On 11/26/2012 11:27 AM, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote: > On Mon, Nov 26, 2012 at 11:20:32AM +0100, Per Förlin wrote: >> On 11/22/2012 06:37 PM, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote: >>> On Thu, Nov 22, 2012 at 06:28:30PM +0100, Per Forlin wrote: >>>> On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 5:50 PM, Russell King - ARM Linux >>>> <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 05:13:55PM +0100, Per Forlin wrote: >>>>>> On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 4:38 PM, Russell King - ARM Linux >>>>>> <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>>> On Fri, Oct 12, 2012 at 04:02:02PM +0200, Ulf Hansson wrote: >>>>>>>> /* >>>>>>>> + * Validate mmc prerequisites >>>>>>>> + */ >>>>>>>> +static int mmci_validate_data(struct mmci_host *host, >>>>>>>> + struct mmc_data *data) >>>>>>>> +{ >>>>>>>> + if (!data) >>>>>>>> + return 0; >>>>>>>> + >>>>>>>> + if (!host->variant->non_power_of_2_blksize && >>>>>>>> + !is_power_of_2(data->blksz)) { >>>>>>>> + dev_err(mmc_dev(host->mmc), >>>>>>>> + "unsupported block size (%d bytes)\n", data->blksz); >>>>>>>> + return -EINVAL; >>>>>>>> + } >>>>>>>> + >>>>>>>> + if (data->sg->offset & 3) { >>>>>>>> + dev_err(mmc_dev(host->mmc), >>>>>>>> + "unsupported alginment (0x%x)\n", data->sg->offset); >>>>>>>> + return -EINVAL; >>>>>>>> + } >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Why? What's the reasoning behind this suddenly introduced restriction? >>>>>>> readsl()/writesl() copes just fine with non-aligned pointers. It may be >>>>>>> that your DMA engine can not, but that's no business interfering with >>>>>>> non-DMA transfers, and no reason to fail such transfers. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> If your DMA engine can't do that then its your DMA engine code which >>>>>>> should refuse to prepare the transfer. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Yes, that means problems with the way things are ordered - or it needs a >>>>>>> proper API where DMA engine can export these kinds of properties. >>>>>> The alignment constraint is related to PIO, sg_miter and that FIFO >>>>>> access must be done with 4 bytes. >>>>> >>>>> Total claptrap. No it isn't. >>>>> >>>>> - sg_miter just deals with bytes, and number of bytes transferred; there >>>>> is no word assumptions in that code. Indeed many ATA disks transfer >>>>> by half-word accesses so such a restriction would be insane. >>>>> >>>>> - the FIFO access itself needs to be 32-bit words, so readsl or writesl >>>>> (or their io* equivalents must be used). >>>>> >>>>> - but - and this is the killer item to your argument as I said above - >>>>> readsl and writesl _can_ take misaligned pointers and cope with them >>>>> fine. >>>>> >>>>> The actual alignment of the buffer address is totally irrelevant here. >>>>> >>>>> What isn't irrelevant is the _number_ of bytes to be transferred, but >>>>> that's something totally different and completely unrelated from >>>>> data->sg->offset. >>>> Let's try again :) >>>> >>>> Keep in mind that the mmc -block layer is aligned so from that aspect >>>> everything is fine. >>>> SDIO may have any length or alignment but sg-len is always 1. >>>> >>>> There is just one sg-element and one continues buffer. >>>> >>>> sg-miter splits the continues buffer in chunks that may not be aligned >>>> with 4 byte size. It depends on the start address alignment of the >>>> buffer. >>>> >>>> Is it more clear now? >>> >>> Is this more clear: you may be passed a single buffer which is misaligned. >>> We cope with that just fine. There is *no* reason to reject that transfer >>> because readsl/writesl cope just fine with it. >>> >> The MMCI driver doesn't support alignment smaller than 4 bytes (it may >> result in data corruption). > > Explain yourself. That's what's lacking here. I'm explaining why I > think you're wrong, but you're just asserting all the time that I'm > wrong without giving any real details. > >> There are two options >> 1. Either one should fix the driver to support it. Currently the driver >> only supports miss-alignment of the last sg-miter buffer. >> 2. Or be kind to inform the user that the alignment is not supported. > > Look, it's very very simple. > > If you have a multi-sg transfer, and the pointer starts off being > misaligned, the first transfer to the end of the page _MAY_ be a > non-word aligned number of bytes. _THAT_ is what you should be checking. > _THAT_ is what the limitation is in the driver. _NOT_ that the pointer > is misaligned. > There will be no multi-sg transfer that is misaligned because SDIO-fwk set the sg-length to 1. Still the transfer may be multi-PAGE with sg-length 1 which is something that mmci driver cannot handle. The intention of "data->sg->offset & 3" is to check for misaligned data. What would you replace this check with? Thanks Per -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-mmc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html