Hi Rob, Thanks for the feedback. On Mon, 2020-12-07 at 10:01 -0600, Rob Herring wrote: > On Tue, Dec 01, 2020 at 02:34:51PM -0800, mgross@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > From: Daniele Alessandrelli <daniele.alessandrelli@xxxxxxxxx> > > > > Add DT binding documentation for the Intel Keem Bay IPC driver, which > > enables communication between the Computing Sub-System (CSS) and the > > Multimedia Sub-System (MSS) of the Intel Movidius SoC code named Keem > > Bay. > > [cut] > > + > > +description: > > + The Keem Bay IPC driver enables Inter-Processor Communication (IPC) with the > > + Visual Processor Unit (VPU) embedded in the Intel Movidius SoC code named > > + Keem Bay. > > Sounds like a mailbox. We did consider using the mailbox framework, but eventually decided against it; mainly because of the following two reasons: 1. The channel concept in the Mailbox framework is different than the channel concept in Keem Bay IPC: a. My understanding is that Mailbox channels are meant to be SW representation of physical HW channels, while in Keem Bay IPC channels are software abstractions to achieve communication multiplexing over a single HW link b. Additionally, Keem Bay IPC has two different classes of channels (high-speed channels and general-purpose channels) that need to access the same HW link with different priorities. 2. The blocking / non-blocking TX behavior of mailbox channels is defined at channel creation time (by the tx_block value of the mailbox client passed to mbox_request_channel(); my understanding is that the tx_block value cannot be modified after the channel is created), while in Keem Bay IPC the same channel can be used for both blocking and non-blocking TX (behavior is controlled by the timeout argument passed to keembay_ipc_send()). Having said that, I guess that it could be possible to create a Mailbox driver implementing the core communication mechanism used by the Keem Bay IPC and then build our API around it (basically having two drivers). But I'm not sure that would make the code simpler or easier to maintain. Any thoughts on this? > > > What's the relationship between this and the xlink thing? > xLink internally uses Keem Bay IPC to communicate with the VPU. Basically, Keem Bay IPC is the lowest layer of the xLink stack.