On Tue, Dec 5, 2017 at 6:53 PM, Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzk@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, Dec 05, 2017 at 05:43:10PM +0100, Łukasz Stelmach wrote: >> It was <2017-12-05 wto 14:54>, when Stephan Mueller wrote: >> > Am Dienstag, 5. Dezember 2017, 13:35:57 CET schrieb Łukasz Stelmach: >> > >> > Hi Łukasz, >> > >> >> Use memcpy_fromio() instead of custom exynos_rng_copy_random() function >> >> to retrieve generated numbers from the registers of PRNG. >> >> >> >> Remove unnecessary invocation of cpu_relax(). >> >> >> >> Signed-off-by: Łukasz Stelmach <l.stelmach@xxxxxxxxxxx> >> >> --- >> >> drivers/crypto/exynos-rng.c | 36 +++++------------------------------- >> >> 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 31 deletions(-) >> >> >> >> diff --git a/drivers/crypto/exynos-rng.c b/drivers/crypto/exynos-rng.c >> >> index 894ef93ef5ec..002e9d2a83cc 100644 >> >> --- a/drivers/crypto/exynos-rng.c >> >> +++ b/drivers/crypto/exynos-rng.c >> >> [...] >> >> >> @@ -171,6 +143,8 @@ static int exynos_rng_get_random(struct exynos_rng_dev >> >> *rng, { >> >> int retry = EXYNOS_RNG_WAIT_RETRIES; >> >> >> >> + *read = min_t(size_t, dlen, EXYNOS_RNG_SEED_SIZE); >> >> + >> >> if (rng->type == EXYNOS_PRNG_TYPE4) { >> >> exynos_rng_writel(rng, EXYNOS_RNG_CONTROL_START, >> >> EXYNOS_RNG_CONTROL); >> >> @@ -180,8 +154,8 @@ static int exynos_rng_get_random(struct exynos_rng_dev >> >> *rng, } >> >> >> >> while (!(exynos_rng_readl(rng, >> >> - EXYNOS_RNG_STATUS) & EXYNOS_RNG_STATUS_RNG_DONE) && --retry) >> >> - cpu_relax(); >> >> + EXYNOS_RNG_STATUS) & EXYNOS_RNG_STATUS_RNG_DONE) && >> >> + --retry); >> SM> >> SM> Is this related to the patch? >> >> KK> It looks like unrelated change so split it into separate commit with >> KK> explanation why you are changing the common busy-loop pattern. >> KK> exynos_rng_readl() uses relaxed versions of readl() so I would expect >> KK> here cpu_relax(). >> >> Yes. As far as I can tell this gives the major part of the performance >> improvement brought by this patch. > > In that case definitely split and explain... what and why you want to > achieve here. > >> >> The busy loop is not very busy. Every time I checked the loop (w/o >> cpu_relax()) was executed twice (retry was 98) and the operation was >> reliable. I don't see why do we need a memory barrier here. On the other >> hand, I am not sure the whole exynos_rng_get_random() shouldn't be ran >> under a mutex or a spinlock (I don't see anything like this in the upper >> layers of the crypto framework). >> >> The *_relaxed() I/O operations do not enforce memory > > The cpu_relax() is a common pattern for busy-loop. If you want to break > this pattern - please explain why only this part of kernel should not > follow it (and rest of kernel should). > > The other part - this code is already using relaxed versions which might > get you into difficult to debug issues. You mentioned that loop works > reliable after removing the cpu_relax... yeah, it might for 99.999% but > that's not the argument. I remember few emails from Arnd Bergmann > mentioning explicitly to avoid using relaxed versions "just because", > unless it is necessary or really understood. > > The code first writes to control register, then checks for status so you > should have these operations strictly ordered. Therefore I think > cpu_relax() should not be removed. ... or just convert it to readl_poll_timeout() because it makes code more readable, takes care of timeout and you do not have care about specific implementation (whether there should or should not be cpu_relax). Best regards, Krzysztof -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-samsung-soc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html