On Thu, Aug 21, 2014 at 03:09:12PM +0200, Sebastian Andrzej Siewior wrote: > On 08/19/2014 05:12 PM, Vinod Koul wrote: > >> > >> desc = dmaengine_prep_slave_single(rxchan, …); > >> rx_cookie = dmaengine_submit(desc); > >> dma_async_issue_pending(rxchan); > >> > >> ssleep(2); > >> /* Now assume that the transfer did not start */ > >> st = dmaengine_tx_status(rxchan, rx_cookie, NULL); > >> /* st is now DMA_IN_PROGRESS as expected */ > >> > >> dmaengine_terminate_all(rxchan); > >> st = dmaengine_tx_status(rxchan, rx_cookie, NULL); > > and here is the culprit. You have terminated the channel. This means that > > dmaengine driver is free to clean up all the allocated descriptors on the > > channels and do whatever it decides to do with them. > > descriptors, yes. and by that logic when you query the driver would have freed up! > > You have already terminated the channel so what is the point in querying the > > status of the cookie, which you shouldn't use anyway after invoking > > terminate_all() as its result is not correct. > > The point is to check (later, after terminate_all()) if there is an > outstanding DMA transfer or not _and_ how much data was really > transfered. Looking at edma it does not really support the latter if > the transfer is already completed. On the plus side the HW does not > support partly transfers :) well that can be achieved properly and differently! Why don't we pause the channel, get the residue, status and then terminate. > But where is it written that the life time of the cookie is limited? > Looking at the "cooking check" code there is no such thing. It is > simply compare of completed vs passed number but okay, this is an > implementation detail. > From [0] it says under "4. Submit the transaction": > > | This returns a cookie can be used to check the progress of DMA engine > | activity via other DMA engine calls not covered in this document. > > no life time limit mentioned here. Which brings to the question: Why is > it okay to use the cookie after the transaction "terminated" normally > but not if it has been canceled? Due to the special nature of terminate. The point here is that you don't terminate a transaction but channel operation > And from [0] the API explanation "4. … dma_async_is_tx_complete()": > > |Note: > | Not all DMA engine drivers can return reliable information for > | a running DMA channel. It is recommended that DMA engine users > | pause or stop (via dmaengine_terminate_all) the channel before > | using this API. > > So the documentation says to use the cookie with > dma_async_is_tx_complete() and before doing so it is recommended that > the transfer should be paused or stopped. _Exactly_ what is done here. > > >> /* st is still DMA_IN_PROGRESS but _I_ expect DMA_COMPLETE because > >> * it has been terminated / canceled > >> */ > >> > >> Both dma driver clean up all / terminate all descriptors as required but > >> _none_ of them completes the cookie. As a result dma_cookie_status() > >> still thinks that the transfer is in progress. > > > > Btw how does it matter in the driver here if the transaction completed or > > not after terminate_all() was invoked. What is the purpose of querying > > status. > > In the RX interrupt (of the 8250 unit), the code checks if the transfer > has been already started or not via querying the status. So if it > returns DMA_COMPLETE then a new transfer will be started. If it returns > DMA_IN_PROGRESS then the code returns doing nothing because the DMA > engine should start moving data anytime now so the RX interrupt goes > away. > > That means: If the transfer is canceled then it won't be started again. > > Btw: the current (probably only) dma driver that is used by 8250-dma is > dw/core.c. That one does cookie complete on terminate: > dwc_control(DMA_TERMINATE_ALL) -> dwc_descriptor_complete() -> > dma_cookie_complete(). Yes but would above flow work for you :) -- ~Vinod > > That is why it works for them… > > [0] Documentation/dmaengine.txt > > > > > Thanks > > > > Sebastian -- -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe dmaengine" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html