On Wed, 2012-01-04 at 10:44 +0800, Yanfei Wang wrote: > On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 4:33 AM, Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk > <konrad.wilk@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed, Dec 07, 2011 at 10:16:40PM +0800, ustc.mail wrote: > >> Dear all, > >> > >> In NIC driver, to eliminate the overhead of dma_map_single() for DMA > >> packet data, we have statically allocated huge DMA memory buffer ring > >> at once instead of calling dma_map_single() per packet. Considering > >> to further reduce the copy overhead between different NIC(port) ring > >> while forwarding, one packet from a input NIC(port) will be > >> transferred to output NIC(port) with no any copy action. > >> > >> To satisfy this requirement, the packet memory should be mapped into > >> input port and unmapped when leaving input port, then mapped into > >> output port and unmapped later. > >> > >> Whether it's legal to map the same DMA memory into input and output > >> port simultaneously? If it's not, then the zero-copy for packet > >> forwarding is not feasible? > >> > > > > Did you ever a get a response about this? > No. This is probably because no-one really understands what you're asking. As far as mapping memory to PCI devices goes, it's the job of the bridge (or the iommu which may or may not be part of the bridge). A standard iommu tends not to care about devices and functions, so a range once mapped is available to everything behind the bridge. A more secure virtualisation based iommu (like the on in VT-D) does, and tends to map ranges per device. I know of none that map per device and function, but maybe there are. Your question reads like you have a range of memory mapped to a PCI device that you want to use for two different purposes, can you do this? to which the answer is that a standard PCI bridge really doesn't care and it all depends on the mechanics of the actual device. The only wrinkle might be if the two different purposes are on two separate PCI functions of the device and the iommu does care. > > > > Is the output/input port on a seperate device function? Or is it > > just a specific MMIO BAR in your PCI device? > > > Platform: x86, intel nehalem 8Core NUMA, linux 2.6.39, 10G > 82599NIC(two ports per NIC card); > Function: Forwarding packets between different ports. > Targets: Forwarding packets with Zero-Overhead, despite other obstacles. This still doesn't really provide the information needed to elucidate the question. James -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-pci" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html