On Wed, Feb 19, 2020 at 1:33 PM Jordan Crouse <jcrouse@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > When CONFIG_INIT_ON_ALLOC_DEFAULT_ON the GMU memory allocator runs afoul of > cache coherency issues because it is mapped as write-combine without clearing > the cache after it was zeroed. > > Rather than duplicate the hacky workaround we use in the GEM allocator for the > same reason it turns out that we don't need to have a bespoke memory allocator > for the GMU anyway. It uses a flat, global address space and there are only > two relatively minor allocations anyway. In short, this is essentially what the > DMA API was created for so replace a bunch of memory management code with two > calls to allocate and free DMA memory and we're fine. > > The only wrinkle is that the memory allocations need to be in a very specific > location in the GMU virtual address space so in order to get the iova allocator > to do the right thing we need to specify the dma-ranges property in the device > tree for the GMU node. Since we've not yet converted the GMU bindings over to > YAML two patches quickly turn into four but at the end of it we have at least > one bindings file converted to YAML and 99 less lines of code to worry about. > > Jordan Crouse (4): > dt-bindings: display: msm: Convert GMU bindings to YAML > dt-bindings: display: msm: Add required dma-range property > arm64: dts: sdm845: Set the virtual address range for GMU allocations > drm/msm/a6xx: Use the DMA API for GMU memory objects Awesome! Thanks so much for the quick turnaround on this! This set resolves the crashes I was seeing with CONFIG_INIT_ON_ALLOC_DEFAULT_ON. Tested-by: John Stultz <john.stultz@xxxxxxxxxx> thanks again! -john