On Thu, 15 Mar 2018 03:42:25 PDT (-0700), Arnd Bergmann wrote:
On Thu, Mar 15, 2018 at 10:59 AM, Hannes Reinecke <hare@xxxxxxx> wrote:
On 03/15/2018 10:42 AM, David Howells wrote:
Do we have anything left that still implements NOMMU?
RISC-V ?
(evil grin :-)
Is anyone producing a chip that includes enough of the Privileged ISA spec
to have things like system calls, but not the MMU parts?
I thought at least initially the kernel only supports hardware that has a rather
complete feature set.
We currently do not have a NOMMU port. As far as I know, everyone who's
currently producing RISC-V hardware with enough memory to run Linux has S mode
with paging support. The ISA allows for S mode without paging but there's no
hardware for that -- if you're going to put a DRAM controller on there then
paging seems pretty cheap. You could run a NOMMU port on a system with S-mode
and paging, but With all the superpage stuff I don't think you'll get an
appreciable performance win for any workload running without an MMU so there's
nothing to justify the work (and incompatibility) of a NOMMU port there.
While I think you could implement a NOMMU port on a machine with only M and U
modes (and therefor no address translation at all), I don't know of any MU-only
machines that have enough memory to run Linux (ours have less than 32KiB). A
SBI-free Linux would be a prerequisite for this, but there's some interest in
that outside of a NOMMU port so it might materialize anyway.
Of course, QEMU could probably be tricked into emulating one of these machines
with little to no effort :)... That said, I doubt we'll see a NOMMU port
materialize without some real hardware as it's a lot of work for a QEMU-only
target.
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