On Thu, May 16, 2024 at 01:55:26PM -0500, Andrew Halaney wrote: > On Thu, May 16, 2024 at 08:20:05PM GMT, Akhil P Oommen wrote: > > On Thu, May 16, 2024 at 08:15:34AM -0500, Andrew Halaney wrote: > > > If I understand correctly, you don't need any memory barrier. > > > writel()/readl()'s are ordered to the same endpoint. That goes for all > > > the reordering/barrier comments mentioned below too. > > > > > > device-io.rst: > > > > > > The read and write functions are defined to be ordered. That is the > > > compiler is not permitted to reorder the I/O sequence. When the ordering > > > can be compiler optimised, you can use __readb() and friends to > > > indicate the relaxed ordering. Use this with care. > > > > > > memory-barriers.txt: > > > > > > (*) readX(), writeX(): > > > > > > The readX() and writeX() MMIO accessors take a pointer to the > > > peripheral being accessed as an __iomem * parameter. For pointers > > > mapped with the default I/O attributes (e.g. those returned by > > > ioremap()), the ordering guarantees are as follows: > > > > > > 1. All readX() and writeX() accesses to the same peripheral are ordered > > > with respect to each other. This ensures that MMIO register accesses > > > by the same CPU thread to a particular device will arrive in program > > > order. > > > > > > > In arm64, a writel followed by readl translates to roughly the following > > sequence: dmb_wmb(), __raw_writel(), __raw_readl(), dmb_rmb(). I am not > > sure what is stopping compiler from reordering __raw_writel() and __raw_readl() > > above? I am assuming iomem cookie is ignored during compilation. > > It seems to me that is due to some usage of volatile there in > __raw_writel() etc, but to be honest after reading about volatile and > some threads from gcc mailing lists, I don't have a confident answer :) > > > > > Added Will to this thread if he can throw some light on this. > > Hopefully Will can school us. The ordering in this case is ensured by the memory attributes used for ioremap(). When an MMIO region is mapped using Device-nGnRE attributes (as it the case for ioremap()), the "nR" part means "no reordering", so readX() and writeX() to that region are ordered wrt each other. Note that guarantee _doesn't_ apply to other flavours of ioremap(), so e.g. ioremap_wc() won't give you the ordering. Hope that helps, Will