Hi Brice, Sorry this review is based on your previous submission, I just noticed it was still sitting in my mailbox. Please ignore anything that has been fixed in the meantime :)
> +/* > + * Set of routunes to get a new receive buffer. Any buffer which > + * crosses a 4KB boundary must start on a 4KB boundary due to PCIe > + * wdma restrictions. We also try to align any smaller allocation to > + * at least a 16 byte boundary for efficiency. We assume the linux > + * memory allocator works by powers of 2, and will not return memory > + * smaller than 2KB which crosses a 4KB boundary. If it does, we fall > + * back to allocating 2x as much space as required. > + * > + * We intend to replace large (>4KB) skb allocations by using > + * pages directly and building a fraglist in the near future. > + */ You go to a lot of trouble to align things. One thing on ppc64 is that we really want to start all DMA writes on a cacheline boundary. We enforce that in network drivers by making NET_IP_ALIGN = 0 and having the drivers do: skb_reserve(skb, NET_IP_ALIGN); It sounds like your small allocations will be only aligned to 16 bytes. > + mgp->cmd = pci_alloc_consistent(pdev, sizeof(*mgp->cmd), &mgp->cmd_bus); Id suggest using the dma API instead of the pci API. We have seen machines in the field that have failed large pci_alloc_consistent calls because it always asks for GFP_ATOMIC memory (it presumes the worst). The dma API allows you to pass a GFP_ flag in which will have a much better chance of succeeding when you dont need GFP_ATOMIC memory. > +#ifdef CONFIG_MTRR > + mgp->mtrr = mtrr_add(mgp->iomem_base, mgp->board_span, > + MTRR_TYPE_WRCOMB, 1); > +#endif ... > + mgp->sram = ioremap(mgp->iomem_base, mgp->board_span); Not sure how we are meant to specify write through in drivers. Any ideas Ben? Anton - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html