On Tue, Aug 06, 2019 at 10:48:21AM +0200, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > This goes in the wrong direction. drm_cflush_* are a bad API we need to > get rid of, not add use of it. The reason for that is two-fold: > > a) it doesn't address how cache maintaince actually works in most > platforms. When talking about a cache we three fundamental operations: > > 1) write back - this writes the content of the cache back to the > backing memory > 2) invalidate - this remove the content of the cache > 3) write back + invalidate - do both of the above > > b) which of the above operation you use when depends on a couple of > factors of what you want to do with the range you do the cache > maintainance operations > > Take a look at the comment in arch/arc/mm/dma.c around line 30 that > explains how this applies to buffer ownership management. Note that > "for device" applies to "for userspace" in the same way, just that > userspace then also needs to follow this protocol. So the whole idea > that random driver code calls random low-level cache maintainance > operations (and use the non-specific term flush to make it all more > confusing) is a bad idea. Fortunately enough we have really good > arch helpers for all non-coherent architectures (this excludes the > magic i915 won't be covered by that, but that is a separate issue > to be addressed later, and the fact that while arm32 did grew them > very recently and doesn't expose them for all configs, which is easily > fixable if needed) with arch_sync_dma_for_device and > arch_sync_dma_for_cpu. So what we need is to figure out where we > have valid cases for buffer ownership transfer outside the DMA > API, and build proper wrappers around the above function for that. > My guess is it should probably be build to go with the iommu API > as that is the only other way to map memory for DMA access, but > if you have a better idea I'd be open to discussion. I just read through all the arch_sync_dma_for_device/cpu functions and none seem to use the struct *dev argument. Iirc you've said that's on the way out? That dev parameter is another holdup for the places where we do not yet know what the new device will be (e.g. generic dma-buf exporters like vgem). And sprinkling a fake dev or passing NULL is a bit silly. Add a HAVE_ARCH_SYNC_DMA and the above refactor (assuming it's ok to roll out everywhere) and we should indeed be able to use this. We still need to have all the others for x86 and all that. Plus I guess we should roll out the split into invalidate and flush. The other bit is phys vs. virt addr confusion, but looks like standard if phys_addr and you kmap underneath (except from drm_clflush_virt_range, only used by i915). -Daniel -- Daniel Vetter Software Engineer, Intel Corporation http://blog.ffwll.ch _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel