Re: [RFT PATCH v3 12/27] of/address: Add infrastructure to declare MMIO as non-posted

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 06/03/2021 02.39, Rob Herring wrote:
I'm still a little hesitant to add these properties and having some
default. I worry about a similar situation as 'dma-coherent' where the
assumed default on non-coherent on Arm doesn't work for PowerPC which
defaults coherent. More below on this.

The intent of the default here is that it matches what ioremap() does on other platforms already (where it does not make any claims of being posted, though it could be on some platforms). It could be per-platform what that means... but either way it should be what drivers get today without asking for anything special.

-       return ioremap(res.start, resource_size(&res));
+       if (res.flags & IORESOURCE_MEM_NONPOSTED)
+               return ioremap_np(res.start, resource_size(&res));
+       else
+               return ioremap(res.start, resource_size(&res));

This and the devm variants all scream for a ioremap_extended()
function. IOW, it would be better if the ioremap flavor was a
parameter. Unless we could implement that just for arm64 first, that's
a lot of refactoring...

I agree, but yeah... that's one big refactor to try to do now...

What's the code path using these functions on the M1 where we need to
return 'posted'? It's just downstream PCI mappings (PCI memory space),
right? Those would never hit these paths because they don't have a DT
node or if they do the memory space is not part of it. So can't the
check just be:

bool of_mmio_is_nonposted(struct device_node *np)
{
     return np && of_machine_is_compatible("apple,arm-platform");
}

Yes; the implementation was trying to be generic, but AIUI we don't need this on M1 because the PCI mappings don't go through this codepath, and nothing else needs posted mode. My first hack was something not too unlike this, then I was going to get rid of apple,arm-platform and just have this be a generic mechanism with the properties, but then we added the optimization to not do the lookups on other platforms, and now we're coming full circle... :-)

If you prefer to handle it this way for now I can do it like this. I think we should still have the DT bindings and properties though (even if not used), as they do describe the hardware properly, and in the future we might want to use them instead of having a quirk.

--
Hector Martin (marcan@xxxxxxxxx)
Public Key: https://mrcn.st/pub



[Index of Archives]     [Linux SoC Development]     [Linux Rockchip Development]     [Linux for Synopsys ARC Processors]    
  • [Linux on Unisoc (RDA Micro) SoCs]     [Linux Actions SoC]     [Linux USB Development]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Linux SCSI]     [Yosemite News]

  •   Powered by Linux