Hello, all. I'd like to discuss memory sharing issue by application on v4l2 based device driver with system mmu and get some advices about that. Now I am working on Samsung SoC C210 platform and this platform has some multimedia devices with system mmu such as fimc, and mfc also we have implemented device drivers for them. those drivers are based on V4L2 framework with videobuf2. for system mmu of each device, we used VCM(Virtual Contiguous Memory) framework. Simply, VCM framework provides physical memory, device virtual memory allocation and memory mapping between them. when device driver is initialized or operated by user application, each driver allocates physical memory and device virtual memory and then mapping using VCM interface. refer to below link for more detail. http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-media/msg26548.html Physical memory access process is as the following. DVA PA device --------------> system mmu ------------------> physical memory DVA : device virtual address. PA : physical address. like this, device virtual address should be set to buffer(source or destination) register of multimedia device. the problem is that application want to share own memory with any device driver to avoid memory copy. in other words, user-allocated memory could be source or destination memory of multimedia device driver. let's see the diagram below. user application | | | | | 1. UVA(allocated by malloc) | | \|/ 2. UVA(in page unit) -----> multimedia device driver -------------------> videobuf2 | | | ^ | | | | | | | ------------------------------------------- | | 3. PA(in page unit) | | | | 4. PA(in page unit) 6. DVA | | | | | | | \|/ | | Virtual Contiguous Memory --------- | | | | ^ | | | | | 5. map PA to DVA | | | | | | | | ------------- ------------------------- PA : physical address. UVA : user virtual address. DVA : device virtual address. 1. user application allocates user space memory through malloc function and sending it to multimedia device driver based on v4l2 framework through userptr feature. 2, 3. multimedia device driver gets translated physical address from videobuf2 framework in page unit. 4, 5. multimedia device driver gets allocated device virtual address and mapping it to physical address and then mapping them through VCM interface. 6. multimedia device driver sets device virtual address from VCM to buffer register. the diagram above is fully theoretical so I wonder that this way is reasonable and has some problems also what should be considered. thank you for your interesting. _______________________________________________ linux-arm-kernel mailing list linux-arm-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-arm-kernel -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html