On 9/9/07, Timur Tabi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Dan Williams wrote: > > > This routine implies that there is a piece of code somewhere that > > wants to select which channels it can use. A similar effect can be > > achieved by registering a dma_client with the dmaengine interface > > ('dma_async_client_register'). Then when the client code makes a call > > to 'dma_async_client_chan_request' it receives a 'dma_event_callback' > > for each channel in the system. It will also be asynchronously > > notified of channels entering and leaving the system. The goal is to > > share a common infrastructure for channel management. > > Are you familiar with the "flat device tree" used for PowerPC systems? The > "piece of code somewhere" is the device tree subsystem that parses the device > tree, which is compiled from the .dts files in arch/powerpc/boot/dts. > > The FDT is how PowerPC systems specify hardware configuration. In the case of > 85xx, the FDT contains entries for each DMA device (typically 2), and the > entries contain sub-entries for each DMA channel as well as the address of the > register sets for each channel. > Ahh, ok then this code is replacing what would normally be handled by the PCI bus enumeration code, or the platform device registrations for iop-adma in arch/arm/mach-iop13xx. Sorry for the noise with this comment.
> -- > Timur Tabi > Linux Kernel Developer @ Freescale > - Thanks, Dan _______________________________________________ Linuxppc-dev mailing list Linuxppc-dev@ozlabs.org https://ozlabs.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxppc-dev