DMA coherency in drivers/tty/serial/mpsc.c
Mark Greer
mgreer at animalcreek.com
Wed Jun 26 02:37:22 AEST 2019
On Tue, Jun 25, 2019 at 02:26:41PM +0200, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
> Hi Paul, Dale and Mark (I hope this reaches the right Mark),
Hi Christoph. Yes, you did reach the right Mark. :)
> I've started auditing all users of DMA_ATTR_NON_CONSISTENT ot prepare
> for major API improvements in that area.
>
> One of the odd users is the mpsc ѕerial driver, which allocates DMA
> memory with the above flag, and then actually properly calls
> dma_cache_sync. So far, so good. But it turns out it also has
> "#if defined(CONFIG_PPC32) && !defined(CONFIG_NOT_COHERENT_CACHE)"
> ifdef blocks next to the dma_cache_sync calls that perform cache
> maintainance for platforms that according to the ifdef claim to
> be cache coherent. According to the Kconfig the driver can
> only build if the MV64X60 symbol is set, which is a ppc embedded 6xx
> SOC, which appears to be configurable as either cache coherent, or
> not. But according to the code in the driver at least this device
> always is not cache coherent.
>
> It seems like we need to always mark that platform as potentially
> not coherent, and then use the per-device flag to mark all device
> except for this one as coherent. Or did I miss anything? Maybe
> all this is actually dead code and can go away?
Yeah, the mpsc driver had lots of ugly cache related hacks because of
cache coherency bugs in the early version of the MV64x60 bridge chips
that it was embedded in. That chip is pretty much dead now and I've
removed core support for it from the powerpc tree. Removing the mpsc
driver is on my todo list but I've been busy and lazy. So, to sum it
up, don't spend any more time worrying about it as it should be removed.
I'll post a patch to do that tonight and I'm sorry for any time you've
spent looking at it so far.
Mark
--
More information about the Linuxppc-dev
mailing list