On Tue, May 20, 2014 at 02:41:18PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > On Tuesday 20 May 2014 14:02:43 Thierry Reding wrote: [...] > > Couldn't a single-master IOMMU be windowed? > > Ah, yes. That would actually be like an IBM pSeries, which has a windowed > IOMMU but uses one window per virtual machine. In that case, the window could > be a property of the iommu node though, rather than part of the address > in the link. Does that mean that the IOMMU has one statically configured window which is the same for each virtual machine? That would require some other mechanism to assign separate address spaces to each virtual machine, wouldn't it? But I suspect that if the IOMMU allows that it could be allocated dynamically at runtime. > > Multiple-master IOMMU with fixed associations: > > ---------------------------------------------- > > > > /* multiple-master IOMMU */ > > iommu { > > /* > > * Masters are statically associated with this IOMMU and > > * address translation is always enabled. > > */ > > #iommu-cells = <0>; > > }; > > copied wrong? I guess you mean #address-cells=<0>/#size-cells=<0> here. Yes, I obviously wasn't careful when I copied this over. > > Multiple-master device: > > ----------------------- > > > > /* single-master IOMMU */ > > iommu@1 { > > reg = <1>; > > #address-cells = <0>; > > #size-cells = <0>; > > }; > > > > /* multiple-master IOMMU */ > > iommu@2 { > > reg = <2>; > > #address-cells = <1>; > > #size-cells = <0>; > > }; > > > > /* device with two master interfaces */ > > master { > > iommus = <&/iommu@1>, /* master of the single-master IOMMU */ > > <&/iommu@2 42>; /* ID 42 in multiple-master IOMMU */ > > }; [...] > > Does that sound about right? > > Yes, sounds great. I would probably leave out the Multiple-master device > from the examples, since that seems to be a rather obscure case. Agreed. We can easily add such examples if/when such device start to appear. > I would like to add an explanation about dma-ranges to the binding: > > 8<-------- > The parent bus of the iommu must have a valid "dma-ranges" property > describing how the physical address space of the IOMMU maps into > memory. With physical address space you mean the addresses after translation, not the I/O virtual addresses, right? But even so, how will this work when there are multiple IOMMU devices? What determines which IOMMU is mapped via which entry? Perhaps having multiple IOMMUs implies that there will have to be some partitioning of the parent address space to make sure two IOMMUs don't translate to the same ranges? > A device with an "iommus" property will ignore the "dma-ranges" property > of the parent node and rely on the IOMMU for translation instead. Do we need to consider the case where an IOMMU listed in iommus isn't enabled (status = "disabled")? In that case presumably the device would either not function or may optionally continue to master onto the parent untranslated. > Using an "iommus" property in bus device nodes with "dma-ranges" > specifying how child devices relate to the IOMMU is a possible extension > but is not recommended until this binding gets extended. Just for my understanding, bus device nodes with iommus and dma-ranges properties could be equivalently written by explicitly moving the iommus properties into the child device nodes, right? In which case they should be the same as the other examples. So that concept is a convenience notation to reduce duplication, but doesn't fundamentally introduce any new concept. Thierry
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