On Thu, Jun 13, 2019 at 5:20 AM Bjorn Helgaas <helgaas@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, Jun 11, 2019 at 10:12:53PM +0800, John Garry wrote: > > Currently when accessing logical indirect PIO addresses in > > logic_{in, out}{,s}, we first ensure that the region is registered. > > I think logic_pio is specifically concerned with I/O port space, so > it's a little bit unfortunate that we named this "PIO". > > PIO is a general term for "Programmed I/O", which just means the CPU > is involved in each transfer, as opposed to DMA. The transfers can be > to either MMIO or I/O port space. > > So this ends up being a little confusing because I think you mean > "Port I/O", not "Programmed I/O". I think the terms that John uses are more common: I would also assume that "PIO" (regardless of whether you expand it as Port or Programmed I/O) refers only to inb/outb and PCI/ISA/LPC I/O space, and is distinct from "MMIO", which refers to the readl/writel accessors and PCI memory space. That is consistent with the usage across at least the x86, powerpc and ia64 architectures when they refer to PIO. Arnd