On Sat, Dec 3, 2016 at 11:39 AM, Lorenzo Pieralisi <lorenzo.pieralisi@xxxxxxx> wrote: > On Sat, Dec 03, 2016 at 03:11:09AM +0100, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: >> On Fri, Dec 2, 2016 at 4:38 PM, Lorenzo Pieralisi >> <lorenzo.pieralisi@xxxxxxx> wrote: >> > Rafael, Mark, Suravee, >> > >> > On Mon, Nov 21, 2016 at 10:01:39AM +0000, Lorenzo Pieralisi wrote: >> >> On DT based systems, the of_dma_configure() API implements DMA >> >> configuration for a given device. On ACPI systems an API equivalent to >> >> of_dma_configure() is missing which implies that it is currently not >> >> possible to set-up DMA operations for devices through the ACPI generic >> >> kernel layer. >> >> >> >> This patch fills the gap by introducing acpi_dma_configure/deconfigure() >> >> calls that for now are just wrappers around arch_setup_dma_ops() and >> >> arch_teardown_dma_ops() and also updates ACPI and PCI core code to use >> >> the newly introduced acpi_dma_configure/acpi_dma_deconfigure functions. >> >> >> >> Since acpi_dma_configure() is used to configure DMA operations, the >> >> function initializes the dma/coherent_dma masks to sane default values >> >> if the current masks are uninitialized (also to keep the default values >> >> consistent with DT systems) to make sure the device has a complete >> >> default DMA set-up. >> > >> > I spotted a niggle that unfortunately was hard to spot (and should not >> > be a problem per se but better safe than sorry) and I am not comfortable >> > with it. >> > >> > Following commit d0562674838c ("ACPI / scan: Parse _CCA and setup >> > device coherency") in acpi_bind_one() we check if the acpi_device >> > associated with a device just added supports DMA, first it was >> > done with acpi_check_dma() and then commit 1831eff876bd ("device >> > property: ACPI: Make use of the new DMA Attribute APIs") changed >> > it to acpi_get_dma_attr(). >> > >> > The subsequent check (attr != DEV_DMA_NOT_SUPPORTED) is always true >> > on _any_ acpi device we pass to acpi_bind_one() on x86, which was >> > fine because we used it to call arch_setup_dma_ops(), which is a nop >> > on x86. On ARM64 a _CCA method is required to define if a device >> > supports DMA so (attr != DEV_DMA_NOT_SUPPORTED) may well be false. >> > >> > Now, acpi_bind_one() is used to bind an acpi_device to its physical >> > node also for pseudo-devices like cpus and memory nodes. For those >> > objects, on x86, attr will always be != DEV_DMA_NOT_SUPPORTED. >> > >> > So far so good, because on x86 arch_setup_dma_ops() is empty code. >> > >> > With this patch, I use the (attr != DEV_DMA_NOT_SUPPORTED) check >> > to call acpi_dma_configure() which is basically a nop on x86 except >> > that it sets up the dma_mask/coherent_dma_mask to a sane default value >> > (after all we are setting up DMA for the device so it makes sense to >> > initialize the masks there if they were unset since we are configuring >> > DMA for the device in question) for the given device. >> > >> > Problem is, as per the explanation above, we are also setting the >> > default dma masks for pseudo-devices (eg CPUs) that were previously >> > untouched, it should not be a problem per-se but I am not comfortable >> > with that, honestly it does not make much sense. >> > >> > An easy "fix" would be to move the default dma masks initialization out >> > of acpi_dma_configure() (as it was in previous patch versions of this >> > series - I moved it to acpi_dma_configure() just a consolidation point >> > for initializing the masks instead of scattering them in every >> > acpi_dma_configure caller) I can send this as a fix-up patch to Joerg if >> > we think that's the right thing to do (or I can send it to Rafael later >> > when the code is in the merged depending on the timing) just let me >> > know please. >> >> Why can't arch_setup_dma_ops() set those masks too? > > Because the dma masks set-up is done by the caller (see > of_dma_configure()) according to firmware configuration or > platform data knowledge. I wanted to replicate the of_dma_configure() > interface on ACPI for obvious reasons (on ARM systems), I stopped > short of adding ACPI code to mirror of_dma_get_range() equivalent > (through the _DMA object) but I am really really nervous about changing > the code path on x86 because in theory all is fine, in practice even > just setting the masks to sane values can have unexpected consequences, > I just can't know (that's why I wasn't doing it in the first iterations > of this series). > > Side note: DT with of_dma_configure() and ACPI with > acpi_create_platform_device() set the default dma mask for all > platform devices already _regardless_ of what they really are, though > arguably acpi_bind_one() touches ways more devices. > > I really think that removing the default dma masks settings from > acpi_dma_configure() is the safer thing to do for the time being (or > moving acpi_dma_configure() to acpi_create_platform_device(), where the > DMA masks are set-up by default by core ACPI. Mark, Suravee, what was > the rationale behind calling arch_setup_dma_ops() in acpi_bind_one() ?) Alternatively, you can add one more arch wrapper that will be a no-op on x86 and that will set up the default masks and call arch_setup_dma_ops() on ARM. Then, you can invoke that from acpi_dma_configure(). Or make the definition of acpi_dma_configure() itself depend on the architecture. Thanks, Rafael -- 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