Re: [PATCH 2/2] [v2] crypto: hisilicon - allow compile-testing on x86

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On 20/09/2019 14:36, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
On Fri, Sep 20, 2019 at 3:26 PM Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> wrote:

On Fri, Sep 20, 2019 at 10:34 AM John Garry <john.garry@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

+     if (!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ARM64)) {
+             memcpy_toio(fun_base, src, 16);
+             wmb();
+             return;
+     }
+
      asm volatile("ldp %0, %1, %3\n"
                   "stp %0, %1, %2\n"
                   "dsb sy\n"


As I understand, this operation needs to be done atomically. So - even
though your change is just for compile testing - the memcpy_to_io() may
not do the same thing on other archs, right?

I just wonder if it's right to make that change, or at least warn the
imaginary user of possible malfunction for !arm64.


Hi Arnd,

It's probably not necessary here. From what I can tell from the documentation,
this is only safe on ARMv8.4 or higher anyway, earlier ARMv8.x implementations
don't guarantee that an stp arrives on the bus in one piece either.

Usually, hardware like this has no hard requirement on an atomic store,
it just needs the individual bits to arrive in a particular order, and then
triggers the update on the last bit that gets stored. If that is the case here
as well, it might actually be better to use two writeq_relaxed() and
a barrier. This would also solve the endianess issue.

See also https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/1/26/554 for a previous attempt
to introduce 128-bit MMIO accessors, this got rejected since they
are not atomic even on ARMv8.4.

So this is proprietary IP integrated with a proprietary ARMv8 implementation, so there could be a tight coupling, the like of which Will mentioned in that thread, but I'm doubtful.

I'm looking at the electronically translated documentation on this HW, and it reads "The Mailbox operation performed by the CPU cannot be interleaved", and then tells that software should lock against concurrent accesses or alternatively use a 128-bit access. So it seems that the 128b op used is only to guarantee software is atomic.

Wang Zhou can confirm my understanding.

If true, I see that we seem to be already guaranteeing mutual exclusion in qm_mb(), in taking a mutex.

Thanks,
John



    Arnd

.






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