Hi John, On Tue, Sep 28, 2010 at 6:36 AM, John Baldwin <j...@freebsd.org> wrote: > On Monday, September 27, 2010 5:13:03 pm Neel Natu wrote: >> Hi John, >> >> Thanks for reviewing this. >> >> On Mon, Sep 27, 2010 at 8:04 AM, John Baldwin <j...@freebsd.org> wrote: >> > On Friday, September 24, 2010 9:00:44 pm Neel Natu wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> >> >> This patch fixes the bogus error message from bus_dmamem_alloc() about >> >> the buffer not being aligned properly. >> >> >> >> The problem is that the check is against a virtual address as opposed >> >> to the physical address. contigmalloc() makes guarantees about >> >> the alignment of physical addresses but not the virtual address >> >> mapping it. >> >> >> >> Any objections if I commit this patch? >> > >> > Hmmm, I guess you are doing super-page alignment rather than sub-page >> > alignment? In general I thought the busdma code only handled sub-page >> > alignment and doesn't fully handle requests for super-page alignment. >> > >> >> Yes, this is for allocations with sizes greater than PAGE_SIZE and >> alignment requirements also greater than a PAGE_SIZE. >> >> > For example, since it insists on walking individual pages at a time, if you >> > had an alignment setting of 4 pages and passed in a single, aligned 4-page >> > buffer, bus_dma would actually bounce the last 3 pages so that each >> > individual >> > page is 4-page aligned. At least, I think that is what would happen. >> > >> >> I think you are referring to bus_dmamap_load() operation that would >> follow the bus_dmamem_alloc(), right? The memory allocated by >> bus_dmamem_alloc() does not need to be bounced. In fact, the dmamap >> pointer returned by bus_dmamem_alloc() is NULL. >> >> At least for the amd64 implementation there is code in >> _bus_dmamap_load_buffer() which will coalesce individual dma segments >> if they satisfy 'boundary' and 'segsize' constraints. > > So the problem is earlier in the routine where it does this: > > /* > * Get the physical address for this segment. > */ > if (pmap) > curaddr = pmap_extract(pmap, vaddr); > else > curaddr = pmap_kextract(vaddr); > > /* > * Compute the segment size, and adjust counts. > */ > max_sgsize = MIN(buflen, dmat->maxsegsz); > sgsize = PAGE_SIZE - ((vm_offset_t)curaddr & PAGE_MASK); > if (map->pagesneeded != 0 && run_filter(dmat, curaddr)) { > sgsize = roundup2(sgsize, dmat->alignment); > sgsize = MIN(sgsize, max_sgsize); > curaddr = add_bounce_page(dmat, map, vaddr, sgsize); > } else { > sgsize = MIN(sgsize, max_sgsize); > } > > If you have a map that does need bouncing, then it will split up the pages. > It happens to work for bus_dmamem_alloc() because that returns a NULL map > which doesn't bounce. But if you had a PCI device which supported only > 32-bit addresses on a 64-bit machine with an aligned, 4 page buffer above > 4GB and did a bus_dma_map_load() on that buffer, it would get split up into > 4 separate 4 page-aligned pages. >
You are right. I assume that you are ok with the patch and the discussion above was an FYI, right? best Neel > -- > John Baldwin > _______________________________________________ freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hackers-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"