boris Brezillon wrote: > >> > Hi Stefan, > >> > > >> > On Tue, 22 May 2018 14:07:06 +0200 > >> > Stefan Agner <stefan@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> >> + > >> >> +struct tegra_nand { > >> >> + void __iomem *regs; > >> >> + struct clk *clk; > >> >> + struct gpio_desc *wp_gpio; > >> >> + > >> >> + struct nand_chip chip; > >> >> + struct device *dev; > >> >> + > >> >> + struct completion command_complete; > >> >> + struct completion dma_complete; > >> >> + bool last_read_error; > >> >> + > >> >> + dma_addr_t data_dma; > >> >> + void *data_buf; > >> >> + dma_addr_t oob_dma; > >> >> + void *oob_buf; > >> >> + > >> >> + int cur_chip; > >> >> +}; > >> > > >> > This struct should be split in 2 structures: one representing the NAND > >> > controller and one representing the NAND chip: > >> > > >> > struct tegra_nand_controller { > >> > struct nand_hw_control base; > >> > void __iomem *regs; > >> > struct clk *clk; > >> > struct device *dev; > >> > struct completion command_complete; > >> > struct completion dma_complete; > >> > bool last_read_error; > >> > int cur_chip; > >> > }; > >> > > >> > struct tegra_nand { > >> > struct nand_chip base; > >> > dma_addr_t data_dma; > >> > void *data_buf; > >> > dma_addr_t oob_dma; > >> > void *oob_buf; > >> > }; > >> > >> Is there a particular reason why you would leave DMA buffers in the chip > >> structure? It seems that is more a controller thing... > > > > The size of those buffers is likely to be device dependent, so if you > > have several NANDs connected to the controller, you'll either have to > > have one buffer at the controller level which is max(all-chip-buf-size) > > or a buffer per device. > > > > Also, do you really need these buffers? The core already provide some > > which are suitable for DMA (chip->oob_poi and chip->data_buf). > > > > Good question, I am not sure, that was existing code. > > Are you sure data_buf it is DMA capable? > > nand_scan_tail allocates with kmalloc: > > chip->data_buf = kmalloc(mtd->writesize + mtd->oobsize, GFP_KERNEL); Yes, kmalloc() allocates DMA-able buffers, so those are DMA-safe. -- 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