Hi Tony, On Mon, Jan 5, 2015 at 11:48 PM, Tony Lindgren <tony at atomide.com> wrote: > * Abhilash Kesavan <kesavan.abhilash at gmail.com> [141217 04:37]: >> Hi, >> >> On Thu, Dec 11, 2014 at 8:28 PM, Catalin Marinas >> <catalin.marinas at arm.com> wrote: >> > On Thu, Dec 11, 2014 at 11:40:46AM +0000, Philipp Zabel wrote: >> >> Hi Will, >> >> >> >> Am Donnerstag, den 11.12.2014, 10:39 +0000 schrieb Will Deacon: >> >> > On Thu, Dec 11, 2014 at 10:08:33AM +0000, Philipp Zabel wrote: >> >> > > Hi Abhilash, >> >> > > >> >> > > Am Donnerstag, den 11.12.2014, 08:28 +0530 schrieb Abhilash Kesavan: >> >> > > > Currently, the SRAM allocator returns device memory via ioremap. >> >> > > > This causes issues on ARM64 when the internal SoC SRAM allocated by >> >> > > > the generic sram driver is used for audio playback. The destination >> >> > > > buffer address (which is ioremapped SRAM) is not 64-bit aligned for >> >> > > > certain streams (e.g. 44.1k sampling rate). In such cases we get >> >> > > > unhandled alignment faults. Use ioremap_wc in place of ioremap which >> >> > > > gives us normal non-cacheable memory instead of device memory. >> >> > > >> >> > > Could this break the omap_bus_sync() implementation in >> >> > > arch/arm/mach-omap2/omap4-common.c? >> >> > > >> >> > > void omap_bus_sync(void) >> >> > > { >> >> > > if (dram_sync && sram_sync) { >> >> > > writel_relaxed(readl_relaxed(dram_sync), dram_sync); >> >> > > writel_relaxed(readl_relaxed(sram_sync), sram_sync); >> >> > > isb(); >> >> > > } >> >> > > } >> >> > > >> >> > > It is used in wmb() and omap_do_wfi() to drain interconnect write >> >> > > buffers on omap4/5. If sram_sync is mapped with write-combining, could >> >> > > the last write to sram_sync stay stuck in the write-combining buffer >> >> > > until after the function returns? >> >> > >> >> > I think you have that issue anyway, since you can get an early write >> >> > response even if you use ioremap. Does the write to sram_sync have >> >> > side-effects that we need to wait for? >> >> >> >> [Added Tony Lindgren and Santosh Shilimkar to Cc:] >> >> I don't know. >> > >> > In addition to Will's question, do you care about the access size? >> > ioremap() returns Device memory which is bufferable (early >> > acknowledgement) but it guarantees the access size. With write >> > combining, you may get a different access size than requested. >> >> From the existing dts files, omap, imx, rockchip and exynos seem to be >> the only users of the sram allocator code. I have tested this on >> Exynos5420, Exynos5800 and Exynos7; there is no change in behavior >> seen on these boards. Tested-by for other SoCs would be appreciated. > > Sorry for the delay, these seems to boot OK on omap4, so from that > point of view: > > Tested-by: Tony Lindgren <tony at atomide.com> Thanks a lot for testing this. If someone with imx and rockchip boards could help test this out, then we could look to get this in. Regards, Abhilash