On 10/18/19 2:57 PM, Ayan Halder wrote: > On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 11:49:22AM -0700, John Stultz wrote: >> On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 11:41 AM Ayan Halder <Ayan.Halder@xxxxxxx> wrote: >>> On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 09:55:17AM +0000, Brian Starkey wrote: >>>> On Thu, Oct 17, 2019 at 01:57:45PM -0700, John Stultz wrote: >>>>> On Thu, Oct 17, 2019 at 12:29 PM Andrew F. Davis <afd@xxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>> On 10/17/19 3:14 PM, John Stultz wrote: >>>>>>> But if the objection stands, do you have a proposal for an alternative >>>>>>> way to enumerate a subset of CMA heaps? >>>>>>> >>>>>> When in staging ION had to reach into the CMA framework as the other >>>>>> direction would not be allowed, so cma_for_each_area() was added. If >>>>>> DMA-BUF heaps is not in staging then we can do the opposite, and have >>>>>> the CMA framework register heaps itself using our framework. That way >>>>>> the CMA system could decide what areas to export or not (maybe based on >>>>>> a DT property or similar). >>>>> >>>>> Ok. Though the CMA core doesn't have much sense of DT details either, >>>>> so it would probably have to be done in the reserved_mem logic, which >>>>> doesn't feel right to me. >>>>> >>>>> I'd probably guess we should have some sort of dt binding to describe >>>>> a dmabuf cma heap and from that node link to a CMA node via a >>>>> memory-region phandle. Along with maybe the default heap as well? Not >>>>> eager to get into another binding review cycle, and I'm not sure what >>>>> non-DT systems will do yet, but I'll take a shot at it and iterate. >>>>> >>>>>> The end result is the same so we can make this change later (it has to >>>>>> come after DMA-BUF heaps is in anyway). >>>>> >>>>> Well, I'm hesitant to merge code that exposes all the CMA heaps and >>>>> then add patches that becomes more selective, should anyone depend on >>>>> the initial behavior. :/ >>>> >>>> How about only auto-adding the system default CMA region (cma->name == >>>> "reserved")? >>>> >>>> And/or the CMA auto-add could be behind a config option? It seems a >>>> shame to further delay this, and the CMA heap itself really is useful. >>>> >>> A bit of a detour, comming back to the issue why the following node >>> was not getting detected by the dma-buf heaps framework. >>> >>> reserved-memory { >>> #address-cells = <2>; >>> #size-cells = <2>; >>> ranges; >>> >>> display_reserved: framebuffer@60000000 { >>> compatible = "shared-dma-pool"; >>> linux,cma-default; >>> reusable; <<<<<<<<<<<<-----------This was missing in our >>> earlier node >>> reg = <0 0x60000000 0 0x08000000>; >>> }; >> >> Right. It has to be a CMA region for us to expose it from the cma heap. >> >> >>> With 'reusable', rmem_cma_setup() succeeds , but the kernel crashes as follows :- >>> >>> [ 0.450562] WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 1 at mm/cma.c:110 cma_init_reserved_areas+0xec/0x22c >> >> Is the value 0x60000000 you're using something you just guessed at? It >> seems like the warning here is saying the pfn calculated from the base >> address isn't valid. > It is a valid memory region we use to allocate framebuffers. But does it have a valid kernel virtual mapping? Most ARM systems (just assuming you are working on ARM :)) that I'm familiar with have the DRAM space starting at 0x80000000 and so don't start having valid pfns until that point. Is this address you are reserving an SRAM? Andrew >> >> thanks >> -john _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel