On Thursday 01 May 2014 14:12:10 Grant Likely wrote: > > > I've got two concerns here. of_dma_get_range() retrieves only the first > > > tuple from the dma-ranges property, but it is perfectly valid for > > > dma-ranges to contain multiple tuples. How should we handle it if a > > > device has multiple ranges it can DMA from? > > > > > > > We've not found any cases in current Linux where more than one dma-ranges > > would be used. Moreover, The MM (definitely for ARM) isn't supported such > > cases at all (if i understand everything right). > > - there are only one arm_dma_pfn_limit > > - there is only one MM zone is used for ARM > > - some arches like x86,mips can support 2 zones (per arch - not per device or bus) > > DMA & DMA32, but they configured once and forever per arch. > > Okay. If anyone ever does implement multiple ranges then this code will > need to be revisited. I wonder if it's needed for platforms implementing the standard "ARM memory map" [1]. The document only talks about addresses as seen from the CPU, and I can see two logical interpretations how the RAM is supposed to be visible from a device: either all RAM would be visible contiguously at DMA address zero, or everything would be visible at the same physical address as the CPU sees it. If anyone picks the first interpretation, we will have to implement that in Linux. We can of course hope that all hardware designs follow the second interpretation, which would be more convenient for us here. Arnd [1] http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0001c/DEN0001C_principles_of_arm_memory_maps.pdf -- 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