[PATCH] of: Add generic device tree DMA helpers
Nicolas Ferre
nicolas.ferre at atmel.com
Wed Mar 21 01:54:45 EST 2012
On 03/19/2012 03:45 PM, Grant Likely :
> On Mon, 19 Mar 2012 14:30:05 +0100, Nicolas Ferre <nicolas.ferre at atmel.com> wrote:
>> On 03/17/2012 10:40 AM, Grant Likely :
>>> On Thu, 15 Mar 2012 09:38:10 +0100, Nicolas Ferre <nicolas.ferre at atmel.com> wrote:
>>>> +struct of_dma {
>>>> + struct list_head of_dma_controllers;
>>>> + struct device_node *of_node;
>>>> + int of_dma_n_cells;
>>>> + int (*of_dma_xlate)(struct of_phandle_args *dma_spec, void *data);
>>>> +};
>>>
>>> This _xlate is nearly useless as a generic API. It solves the problem for
>>> the specific case where the driver is hard-coded to know which DMA engine
>>> to talk to, but since the returned data doesn't provide any context, it
>>> isn't useful if there are multiple DMA controllers to choose from.
>>
>> You mean, if there is no DMA controller phandle specified in the
>> property?
>
> No; I'm assuming that dma-channel properties will alwasy have a
> phandle to the dma controller node.
>
>> I think that it is not the purpose of this API to choose a DMA
>> controller, Nor to provide a channel. The only purpose of this API is to
>> give a HW request to be used by a DMA slave driver. This slave should
>> already have a channel to use and a controller to talk to.
>
> Then where is the function that finds the reference to the DMA
> controller? I don't understand why it would be useful to decode that
> separately.
>
>>> The void *data pointer must be replaced with a typed structure so that
>>> context can be returned.
>>
>> I am not sure to follow you entirely... How do I address the fact that
>> several types of request value can be returned then?
>>
>> BTW, can we imagine a phandle property with a sting as a argument?
>> should it be written this way?
>> dma-request = <&testdmac1>, "slave-rx", "slave-tx";
>
> No, I'm not suggesting that. Mixing phandles and strings in a single
> property is possible but ugly. The phandle-args pattern which uses
> zero or more cells as arguments should be used.
>
>>
>> If yes, the of_parse_phandle_with_args() is not working on this type...
>
> Right; of_parse_phandle_with_args() should do the job.
>
>>
>> (I realize that there seems to be no way out for a generic API: maybe we
>> should move to one or two cases to address and concentrate on them).
>
> The way I read this patch, the xlate function returns a single
> integer representing the DMA request number, but it doesn't provide
> any data about *which* dma controller is associated with that channel.
> The result of xlate needs to be something like a dma_chan reference
> that identifies both the DMA engine and the channel/request on that
> dma engine.
>
> [...]
>>>> +/**
>>>> + * of_dma_xlate_onenumbercell() - Generic DMA xlate for direct one cell bindings
>>>> + *
>>>> + * Device Tree DMA translation function which works with one cell bindings
>>>> + * where the cell values map directly to the hardware request number understood
>>>> + * by the DMA controller.
>>>> + */
>>>> +int of_dma_xlate_onenumbercell(struct of_phandle_args *dma_spec, void *dma_req)
>>>> +{
>>>> + if (!dma_spec)
>>>> + return -EINVAL;
>>>> + if (WARN_ON(dma_spec->args_count != 1))
>>>> + return -EINVAL;
>>>> + *(int *)dma_req = dma_spec->args[0];
>>>
>>> Following on from comment above; the void *dma_req parameter is dangerous. How
>>> does this function know that it has been passed an int* pointer?
>>
>> Well, that is a drawback that comes from having to address generic
>> cases.
>
> Not if you do it right. If a specific data structure is returned,
> then there can be context attached as to what the data means and which
> dma controller knows how to parse it.
>
>> But anyway, if the DMA controller decide to register a .xlate()
>> function that returns an integer, the slave driver that will ask a
>> "request line" to this DMA controller will be aware that an integer has
>> to be passed to of_get_dma_request().
>
> The problem still remains; I don't see how the dma slave can figure
> out *which* dma controller it needs to talk to.
Is not it what the phandle to the dma controller is made for?
Bye,
--
Nicolas Ferre
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