On Friday, August 19, 2016 7:32:26 PM CEST Thierry Reding wrote: > +static bool tegra_bpmp_master_acked(struct tegra_bpmp_channel *channel) > +{ > + void *frame; > + > + frame = tegra_ivc_read_get_next_frame(channel->ivc); > + if (IS_ERR_OR_NULL(frame)) { > + channel->ib = NULL; > + return false; > + } > + > + channel->ib = frame; > + > + return true; > +} Something is wrong with your API if you need IS_ERR_OR_NULL(). If you can return NULL, use that for all error. Alternatively make sure that you never return NULL > + > +static int tegra_bpmp_wait_ack(struct tegra_bpmp_channel *channel) > +{ > + unsigned long timeout = channel->bpmp->soc->channels.cpu_tx.timeout; > + ktime_t start, now; > + > + start = ns_to_ktime(local_clock()); > + > + do { > + if (tegra_bpmp_master_acked(channel)) > + return 0; > + > + now = ns_to_ktime(local_clock()); > + } while (ktime_us_delta(now, start) < timeout); > + > + return -ETIMEDOUT; > +} local_clock() is not guaranteed to be in nanoseconds, why not use ktime_get() instead? ktime_us_delta() is a bit slow because of the 64-bit division, you could multiply timeout by NSEC_PER_USEC instead and do a straight comparison. ktime_t end = ktime_add_us(ktime_get(), timeout); do { ... } while (ktime_before(ktime_get(), end); > diff --git a/include/soc/tegra/bpmp-abi.h b/include/soc/tegra/bpmp-abi.h > new file mode 100644 > index 000000000000..0aaef5960e29 > --- /dev/null > +++ b/include/soc/tegra/bpmp-abi.h > +#ifndef _ABI_BPMP_ABI_H_ > +#define _ABI_BPMP_ABI_H_ > + > +#ifdef LK > +#include <stdint.h> > +#endif > + > +#ifndef __ABI_PACKED > +#define __ABI_PACKED __attribute__((packed)) > +#endif > + > +#ifdef NO_GCC_EXTENSIONS > +#define EMPTY char empty; > +#define EMPTY_ARRAY 1 > +#else > +#define EMPTY > +#define EMPTY_ARRAY 0 > +#endif > + > +#ifndef __UNION_ANON > +#define __UNION_ANON > +#endif Maybe keep these all out of the kernel? > + > +/** > + * @ingroup MRQ_Format > + * @brief header for an MRQ message > + * > + * Provides the MRQ number for the MRQ message: #mrq. The remainder of > + * the MRQ message is a payload (immediately following the > + * mrq_request) whose format depends on mrq. > + * > + * @todo document the flags > + */ What's the deal with the odd documentation format? > +struct mrq_request { > + /** @brief MRQ number of the request */ > + uint32_t mrq; > + /** @brief flags for the request */ > + uint32_t flags; > +} __ABI_PACKED; Marking the structure as packed may result in byte-wise access, depending on compiler flags. Is that what you intended? The structure is fully packed already, so you won't avoid any padding here. > +/** > + * @addtogroup Debugfs > + * @{ > + * > + * The BPMP firmware implements a pseudo-filesystem called > + * debugfs. Any driver within the firmware may register with debugfs > + * to expose an arbitrary set of "files" in the filesystem. When > + * software on the CPU writes to a debugfs file, debugfs passes the > + * written data to a callback provided by the driver. When software on > + * the CPU reads a debugfs file, debugfs queries the driver for the > + * data to return to the CPU. The intention of the debugfs filesystem > + * is to provide information useful for debugging the system at > + * runtime. > + * > + * @note The files exposed via debugfs are not part of the > + * BPMP firmware's ABI. debugfs files may be added or removed in any > + * given version of the firmware. Typically the semantics of a debugfs > + * file are consistent from version to version but even that is not > + * guaranteed. > + * > + * @} > + */ > +/** @ingroup Debugfs */ > +enum mrq_debugfs_commands { > + CMD_DEBUGFS_READ = 1, > + CMD_DEBUGFS_WRITE = 2, > + CMD_DEBUGFS_DUMPDIR = 3, > + CMD_DEBUGFS_MAX > +}; > + > +/** > + * @ingroup Debugfs > + * @brief parameters for CMD_DEBUGFS_READ/WRITE command > + */ > +struct cmd_debugfs_fileop_request { > + /** @brief physical address pointing at filename */ > + uint32_t fnameaddr; > + /** @brief length in bytes of filename buffer */ > + uint32_t fnamelen; > + /** @brief physical address pointing to data buffer */ > + uint32_t dataaddr; > + /** @brief length in bytes of data buffer */ > + uint32_t datalen; > +} __ABI_PACKED; > If the ABI is version specific, maybe add the firmware version name to the structure definition? > +struct cmd_clk_set_rate_request { > + int32_t unused; > + int64_t rate; > +} __ABI_PACKED; This structure actually has a non-aligned struct member, but you can write that as struct cmd_clk_set_rate_request { int32_t unused; int64_t rate; } __attribute__((packed, aligned(4))); to still use a default four-byte alignment. Arnd -- 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