On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 12:54:38PM +0200, Nicolas Saenz Julienne wrote: > On Mon, 2019-09-09 at 11:58 +0200, Nicolas Saenz Julienne wrote: > > /* > > - * Return the maximum physical address for ZONE_DMA32 (DMA_BIT_MASK(32)). It > > - * currently assumes that for memory starting above 4G, 32-bit devices will > > - * use a DMA offset. > > + * Return the maximum physical address for a zone with a given address size > > + * limit. It currently assumes that for memory starting above 4G, 32-bit > > + * devices will use a DMA offset. > > */ > > -static phys_addr_t __init max_zone_dma32_phys(void) > > +static phys_addr_t __init max_zone_phys(unsigned int zone_bits) > > { > > phys_addr_t offset = memblock_start_of_DRAM() & GENMASK_ULL(63, 32); > > - return min(offset + (1ULL << 32), memblock_end_of_DRAM()); > > + return min(offset + (1ULL << zone_bits), memblock_end_of_DRAM()); > > } > > while testing other code on top of this series on odd arm64 machines I found an > issue: when memblock_start_of_DRAM() != 0, max_zone_phys() isn't taking into > account the offset to the beginning of memory. This doesn't matter with > zone_bits == 32 but it does when zone_bits == 30. I thought about this but I confused myself and the only case I had in mind was an AMD Seattle system with RAM starting at 4GB. What we need from this function is that the lowest naturally aligned 2^30 RAM is covered by ZONE_DMA while the rest to 2^32 are ZONE_DMA32. This assumed that devices only capable of 30-bit (or 32-bit), have the top address bits hardwired to be able access the bottom of the memory (and this would be expressed in DT as the DMA offset). I guess the fix here is to use GENMASK_ULL(63, zone_bits). -- Catalin