On Fri, Jul 17, 2020 at 01:44:03PM +0530, Vinod Koul wrote: > On 15-07-20, 20:08, Serge Semin wrote: > > On Wed, Jul 15, 2020 at 04:43:15PM +0530, Vinod Koul wrote: > > > On 10-07-20, 19:14, Serge Semin wrote: > > > > On Fri, Jul 10, 2020 at 02:51:33PM +0300, Peter Ujfalusi wrote: > > > > > > > > Since we should be able to handle longer lists and this is kind of a > > > > > hint for clients that above this number of nents the list will be broken > > > > > up to smaller 'bursts', which when traversing could cause latency. > > > > > > > > > > sg_chunk_len might be another candidate. > > > > > > > > Ok. We've got four candidates: > > > > - max_sg_nents_burst > > > > - max_sg_burst > > > > - max_sg_chain > > > > - sg_chunk_len > > > > > > > > @Vinod, @Andy, what do you think? > > > > > > > > So IIUC your hw supports single sg and in that you would like to publish > > > the length of each chunk, is that correct? > > > > No. My DMA engine does support only a single-entry SG-list, but the new DMA > > {~~slave~~,channel,device,peripheral,...} capability isn't about the length, but > > is about the maximum number of SG-list entries a DMA engine is able to > > automatically/"without software help" walk through and execute. In this thread > > we are debating about that new capability naming. > > > > The name suggested in this patch: max_sg_nents. Peter noted (I mostly agree with > > him), that it might be ambiguous, since from it (without looking into the > > dma_slave_caps structure comment) a user might think that it's a maximum number of > > SG-entries, which can be submitted for the DMA engine execution, while in fact it's > > about the DMA engine capability of automatic/burst/"without software intervention" > > SG-list entries walking through. (Such information will be helpful to solve a > > problem discussed in this mailing thread, and described in the cover-letter to > > this patchset. We also discussed it with you and Andy in the framework of this > > patchset many times.) > > > > As an alternative Peter suggested: max_sg_nents_burst. I also think it's better > > than "max_sg_nents" but for me it seems a bit long. max_sg_burst seems better. > > There is no need in having the "nents" in the name, since SG-list implies a list, > > which main parameter (if not to say only parameter) is the number of entries. > > "burst" is pointing out to the automatic/accelerated/"without software intervention" > > SG-list entries walking through. > > > > On the second thought suggested by me "max_sg_chain" sounds worse than "max_sg_burst", > > because it also might be perceived as a parameter limiting the number of SG-list > > entries is able to be submitted for the DMA engine execution, while in fact it > > describes another matter. > > > > Regarding "sg_chunk_len". I think it's ambiguous too, since the "chunk > > length" might be referred to both the entries length and to the sub-SG-list > > length. > > > > So what do you think? What name is better describing the new DMA capability? > > How about max_nents_per_sg or max_nents_sg to signify that this implies > max nents for sg not sg entries. Well, as I see it those versions are no better than "max_sg_nents" suggested in this patch, which Peter and me considered ambiguous. By reading just capability name all "max_sg_nents" and "max_nents_per_sg" and "max_nents_sg" seem like describing a hard limitation of the number of SG-list entries, but in fact they should merely mean a maximum number of entries executed in a single DMA engine transaction without software intervention. We need to have some new word which would define that "automatic/accelerated/burst/chained/etc." DMA transaction. > IMO Burst/chain are not better than max_sg_nents. Could you elaborate why? In case of having "max_sg_burst" we could give to a user an impression of this capability describing something similar to the "max_burst" (maximum burst transaction length), but in application to the SG-list. The main SG-list parameter is the number of entries, so having the "burst" word in the capability name we'd imply the bursted number of entries instead of the total number of entries if the "nents" word would have been used. -Sergey > > -- > ~Vinod