On Tuesday 07 October 2014 13:06:59 Lorenzo Pieralisi wrote: > On Wed, Oct 01, 2014 at 10:38:45AM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > [...] > > > pci_mmap_page_range could either get generalized some more in an attempt > > to have a __weak default implementation that works on ARM, or it could > > be changed to lose the dependency on pci_sys_data instead. In either > > case, the change would involve using the generic pci_host_bridge_window > > list. > > On ARM pci_mmap_page_range requires pci_sys_data to retrieve its > mem_offset parameter. I had a look, and I do not understand *why* > it is required in that function, so I am asking. That function > is basically used to map PCI resources to userspace, IIUC, through > /proc or /sysfs file mappings. As far as I understand those mappings > expect VMA pgoff to be the CPU address when files representing resources > are mmapped from /proc and 0 when mmapped from /sys (I mean from > userspace, then VMA pgoff should be updated by the kernel to map the > resource). Applying the mem_offset is certainly the more intuitive way, since that lets you read the PCI BAR values from a device and access the device with the appropriate offsets. > Question is: why pci_mmap_page_range() should apply an additional > shift to the VMA pgoff based on pci_sys_data.mem_offset, which represents > the offset from cpu->bus offset. I do not understand that. PowerPC > does not seem to apply that fix-up (in PowerPC __pci_mmap_make_offset there > is commented out code which prevents the pci_mem_offset shift to be > applied). I think it all boils down to what the userspace interface is > expecting when the memory areas are mmapped, if anyone has comments on > this that is appreciated. The important part is certainly that whatever transformation is done by pci_resource_to_user() gets undone by __pci_mmap_make_offset(). In case of PowerPC and Microblaze, the mem_offset handling is commented out in both, to work around X11 trying to use the same values on /dev/mem. However, they do have the respective fixup for io_offset. sparc applies the offset in both places for both io_offset and mem_offset. xtensa applies only io_offset in __pci_mmap_make_offset but neither in pci_resource_to_user. This probably works because the mem_offset is always zero there. mips applies a different fixup (for 36-bit addressing), but not the mem_offset. Every other architecture applies no offset here, neither in __pci_mmap_make_offset/pci_mmap_page_range nor in pci_resource_to_user The only hint I could find for how the ARM version came to be is from the historic kernel tree git log for linux-2.5.42, which added the current code as 2002/10/13 11:05:47+01:00 rmk [ARM] Update pcibios_enable_device, supply pci_mmap_page_range() Update pcibios_enable_device to only enable requested resources, mainly for IDE. Supply a pci_mmap_page_range() function to allow user space to mmap PCI regions. At that point, only two platforms had a nonzero mem_offset: footbridge/dc21285 and integrator/pci_v3. Both were using VGA, and presumably used this to make X work. (rmk might remember details). The code at the time matched what powerpc and sparc did, but then both implemented pci_resource_to_user() in order for libpciaccess to work correctly (bcea1db16b for sparc, 463ce0e103f for powerpc), and later powerpc changed it again to not apply the offset in pci_resource_to_user or pci_mmap_page_range in 396a1a5832ae. Arnd -- 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