On 07/29/2013 05:39 AM, Hiroshi Doyu wrote: > Stephen Warren <swarren@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote @ Thu, 18 Jul 2013 22:28:42 +0200: > >> On 07/05/2013 04:44 AM, Hiroshi Doyu wrote: >>> This provides the info about which H/W Accelerators are supported on >>> Tegra SoC. This info is passed from DT. This is necessary to have the >>> unified SMMU driver among Tegra SoCs. Instead of using platform data, >>> DT passes "nvidia,swgroup" now. DT is mandatory in Tegra. >> >>> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iommu/nvidia,tegra30-smmu.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iommu/nvidia,tegra30-smmu.txt >> >>> +- nvidia,swgroups: A bitmap of supported HardWare Accelerators(HWA). >>> + Each bit represents one swgroup. The assignments may be found in header >>> + file <dt-bindings/memory/tegra-swgroup.h>. >> >> There needs to be a default for this field if one is not specified so >> that existing DTs continue to work without modification. > > Only enabling PPCS(AHB) can be an option because PPCS has SD/MMC where > rootfs can be located ususally. There's no reason that the root filesystem has to be on SD/MMC. Either way, the DT binding shouldn't be influenced by the root fs location at all. I think more explanation of exactly what this property does and why is required. >> How many cells big is this property? > > 64 I assume that's bits, so 2 cells? To be clear: the document needs to include this information, not just this email thread. >> Is this really a bitmap of HWAs? Surely it's a bitmap of SMMU client >> IDs? > > At least this info can be used for PMC too. How and why? A complete explanation of how the SMMU and PMC are expected to interact is required. The PMC DT binding should include all information related to the PMC; the binding definitions probably shouldn't expect a PMC driver to go grovelling in an SMMU node to find information. > ..... >>> diff --git a/drivers/iommu/tegra-smmu.c b/drivers/iommu/tegra-smmu.c >> >>> @@ -265,7 +265,7 @@ struct smmu_client { >>> struct device *dev; >>> struct list_head list; >>> struct smmu_as *as; >>> - u32 hwgrp; >>> + u64 hwgrp; >> >> Why is that "hwgrp" not "swgrp"? Don't they represent the same >> thing? > > They are same but initial SMMU driver used the term "hwgroup". Should > this be renamed with another patch or can it be left as it is? I thought there had already been a patch to do this rename. Was it not complete? If so, that work should probably be completed. > .... >>> static int __smmu_client_set_hwgrp(struct smmu_client *c, >>> - unsigned long map, int on) >>> + u64 map, int on) >>> { >>> int i; >>> struct smmu_as *as = c->as; >>> @@ -398,12 +400,11 @@ static int __smmu_client_set_hwgrp(struct smmu_client *c, >>> if (!on) >>> map = smmu_client_hwgrp(c); >>> >>> - for_each_set_bit(i, &map, HWGRP_COUNT) { >>> + for_each_set_bit(i, (unsigned long *)&map, >>> + sizeof(map) * BITS_PER_BYTE) { >> >> Why change the type if it just forces you to add this cast? > > u32 map; -> u64 map; > > for_each_set_bit() expects "unsigned long *" for any length of bitmap. Shouldn't the map just be an "unsigned long map[]" then, so no casts are needed anywhere? Equally, that pointer could just be passed to the function rather than copying the data to the stack? -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-tegra" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html