On Mon, Nov 15, 2021 at 12:49 PM Laurent Pinchart <laurent.pinchart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, Nov 15, 2021 at 11:21:30AM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > On Mon, Nov 15, 2021 at 10:14 AM Laurent Pinchart wrote: > > > On Mon, Nov 15, 2021 at 09:54:00AM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > > > @@ -1285,11 +1287,13 @@ static int xilinx_dpdma_config(struct dma_chan *dchan, > > > > spin_lock_irqsave(&chan->lock, flags); > > > > > > > > /* > > > > - * Abuse the slave_id to indicate that the channel is part of a video > > > > - * group. > > > > + * Abuse the peripheral_config to indicate that the channel is part > > > > > > Is it still an abuse, or is this now the right way to pass custom data > > > to the DMA engine driver ? > > > > It doesn't make the driver any more portable, but it's now being > > more explicit about it. As far as I can tell, this is the best way > > to pass data that cannot be expressed through the regular interfaces > > in DT and the dmaengine API. > > > > Ideally there would be a generic way to pass this flag, but I couldn't > > figure out what this is actually doing, or whether there is a better > > way. Maybe Vinod has an idea. > > I don't think we need a generic API in this case. The DMA engine is > specific to the display device, I don't foresee a need to mix-n-match. Right. I wonder if there is even a point in using the dmaengine API in that case, I think for other single-purpose drivers we tend to just integrate the functionality in the client driver. No point changing this now of course, but it does feel odd. >From my earlier reading of the driver, my impression was that this is just a memory-to-memory device, so it could be used that way as well, but does need a flag when working on the video memory. I couldn't quite make sense of that though. > > /* > > * Use the peripheral_config to indicate that the channel is part > > * of a video group. This requires matching use of the custom > > * structure in each driver. > > */ > > pconfig = config->peripheral_config; > > if (WARN_ON(config->peripheral_size != 0 && > > config->peripheral_size != sizeof(*pconfig))) > > return -EINVAL; > > How about > > if (WARN_ON(config->peripheral_config && > config->peripheral_size != sizeof(*pconfig))) > > > > > spin_lock_irqsave(&chan->lock, flags); > > if (chan->id <= ZYNQMP_DPDMA_VIDEO2 && > > config->peripheral_size == sizeof(*pconfig)) > > And here you can test pconfig != NULL. Good idea. Changed now, using 'if (pconfig)' without the '!= NULL' in both expressions. Arnd