Hi Jordan,
On 06/22/2011 09:30 PM, Jordan Crouse wrote:
On 06/22/2011 03:27 AM, Marek Szyprowski wrote:
Hello,
On Wednesday, June 22, 2011 10:53 AM Subash Patel wrote:
On 06/22/2011 12:29 PM, Marek Szyprowski wrote:
Hello,
On Wednesday, June 22, 2011 6:53 AM Subash Patel wrote:
On 06/20/2011 01:20 PM, Marek Szyprowski wrote:
Hello,
This patch series is a continuation of my works on implementing
generic
IOMMU support in DMA mapping framework for ARM architecture. Now I
focused on the DMA mapping framework itself. It turned out that
adding
support for common dma_map_ops structure was not that hard as I
initally
thought. After some modification most of the code fits really well to
the generic dma_map_ops methods.
The only change required to dma_map_ops is a new alloc function.
During
the discussion on Linaro Memory Management meeting in Budapest we got
the idea that we can have only one alloc/free/mmap function with
additional attributes argument. This way all different kinds of
architecture specific buffer mappings can be hidden behind the
attributes without the need of creating several versions of
dma_alloc_
function. I also noticed that the dma_alloc_noncoherent() function
can
be also implemented this way with DMA_ATTRIB_NON_COHERENT attribute.
Systems that just defines dma_alloc_noncoherent as dma_alloc_coherent
will just ignore such attribute.
Another good use case for alloc methods with attributes is the
possibility to allocate buffer without a valid kernel mapping. There
are
a number of drivers (mainly V4L2 and ALSA) that only exports the DMA
buffers to user space. Such drivers don't touch the buffer data at
all.
For such buffers we can avoid the creation of a mapping in kernel
virtual address space, saving precious vmalloc area. Such buffers
might
be allocated once a new attribute DMA_ATTRIB_NO_KERNEL_MAPPING.
Are you trying to say here, that the buffer would be allocated in the
user space, and we just use it to map it to the device in DMA+IOMMU
framework?
Nope. I proposed an extension which would allow you to allocate a
buffer
without creating the kernel mapping for it. Right now
dma_alloc_coherent()
performs 3 operations:
1. allocates memory for the buffer
2. creates coherent kernel mapping for the buffer
3. translates physical buffer address to DMA address that can be
used by
the hardware.
dma_mmap_coherent makes additional mapping for the buffer in user
process
virtual address space.
I want make the step 2 in dma_alloc_coherent() optional to save virtual
address space: it is really limited resource. I really want to avoid
wasting it for mapping 128MiB buffers just to create full-HD processing
hardware pipeline, where no drivers will use kernel mapping at all.
I think by (2) above, you are referring to
__dma_alloc_remap()->arm_vmregion_alloc() to allocate the kernel virtual
address for the drivers use. That makes sense now.
Well, this is particular implementation which is used on ARM. Other
architectures might implement it differently, that's why I used generic
description and didn't point to any particular function.
I have a query in similar lines, but related to user virtual address
space. Is it feasible to extend these DMA interfaces(and IOMMU), to map
a user allocated buffer into the hardware?
This can be done with the current API, although it may not look so
straightforward. You just need to create a scatter list of user pages
(these can be gathered with get_user_pages function) and use dma_map_sg()
function. If the dma-mapping support iommu, it can map all these pages
into a single contiguous buffer on device (DMA) address space.
Some additional 'magic' might be required to get access to pages that are
mapped with pure PFN (VM_PFNMAP flag), but imho it still can be done.
I will try to implement this feature in videobuf2-dma-config allocator
together with the next version of my patches for dma-mapping&iommu.
With luck DMA_ATTRIB_NO_KERNEL_MAPPING should remove any lingering
arguments
for trying to map user pages. Given that our ultimate goal here is buffer
sharing, user allocated pages have limited value and appeal. If anything, I
vote that this be a far lower priority compared to the rest of the win you
have here.
We have some rare cases, where requirements like above are also there.
So we require to have flexibility to map user allocated buffers to
devices as well.
Please refer to my email
(http://lists.linaro.org/pipermail/linaro-mm-sig/2011-June/000273.html)
Regards,
Subash
Jordan
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