01.07.2021 21:14, Thierry Reding пишет: > On Tue, Jun 08, 2021 at 06:51:40PM +0200, Thierry Reding wrote: >> On Fri, May 28, 2021 at 06:54:55PM +0200, Thierry Reding wrote: >>> On Thu, May 20, 2021 at 05:03:06PM -0500, Rob Herring wrote: >>>> On Fri, Apr 23, 2021 at 06:32:30PM +0200, Thierry Reding wrote: >>>>> From: Thierry Reding <treding@xxxxxxxxxx> >>>>> >>>>> Reserved memory region phandle references can be accompanied by a >>>>> specifier that provides additional information about how that specific >>>>> reference should be treated. >>>>> >>>>> One use-case is to mark a memory region as needing an identity mapping >>>>> in the system's IOMMU for the device that references the region. This is >>>>> needed for example when the bootloader has set up hardware (such as a >>>>> display controller) to actively access a memory region (e.g. a boot >>>>> splash screen framebuffer) during boot. The operating system can use the >>>>> identity mapping flag from the specifier to make sure an IOMMU identity >>>>> mapping is set up for the framebuffer before IOMMU translations are >>>>> enabled for the display controller. >>>>> >>>>> Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <treding@xxxxxxxxxx> >>>>> --- >>>>> .../reserved-memory/reserved-memory.txt | 21 +++++++++++++++++++ >>>>> include/dt-bindings/reserved-memory.h | 8 +++++++ >>>>> 2 files changed, 29 insertions(+) >>>>> create mode 100644 include/dt-bindings/reserved-memory.h >>>> >>>> Sorry for being slow on this. I have 2 concerns. >>>> >>>> First, this creates an ABI issue. A DT with cells in 'memory-region' >>>> will not be understood by an existing OS. I'm less concerned about this >>>> if we address that with a stable fix. (Though I'm pretty sure we've >>>> naively added #?-cells in the past ignoring this issue.) >>> >>> A while ago I had proposed adding memory-region*s* as an alternative >>> name for memory-region to make the naming more consistent with other >>> types of properties (think clocks, resets, gpios, ...). If we added >>> that, we could easily differentiate between the "legacy" cases where >>> no #memory-region-cells was allowed and the new cases where it was. >>> >>>> Second, it could be the bootloader setting up the reserved region. If a >>>> node already has 'memory-region', then adding more regions is more >>>> complicated compared to adding new properties. And defining what each >>>> memory-region entry is or how many in schemas is impossible. >>> >>> It's true that updating the property gets a bit complicated, but it's >>> not exactly rocket science. We really just need to splice the array. I >>> have a working implemention for this in U-Boot. >>> >>> For what it's worth, we could run into the same issue with any new >>> property that we add. Even if we renamed this to iommu-memory-region, >>> it's still possible that a bootloader may have to update this property >>> if it already exists (it could be hard-coded in DT, or it could have >>> been added by some earlier bootloader or firmware). >>> >>>> Both could be addressed with a new property. Perhaps something like >>>> 'iommu-memory-region = <&phandle>;'. I think the 'iommu' prefix is >>>> appropriate given this is entirely because of the IOMMU being in the >>>> mix. I might feel differently if we had other uses for cells, but I >>>> don't really see it in this case. >>> >>> I'm afraid that down the road we'll end up with other cases and then we >>> might proliferate a number of *-memory-region properties with varying >>> prefixes. >>> >>> I am aware of one other case where we might need something like this: on >>> some Tegra SoCs we have audio processors that will access memory buffers >>> using a DMA engine. These processors are booted from early firmware >>> using firmware from system memory. In order to avoid trashing the >>> firmware, we need to reserve memory. We can do this using reserved >>> memory nodes. However, the audio DMA engine also uses the SMMU, so we >>> need to make sure that the firmware memory is marked as reserved within >>> the SMMU. This is similar to the identity mapping case, but not exactly >>> the same. Instead of creating a 1:1 mapping, we just want that IOVA >>> region to be reserved (i.e. IOMMU_RESV_RESERVED instead of >>> IOMMU_RESV_DIRECT{,_RELAXABLE}). >>> >>> That would also fall into the IOMMU domain, but we can't reuse the >>> iommu-memory-region property for that because then we don't have enough >>> information to decide which type of reservation we need. >>> >>> We could obviously make iommu-memory-region take a specifier, but we >>> could just as well use memory-regions in that case since we have >>> something more generic anyway. >>> >>> With the #memory-region-cells proposal, we can easily extend the cell in >>> the specifier with an additional MEMORY_REGION_IOMMU_RESERVE flag to >>> take that other use case into account. If we than also change to the new >>> memory-regions property name, we avoid the ABI issue (and we gain a bit >>> of consistency while at it). >> >> Ping? Rob, do you want me to add this second use-case to the patch >> series to make it more obvious that this isn't just a one-off thing? Or >> how do we proceed? > > Rob, given that additional use-case, do you want me to run with this > proposal and send out an updated series? What about variant with a "descriptor" properties that will describe each region: fb_desc: display-framebuffer-memory-descriptor { needs-identity-mapping; } display@52400000 { memory-region = <&fb ...>; memory-region-descriptor = <&fb_desc ...>; }; It could be a more flexible/extendible variant.