On Wed, Nov 01, 2023 at 10:08:42AM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > On Tue, Oct 31, 2023, at 22:41, Jiaxun Yang wrote: > > Hi all, > > > > I'm trying to improve Kernel's support of devices that have ioports > > mapped into MMIO, that involves converting existing driver which is > > using {in,out}{l,w,b} to use io{read,write}{8,16,32,64}, so they can > > benefit from ioport_map and pci_iomap. > > > > However, the problem is io{read,write}{8,16,32,64} will incur penalty > > on x86 by introducing extra function calls (they are not inlined) and > > having extra condition judgment on MMIO vs PIO. > > > > x86 folks, do you think this kind of overhead is acceptable? I do think > > most of PCI/ISA drivers will need to be converted. > > > > linux-arch folks, do you think it will be better if we introduce a > > variant of io{read,write}{8,16,32,64} that direct to PIO on x86 but > > remains the same functionality on other architectures? > > I think in general there is not much of a problem here since > the inb()/outb() operations themselves are extremely slow already, > in particular the outb() writes are non-posted unlike writeb(). > > My feeling is that converting to ioread/iowrite is generally a win > for any driver that already needs to support both cases (e.g. > serial-8250) since this can unify the two code paths. And here I looked at iowrite8 and find it includes tracing and all sorts, which means it is unsuitable for things like early-serial and the shiny new atomic write functionality of said serial-8250.