On Tue, Apr 28, 2015 at 11:24 AM, Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Changes since v1 [1]: Incorporates feedback received prior to April 24. > > 1/ Ingo said [2]: > > "So why on earth is this whole concept and the naming itself > ('drivers/block/nd/' stands for 'NFIT Defined', apparently) > revolving around a specific 'firmware' mindset and revolving > around specific, weirdly named, overly complicated looking > firmware interfaces that come with their own new weird > glossary??" > > Indeed, we of course consulted the NFIT specification to determine > the shape of the sub-system, but then let its terms and data > structures permeate too deep into the implementation. That is fixed > now with all NFIT specifics factored out into acpi.c. The NFIT is no > longer required reading to review libnd. Only three concepts are > needed: > > i/ PMEM - contiguous memory range where cpu stores are > persistent once they are flushed through the memory > controller. > > ii/ BLK - mmio apertures (sliding windows) that can be > programmed to access an aperture's-worth of persistent > media at a time. > > iii/ DPA - "dimm-physical-address", address space local to a > dimm. A dimm may provide both PMEM-mode and BLK-mode > access to a range of DPA. libnd manages allocation of DPA > to either PMEM or BLK-namespaces to resolve this aliasing. Mostly for my understanding: is there a name for "address relative to the address lines on the DIMM"? That is, a DIMM that exposes 8 GB of apparent physical memory, possibly interleaved, broken up, or weirdly remapped by the memory controller, would still have addresses between 0 and 8 GB. Some of those might be PMEM windows, some might be MMIO, some might be BLK apertures, etc. IIUC "DPA" refers to actual addressable storage, not this type of address? --Andy -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html