Thanks for your time,
On 02/03/18 16:14, Robin Murphy wrote:
On 02/03/18 14:55, srinivas.kandagatla@xxxxxxxxxx wrote:
From: Srinivas Kandagatla <srinivas.kandagatla@xxxxxxxxxx>
Many of the rpmsg clients like audio drivers need to allocate
dma memory. Make this bus DMA capable so that the child devices
can use dma apis.
AFAICS after 15 minutes in the docs and code, the rpmsg "bus" is a
virtual one based around shared-memory mailbox communication, so I don't
really see how DMA exists in that context - I think maybe that
abstraction needs looking at.
However, from grepping through the DTs it seems at first glance like the
non-trivial things under the "qcom,smd" bus mostly map to actual
platform devices via the "qcom,smd-edge" property - if those platform
devices are the physical DMA masters, they should be the ones used for
DMA API operations.
Currently there are very limited rpmsg devices in the mainline that use
dma. Only one I can think of is wcnss WIFI driver which models up itself
into another layer of platform device. Not sure if the DMA was the
reason to do that.
However am working on audio drivers [1] which I modeled up as children
of the rpmsg bus, so the problem started. There is an IOMMU in between
APPs and DSP which provides audio services.
There are also other projects like FastRPC which have used similar
driver model which ended up with same issues.
It all depends on how you model your driver. Audio case we have a rpmsg
channel which exposes audio functionality. so If we want to use the
iommu/dma operations we have to add another layer of platform device.
Which also means that rpmsg channel notifications have to be passed to
these platform devices in some way.
Am not 100% sure if this correct way to fix the issue.
Signed-off-by: Srinivas Kandagatla <srinivas.kandagatla@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
drivers/rpmsg/rpmsg_core.c | 1 +
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
diff --git a/drivers/rpmsg/rpmsg_core.c b/drivers/rpmsg/rpmsg_core.c
index e84c71f8d6ab..540a3f3567b8 100644
--- a/drivers/rpmsg/rpmsg_core.c
+++ b/drivers/rpmsg/rpmsg_core.c
@@ -472,6 +472,7 @@ struct bus_type rpmsg_bus = {
.uevent = rpmsg_uevent,
.probe = rpmsg_dev_probe,
.remove = rpmsg_dev_remove,
+ .force_dma = true,
Regardless of the above, would you really need to use this brute force
hack instead of just fixing the DTs? I'm struggling to find which
drivers might currently be relying on this :/
This is one of the two issues. dma-ranges might work in this case, but
we still have iommu case.
Robin.
};
EXPORT_SYMBOL(rpmsg_bus);
thanks,
srini
[1]: https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/2/13/719
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