On 21/02/17 12:57, Robin Murphy wrote:
> On 15/02/17 09:59, Vladimir Murzin wrote:
>> Now, we have dedicated non-cacheable region for consistent DMA
>> operations. However, that region can still be marked as bufferable by
>> MPU, so it'd be safer to have barriers by default.
> 
> Makes sense - plenty of cases want their DMA buffers to still be
> write-combining (e.g. framebuffers have already been mentioned here),
> for which strongly-ordered mappings won't do. Plus you don't exactly
> have a choice if you've no MPU and have fixed Normal attributes for your
> RAM region.
> 
> Reviewed-by: Robin Murphy <[email protected]>

Thanks!

Vladimir

> 
>> Tested-by: Benjamin Gaignard <[email protected]>
>> Tested-by: Andras Szemzo <[email protected]>
>> Tested-by: Alexandre TORGUE <[email protected]>
>> Signed-off-by: Vladimir Murzin <[email protected]>
>> ---
>>  arch/arm/mm/Kconfig | 2 +-
>>  1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
>>
>> diff --git a/arch/arm/mm/Kconfig b/arch/arm/mm/Kconfig
>> index 0b79f12..64a1465c 100644
>> --- a/arch/arm/mm/Kconfig
>> +++ b/arch/arm/mm/Kconfig
>> @@ -1029,7 +1029,7 @@ config ARM_L1_CACHE_SHIFT
>>  
>>  config ARM_DMA_MEM_BUFFERABLE
>>      bool "Use non-cacheable memory for DMA" if (CPU_V6 || CPU_V6K) && 
>> !CPU_V7
>> -    default y if CPU_V6 || CPU_V6K || CPU_V7
>> +    default y if CPU_V6 || CPU_V6K || CPU_V7 || CPU_V7M
>>      help
>>        Historically, the kernel has used strongly ordered mappings to
>>        provide DMA coherent memory.  With the advent of ARMv7, mapping
>>
> 
> 

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