On Wed, Jun 27, 2012 at 03:59:07PM +0300, Hiroshi Doyu wrote:
On Wed, 27 Jun 2012 07:14:18 +0200 Thierry Reding thierry.reding@avionic-design.de wrote:
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On Tue, Jun 26, 2012 at 08:48:18PM -0600, Stephen Warren wrote:
On 06/26/2012 08:32 PM, Mark Zhang wrote:
On 06/26/2012 07:46 PM, Mark Zhang wrote:
>> On Tue, 26 Jun 2012 12:55:13 +0200 >> Thierry Reding thierry.reding@avionic-design.de wrote:
...
> I'm not sure I understand how information about the carveout would be > obtained from the IOMMU API, though.
I think that can be similar with current gart implementation. Define carveout as:
carveout { compatible = "nvidia,tegra20-carveout"; size = <0x10000000>; };
Then create a file such like "tegra-carveout.c" to get these definitions and
register itself as platform device's iommu instance.
The carveout isn't a HW object, so it doesn't seem appropriate to define a DT node to represent it.
Yes. But I think it's better to export the size of carveout as a configurable item. So we need to define this somewhere. How about define carveout as a property of gart?
There already exists a way of preventing Linux from using certain chunks of memory; the /memreserve/ syntax. From a brief look at the dtc source, it looks like /memreserve/ entries can have labels, which implies that a property in the GART node could refer to the /memreserve/ entry by phandle in order to know what memory regions to use.
Wasn't the whole point of using a carveout supposed to be a replacement for the GART?
Mostly agree. IIUC, we use both carveout/gart allocated buffers in android/tegra2.
As such I'd think the carveout should rather be a property of the host1x device.
Rather than introducing a new property, how about using "coherent_pool=??M" in the kernel command line if necessary? I think that this carveout size depends on the system usage/load.
I was hoping that we could get away with using the CMA and perhaps initialize it based on device tree content. I agree that the carveout size depends on the use-case, but I still think it makes sense to specify it on a per-board basis.
Thierry