On Tue, 2007-11-06 at 07:50 +0100, Stefan Roese wrote: > On Monday 05 November 2007, Josh Boyer wrote: > > > I am attempting to access the CPLD on the AMCC Sequoia board from > > > user-land. I open /dev/mem, and mmap it, then try to access the > > > resulting pointer. That works fine when accessing physical addresses > > > that correspond to RAM, but as soon as I try to access the CPLD at > > > physical address 0xc0000000, I get an infinite machine check. > > > > That's because the CPLD is actually at physical address 0x1C0000000. > > Yay for 36-bit physical addresses. > > Right. Are you using arch/ppc or arch/powerpc? If it's arch/ppc you could > give the following patch a try: > > @@ -275,6 +275,14 @@ > { > size_t size = vma->vm_end - vma->vm_start; > > +#if defined(CONFIG_44x) && !defined(CONFIG_PPC_MERGE) > + /* > + * 2006-08-07: sr > + * Needed on 44x-er systems for 36bit addresses (like pci on 440gx) > + */ > + vma->vm_pgoff = (fixup_bigphys_addr(vma->vm_pgoff << PAGE_SHIFT, > size) >> PAGE_SHIFT); > +#endif > + > if (!valid_mmap_phys_addr_range(vma->vm_pgoff, size)) > return -EINVAL;
I think we need to ditch the bigphys fixup stuff and come up with a way to make /dev/mem work with the actual 36 bits offsets (after all, it's all pgoff, it should work). The other problem is X of course... 32 bits X server currently cannot cope with physical addresses > 32 bits at all. They will just blow up or randomly scribble over /dev/mem. The solution is libpciaccess and the new pci-rework branch of X which uses it, but I haven't had a chance to test that properly yet on 4xx. Ben. _______________________________________________ Linuxppc-dev mailing list Linuxppc-dev@ozlabs.org https://ozlabs.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxppc-dev