Am 15.02.23 um 14:52 schrieb Paul Cercueil:
Le mercredi 15 février 2023 à 14:46 +0100, Christian König a écrit :
Am 15.02.23 um 14:24 schrieb Paul Cercueil:
Hi Christian,
Le mercredi 15 février 2023 à 13:58 +0100, Christian König a
écrit :
Hi Paul,
Am 15.02.23 um 11:48 schrieb Paul Cercueil:
Hi,
I am working on adding support for DMABUFs in the IIO
subsystem.
One thing we want there, is the ability to specify the number
of
bytes
to transfer (while still defaulting to the DMABUF size).
Since dma_buf_map_attachment() returns a sg_table,
Please don't assume that this is an sg_table. We just used it as
container for DMA addresses, but this has proven to be a mistake.
TL/DR, why was it a mistake? Just curious.
The sg_table should have just contained DMA addresses, but we had
multiple people who tried to use the pages instead.
This works to some extend, but goes boom as soon as somebody messes
with
the pages reference counts or tries to map it into an address space
or
something like that.
We got so far that we now intentionally mangle the page addresses in
the
sg_table to prevent people from using it:
https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/latest/source/drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c#L763
Isn't that breaking the chains though? I'd expect page_link to be
mangled only if !sg_is_chain(sg).
Those are filtered out by for_each_sgtable_sg if I'm not completely
mistaken.
There is work underway to replace the sg_table with (for example)
just
an array of DMA addresses.
Ok, so I believe at some point we will need an equivalent of
dmaengine_prep_slave_sg() which takes an array of DMA addresses.
Well we will probably come up with a new container for this, but
yeah.
Understood.
You said there was work underway, could you point me to the
corresponding mailing list threads and/or code?
That's not really released yet. We just discussed it a bit when Daniel
added the sg_table mangling after this went boom for the third time so :)
Just use git blame to find the patch of the mangling and read up on the
mailing list discussion around that.
Regards,
Christian.
Regards,
Christian.
Cheers,
-Paul
I basically have two options, and I can't decide which one is
the
best (or the less ugly):
- Either I add a new API function similar to
dmaengine_prep_slave_sg(),
which still takes a scatterlist as argument but also takes the
number
of bytes as argument;
- Or I add a function to duplicate the scatterlist and then
shrink
it
manually, which doesn't sound like a good idea either.
What would be the recommended way?
I strongly recommend to come up with a new function which only
takes
DMA
addresses and separate segment length.
Alright, thanks for your input.
So I would add a new dma_device.dma_prep_slave_dma_array() callback
with a corresponding API function, and then the drivers can be
converted from using .dma_prep_slave_sg() to this new function in
due
time.
Vinod, that works for you?
Cheers,
-Paul