1 ========================= 2 Dynamic DMA mapping Guide 3 ========================= 4 5 :Author: David S. Miller <davem@redhat.com> 6 :Author: Richard Henderson <rth@cygnus.com> 7 :Author: Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com> 8 9 This is a guide to device driver writers on how to use the DMA API 10 with example pseudo-code. For a concise description of the API, see 11 Documentation/core-api/dma-api.rst. 12 13 CPU and DMA addresses 14 ===================== 15 16 There are several kinds of addresses involved in the DMA API, and it's 17 important to understand the differences. 18 19 The kernel normally uses virtual addresses. Any address returned by 20 kmalloc(), vmalloc(), and similar interfaces is a virtual address and can 21 be stored in a ``void *``. 22 23 The virtual memory system (TLB, page tables, etc.) translates virtual 24 addresses to CPU physical addresses, which are stored as "phys_addr_t" or 25 "resource_size_t". The kernel manages device resources like registers as 26 physical addresses. These are the addresses in /proc/iomem. The physical 27 address is not directly useful to a driver; it must use ioremap() to map 28 the space and produce a virtual address. 29 30 I/O devices use a third kind of address: a "bus address". If a device has 31 registers at an MMIO address, or if it performs DMA to read or write system 32 memory, the addresses used by the device are bus addresses. In some 33 systems, bus addresses are identical to CPU physical addresses, but in 34 general they are not. IOMMUs and host bridges can produce arbitrary 35 mappings between physical and bus addresses. 36 37 From a device's point of view, DMA uses the bus address space, but it may 38 be restricted to a subset of that space. For example, even if a system 39 supports 64-bit addresses for main memory and PCI BARs, it may use an IOMMU 40 so devices only need to use 32-bit DMA addresses. 41 42 Here's a picture and some examples:: 43 44 CPU CPU Bus 45 Virtual Physical Address 46 Address Address Space 47 Space Space 48 49 +-------+ +------+ +------+ 50 | | |MMIO | Offset | | 51 | | Virtual |Space | applied | | 52 C +-------+ --------> B +------+ ----------> +------+ A 53 | | mapping | | by host | | 54 +-----+ | | | | bridge | | +--------+ 55 | | | | +------+ | | | | 56 | CPU | | | | RAM | | | | Device | 57 | | | | | | | | | | 58 +-----+ +-------+ +------+ +------+ +--------+ 59 | | Virtual |Buffer| Mapping | | 60 X +-------+ --------> Y +------+ <---------- +------+ Z 61 | | mapping | RAM | by IOMMU 62 | | | | 63 | | | | 64 +-------+ +------+ 65 66 During the enumeration process, the kernel learns about I/O devices and 67 their MMIO space and the host bridges that connect them to the system. For 68 example, if a PCI device has a BAR, the kernel reads the bus address (A) 69 from the BAR and converts it to a CPU physical address (B). The address B 70 is stored in a struct resource and usually exposed via /proc/iomem. When a 71 driver claims a device, it typically uses ioremap() to map physical address 72 B at a virtual address (C). It can then use, e.g., ioread32(C), to access 73 the device registers at bus address A. 74 75 If the device supports DMA, the driver sets up a buffer using kmalloc() or 76 a similar interface, which returns a virtual address (X). The virtual 77 memory system maps X to a physical address (Y) in system RAM. The driver 78 can use virtual address X to access the buffer, but the device itself 79 cannot because DMA doesn't go through the CPU virtual memory system. 80 81 In some simple systems, the device can do DMA directly to physical address 82 Y. But in many others, there is IOMMU hardware that translates DMA 83 addresses to physical addresses, e.g., it translates Z to Y. This is part 84 of the reason for the DMA API: the driver can give a virtual address X to 85 an interface like dma_map_single(), which sets up any required IOMMU 86 mapping and returns the DMA address Z. The driver then tells the device to 87 do DMA to Z, and the IOMMU maps it to the buffer at address Y in system 88 RAM. 89 90 So that Linux can use the dynamic DMA mapping, it needs some help from the 91 drivers, namely it has to take into account that DMA addresses should be 92 mapped only for the time they are actually used and unmapped after the DMA 93 transfer. 94 95 The following API will work of course even on platforms where no such 96 hardware exists. 97 98 Note that the DMA API works with any bus independent of the underlying 99 microprocessor architecture. You should use the DMA API rather than the 100 bus-specific DMA API, i.e., use the dma_map_*() interfaces rather than the 101 pci_map_*() interfaces. 102 103 First of all, you should make sure:: 104 105 #include <linux/dma-mapping.h> 106 107 is in your driver, which provides the definition of dma_addr_t. This type 108 can hold any valid DMA address for the platform and should be used 109 everywhere you hold a DMA address returned from the DMA mapping functions. 110 111 What memory is DMA'able? 112 ======================== 113 114 The first piece of information you must know is what kernel memory can 115 be used with the DMA mapping facilities. There has been an unwritten 116 set of rules regarding this, and this text is an attempt to finally 117 write them down. 118 119 If you acquired your memory via the page allocator 120 (i.e. __get_free_page*()) or the generic memory allocators 121 (i.e. kmalloc() or kmem_cache_alloc()) then you may DMA to/from 122 that memory using the addresses returned from those routines. 123 124 This means specifically that you may _not_ use the memory/addresses 125 returned from vmalloc() for DMA. It is possible to DMA to the 126 _underlying_ memory mapped into a vmalloc() area, but this requires 127 walking page tables to get the physical addresses, and then 128 translating each of those pages back to a kernel address using 129 something like __va(). [ EDIT: Update this when we integrate 130 Gerd Knorr's generic code which does this. ] 131 132 This rule also means that you may use neither kernel image addresses 133 (items in data/text/bss segments), nor module image addresses, nor 134 stack addresses for DMA. These could all be mapped somewhere entirely 135 different than the rest of physical memory. Even if those classes of 136 memory could physically work with DMA, you'd need to ensure the I/O 137 buffers were cacheline-aligned. Without that, you'd see cacheline 138 sharing problems (data corruption) on CPUs with DMA-incoherent caches. 139 (The CPU could write to one word, DMA would write to a different one 140 in the same cache line, and one of them could be overwritten.) 141 142 Also, this means that you cannot take the return of a kmap() 143 call and DMA to/from that. This is similar to vmalloc(). 144 145 What about block I/O and networking buffers? The block I/O and 146 networking subsystems make sure that the buffers they use are valid 147 for you to DMA from/to. 148 149 DMA addressing capabilities 150 =========================== 151 152 By default, the kernel assumes that your device can address 32-bits of DMA 153 addressing. For a 64-bit capable device, this needs to be increased, and for 154 a device with limitations, it needs to be decreased. 155 156 Special note about PCI: PCI-X specification requires PCI-X devices to support 157 64-bit addressing (DAC) for all transactions. And at least one platform (SGI 158 SN2) requires 64-bit consistent allocations to operate correctly when the IO 159 bus is in PCI-X mode. 160 161 For correct operation, you must set the DMA mask to inform the kernel about 162 your devices DMA addressing capabilities. 163 164 This is performed via a call to dma_set_mask_and_coherent():: 165 166 int dma_set_mask_and_coherent(struct device *dev, u64 mask); 167 168 which will set the mask for both streaming and coherent APIs together. If you 169 have some special requirements, then the following two separate calls can be 170 used instead: 171 172 The setup for streaming mappings is performed via a call to 173 dma_set_mask():: 174 175 int dma_set_mask(struct device *dev, u64 mask); 176 177 The setup for consistent allocations is performed via a call 178 to dma_set_coherent_mask():: 179 180 int dma_set_coherent_mask(struct device *dev, u64 mask); 181 182 Here, dev is a pointer to the device struct of your device, and mask is a bit 183 mask describing which bits of an address your device supports. Often the 184 device struct of your device is embedded in the bus-specific device struct of 185 your device. For example, &pdev->dev is a pointer to the device struct of a 186 PCI device (pdev is a pointer to the PCI device struct of your device). 187 188 These calls usually return zero to indicate your device can perform DMA 189 properly on the machine given the address mask you provided, but they might 190 return an error if the mask is too small to be supportable on the given 191 system. If it returns non-zero, your device cannot perform DMA properly on 192 this platform, and attempting to do so will result in undefined behavior. 193 You must not use DMA on this device unless the dma_set_mask family of 194 functions has returned success. 195 196 This means that in the failure case, you have two options: 197 198 1) Use some non-DMA mode for data transfer, if possible. 199 2) Ignore this device and do not initialize it. 200 201 It is recommended that your driver print a kernel KERN_WARNING message when 202 setting the DMA mask fails. In this manner, if a user of your driver reports 203 that performance is bad or that the device is not even detected, you can ask 204 them for the kernel messages to find out exactly why. 205 206 The 24-bit addressing device would do something like this:: 207 208 if (dma_set_mask_and_coherent(dev, DMA_BIT_MASK(24))) { 209 dev_warn(dev, "mydev: No suitable DMA available\n"); 210 goto ignore_this_device; 211 } 212 213 The standard 64-bit addressing device would do something like this:: 214 215 dma_set_mask_and_coherent(dev, DMA_BIT_MASK(64)) 216 217 dma_set_mask_and_coherent() never return fail when DMA_BIT_MASK(64). Typical 218 error code like:: 219 220 /* Wrong code */ 221 if (dma_set_mask_and_coherent(dev, DMA_BIT_MASK(64))) 222 dma_set_mask_and_coherent(dev, DMA_BIT_MASK(32)) 223 224 dma_set_mask_and_coherent() will never return failure when bigger than 32. 225 So typical code like:: 226 227 /* Recommended code */ 228 if (support_64bit) 229 dma_set_mask_and_coherent(dev, DMA_BIT_MASK(64)); 230 else 231 dma_set_mask_and_coherent(dev, DMA_BIT_MASK(32)); 232 233 If the device only supports 32-bit addressing for descriptors in the 234 coherent allocations, but supports full 64-bits for streaming mappings 235 it would look like this:: 236 237 if (dma_set_mask(dev, DMA_BIT_MASK(64))) { 238 dev_warn(dev, "mydev: No suitable DMA available\n"); 239 goto ignore_this_device; 240 } 241 242 The coherent mask will always be able to set the same or a smaller mask as 243 the streaming mask. However for the rare case that a device driver only 244 uses consistent allocations, one would have to check the return value from 245 dma_set_coherent_mask(). 246 247 Finally, if your device can only drive the low 24-bits of 248 address you might do something like:: 249 250 if (dma_set_mask(dev, DMA_BIT_MASK(24))) { 251 dev_warn(dev, "mydev: 24-bit DMA addressing not available\n"); 252 goto ignore_this_device; 253 } 254 255 When dma_set_mask() or dma_set_mask_and_coherent() is successful, and 256 returns zero, the kernel saves away this mask you have provided. The 257 kernel will use this information later when you make DMA mappings. 258 259 There is a case which we are aware of at this time, which is worth 260 mentioning in this documentation. If your device supports multiple 261 functions (for example a sound card provides playback and record 262 functions) and the various different functions have _different_ 263 DMA addressing limitations, you may wish to probe each mask and 264 only provide the functionality which the machine can handle. It 265 is important that the last call to dma_set_mask() be for the 266 most specific mask. 267 268 Here is pseudo-code showing how this might be done:: 269 270 #define PLAYBACK_ADDRESS_BITS DMA_BIT_MASK(32) 271 #define RECORD_ADDRESS_BITS DMA_BIT_MASK(24) 272 273 struct my_sound_card *card; 274 struct device *dev; 275 276 ... 277 if (!dma_set_mask(dev, PLAYBACK_ADDRESS_BITS)) { 278 card->playback_enabled = 1; 279 } else { 280 card->playback_enabled = 0; 281 dev_warn(dev, "%s: Playback disabled due to DMA limitations\n", 282 card->name); 283 } 284 if (!dma_set_mask(dev, RECORD_ADDRESS_BITS)) { 285 card->record_enabled = 1; 286 } else { 287 card->record_enabled = 0; 288 dev_warn(dev, "%s: Record disabled due to DMA limitations\n", 289 card->name); 290 } 291 292 A sound card was used as an example here because this genre of PCI 293 devices seems to be littered with ISA chips given a PCI front end, 294 and thus retaining the 16MB DMA addressing limitations of ISA. 295 296 Types of DMA mappings 297 ===================== 298 299 There are two types of DMA mappings: 300 301 - Consistent DMA mappings which are usually mapped at driver 302 initialization, unmapped at the end and for which the hardware should 303 guarantee that the device and the CPU can access the data 304 in parallel and will see updates made by each other without any 305 explicit software flushing. 306 307 Think of "consistent" as "synchronous" or "coherent". 308 309 The current default is to return consistent memory in the low 32 310 bits of the DMA space. However, for future compatibility you should 311 set the consistent mask even if this default is fine for your 312 driver. 313 314 Good examples of what to use consistent mappings for are: 315 316 - Network card DMA ring descriptors. 317 - SCSI adapter mailbox command data structures. 318 - Device firmware microcode executed out of 319 main memory. 320 321 The invariant these examples all require is that any CPU store 322 to memory is immediately visible to the device, and vice 323 versa. Consistent mappings guarantee this. 324 325 .. important:: 326 327 Consistent DMA memory does not preclude the usage of 328 proper memory barriers. The CPU may reorder stores to 329 consistent memory just as it may normal memory. Example: 330 if it is important for the device to see the first word 331 of a descriptor updated before the second, you must do 332 something like:: 333 334 desc->word0 = address; 335 wmb(); 336 desc->word1 = DESC_VALID; 337 338 in order to get correct behavior on all platforms. 339 340 Also, on some platforms your driver may need to flush CPU write 341 buffers in much the same way as it needs to flush write buffers 342 found in PCI bridges (such as by reading a register's value 343 after writing it). 344 345 - Streaming DMA mappings which are usually mapped for one DMA 346 transfer, unmapped right after it (unless you use dma_sync_* below) 347 and for which hardware can optimize for sequential accesses. 348 349 Think of "streaming" as "asynchronous" or "outside the coherency 350 domain". 351 352 Good examples of what to use streaming mappings for are: 353 354 - Networking buffers transmitted/received by a device. 355 - Filesystem buffers written/read by a SCSI device. 356 357 The interfaces for using this type of mapping were designed in 358 such a way that an implementation can make whatever performance 359 optimizations the hardware allows. To this end, when using 360 such mappings you must be explicit about what you want to happen. 361 362 Neither type of DMA mapping has alignment restrictions that come from 363 the underlying bus, although some devices may have such restrictions. 364 Also, systems with caches that aren't DMA-coherent will work better 365 when the underlying buffers don't share cache lines with other data. 366 367 368 Using Consistent DMA mappings 369 ============================= 370 371 To allocate and map large (PAGE_SIZE or so) consistent DMA regions, 372 you should do:: 373 374 dma_addr_t dma_handle; 375 376 cpu_addr = dma_alloc_coherent(dev, size, &dma_handle, gfp); 377 378 where device is a ``struct device *``. This may be called in interrupt 379 context with the GFP_ATOMIC flag. 380 381 Size is the length of the region you want to allocate, in bytes. 382 383 This routine will allocate RAM for that region, so it acts similarly to 384 __get_free_pages() (but takes size instead of a page order). If your 385 driver needs regions sized smaller than a page, you may prefer using 386 the dma_pool interface, described below. 387 388 The consistent DMA mapping interfaces, will by default return a DMA address 389 which is 32-bit addressable. Even if the device indicates (via the DMA mask) 390 that it may address the upper 32-bits, consistent allocation will only 391 return > 32-bit addresses for DMA if the consistent DMA mask has been 392 explicitly changed via dma_set_coherent_mask(). This is true of the 393 dma_pool interface as well. 394 395 dma_alloc_coherent() returns two values: the virtual address which you 396 can use to access it from the CPU and dma_handle which you pass to the 397 card. 398 399 The CPU virtual address and the DMA address are both 400 guaranteed to be aligned to the smallest PAGE_SIZE order which 401 is greater than or equal to the requested size. This invariant 402 exists (for example) to guarantee that if you allocate a chunk 403 which is smaller than or equal to 64 kilobytes, the extent of the 404 buffer you receive will not cross a 64K boundary. 405 406 To unmap and free such a DMA region, you call:: 407 408 dma_free_coherent(dev, size, cpu_addr, dma_handle); 409 410 where dev, size are the same as in the above call and cpu_addr and 411 dma_handle are the values dma_alloc_coherent() returned to you. 412 This function may not be called in interrupt context. 413 414 If your driver needs lots of smaller memory regions, you can write 415 custom code to subdivide pages returned by dma_alloc_coherent(), 416 or you can use the dma_pool API to do that. A dma_pool is like 417 a kmem_cache, but it uses dma_alloc_coherent(), not __get_free_pages(). 418 Also, it understands common hardware constraints for alignment, 419 like queue heads needing to be aligned on N byte boundaries. 420 421 Create a dma_pool like this:: 422 423 struct dma_pool *pool; 424 425 pool = dma_pool_create(name, dev, size, align, boundary); 426 427 The "name" is for diagnostics (like a kmem_cache name); dev and size 428 are as above. The device's hardware alignment requirement for this 429 type of data is "align" (which is expressed in bytes, and must be a 430 power of two). If your device has no boundary crossing restrictions, 431 pass 0 for boundary; passing 4096 says memory allocated from this pool 432 must not cross 4KByte boundaries (but at that time it may be better to 433 use dma_alloc_coherent() directly instead). 434 435 Allocate memory from a DMA pool like this:: 436 437 cpu_addr = dma_pool_alloc(pool, flags, &dma_handle); 438 439 flags are GFP_KERNEL if blocking is permitted (not in_interrupt nor 440 holding SMP locks), GFP_ATOMIC otherwise. Like dma_alloc_coherent(), 441 this returns two values, cpu_addr and dma_handle. 442 443 Free memory that was allocated from a dma_pool like this:: 444 445 dma_pool_free(pool, cpu_addr, dma_handle); 446 447 where pool is what you passed to dma_pool_alloc(), and cpu_addr and 448 dma_handle are the values dma_pool_alloc() returned. This function 449 may be called in interrupt context. 450 451 Destroy a dma_pool by calling:: 452 453 dma_pool_destroy(pool); 454 455 Make sure you've called dma_pool_free() for all memory allocated 456 from a pool before you destroy the pool. This function may not 457 be called in interrupt context. 458 459 DMA Direction 460 ============= 461 462 The interfaces described in subsequent portions of this document 463 take a DMA direction argument, which is an integer and takes on 464 one of the following values:: 465 466 DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL 467 DMA_TO_DEVICE 468 DMA_FROM_DEVICE 469 DMA_NONE 470 471 You should provide the exact DMA direction if you know it. 472 473 DMA_TO_DEVICE means "from main memory to the device" 474 DMA_FROM_DEVICE means "from the device to main memory" 475 It is the direction in which the data moves during the DMA 476 transfer. 477 478 You are _strongly_ encouraged to specify this as precisely 479 as you possibly can. 480 481 If you absolutely cannot know the direction of the DMA transfer, 482 specify DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL. It means that the DMA can go in 483 either direction. The platform guarantees that you may legally 484 specify this, and that it will work, but this may be at the 485 cost of performance for example. 486 487 The value DMA_NONE is to be used for debugging. One can 488 hold this in a data structure before you come to know the 489 precise direction, and this will help catch cases where your 490 direction tracking logic has failed to set things up properly. 491 492 Another advantage of specifying this value precisely (outside of 493 potential platform-specific optimizations of such) is for debugging. 494 Some platforms actually have a write permission boolean which DMA 495 mappings can be marked with, much like page protections in the user 496 program address space. Such platforms can and do report errors in the 497 kernel logs when the DMA controller hardware detects violation of the 498 permission setting. 499 500 Only streaming mappings specify a direction, consistent mappings 501 implicitly have a direction attribute setting of 502 DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL. 503 504 The SCSI subsystem tells you the direction to use in the 505 'sc_data_direction' member of the SCSI command your driver is 506 working on. 507 508 For Networking drivers, it's a rather simple affair. For transmit 509 packets, map/unmap them with the DMA_TO_DEVICE direction 510 specifier. For receive packets, just the opposite, map/unmap them 511 with the DMA_FROM_DEVICE direction specifier. 512 513 Using Streaming DMA mappings 514 ============================ 515 516 The streaming DMA mapping routines can be called from interrupt 517 context. There are two versions of each map/unmap, one which will 518 map/unmap a single memory region, and one which will map/unmap a 519 scatterlist. 520 521 To map a single region, you do:: 522 523 struct device *dev = &my_dev->dev; 524 dma_addr_t dma_handle; 525 void *addr = buffer->ptr; 526 size_t size = buffer->len; 527 528 dma_handle = dma_map_single(dev, addr, size, direction); 529 if (dma_mapping_error(dev, dma_handle)) { 530 /* 531 * reduce current DMA mapping usage, 532 * delay and try again later or 533 * reset driver. 534 */ 535 goto map_error_handling; 536 } 537 538 and to unmap it:: 539 540 dma_unmap_single(dev, dma_handle, size, direction); 541 542 You should call dma_mapping_error() as dma_map_single() could fail and return 543 error. Doing so will ensure that the mapping code will work correctly on all 544 DMA implementations without any dependency on the specifics of the underlying 545 implementation. Using the returned address without checking for errors could 546 result in failures ranging from panics to silent data corruption. The same 547 applies to dma_map_page() as well. 548 549 You should call dma_unmap_single() when the DMA activity is finished, e.g., 550 from the interrupt which told you that the DMA transfer is done. 551 552 Using CPU pointers like this for single mappings has a disadvantage: 553 you cannot reference HIGHMEM memory in this way. Thus, there is a 554 map/unmap interface pair akin to dma_{map,unmap}_single(). These 555 interfaces deal with page/offset pairs instead of CPU pointers. 556 Specifically:: 557 558 struct device *dev = &my_dev->dev; 559 dma_addr_t dma_handle; 560 struct page *page = buffer->page; 561 unsigned long offset = buffer->offset; 562 size_t size = buffer->len; 563 564 dma_handle = dma_map_page(dev, page, offset, size, direction); 565 if (dma_mapping_error(dev, dma_handle)) { 566 /* 567 * reduce current DMA mapping usage, 568 * delay and try again later or 569 * reset driver. 570 */ 571 goto map_error_handling; 572 } 573 574 ... 575 576 dma_unmap_page(dev, dma_handle, size, direction); 577 578 Here, "offset" means byte offset within the given page. 579 580 You should call dma_mapping_error() as dma_map_page() could fail and return 581 error as outlined under the dma_map_single() discussion. 582 583 You should call dma_unmap_page() when the DMA activity is finished, e.g., 584 from the interrupt which told you that the DMA transfer is done. 585 586 With scatterlists, you map a region gathered from several regions by:: 587 588 int i, count = dma_map_sg(dev, sglist, nents, direction); 589 struct scatterlist *sg; 590 591 for_each_sg(sglist, sg, count, i) { 592 hw_address[i] = sg_dma_address(sg); 593 hw_len[i] = sg_dma_len(sg); 594 } 595 596 where nents is the number of entries in the sglist. 597 598 The implementation is free to merge several consecutive sglist entries 599 into one (e.g. if DMA mapping is done with PAGE_SIZE granularity, any 600 consecutive sglist entries can be merged into one provided the first one 601 ends and the second one starts on a page boundary - in fact this is a huge 602 advantage for cards which either cannot do scatter-gather or have very 603 limited number of scatter-gather entries) and returns the actual number 604 of sg entries it mapped them to. On failure 0 is returned. 605 606 Then you should loop count times (note: this can be less than nents times) 607 and use sg_dma_address() and sg_dma_len() macros where you previously 608 accessed sg->address and sg->length as shown above. 609 610 To unmap a scatterlist, just call:: 611 612 dma_unmap_sg(dev, sglist, nents, direction); 613 614 Again, make sure DMA activity has already finished. 615 616 .. note:: 617 618 The 'nents' argument to the dma_unmap_sg call must be 619 the _same_ one you passed into the dma_map_sg call, 620 it should _NOT_ be the 'count' value _returned_ from the 621 dma_map_sg call. 622 623 Every dma_map_{single,sg}() call should have its dma_unmap_{single,sg}() 624 counterpart, because the DMA address space is a shared resource and 625 you could render the machine unusable by consuming all DMA addresses. 626 627 If you need to use the same streaming DMA region multiple times and touch 628 the data in between the DMA transfers, the buffer needs to be synced 629 properly in order for the CPU and device to see the most up-to-date and 630 correct copy of the DMA buffer. 631 632 So, firstly, just map it with dma_map_{single,sg}(), and after each DMA 633 transfer call either:: 634 635 dma_sync_single_for_cpu(dev, dma_handle, size, direction); 636 637 or:: 638 639 dma_sync_sg_for_cpu(dev, sglist, nents, direction); 640 641 as appropriate. 642 643 Then, if you wish to let the device get at the DMA area again, 644 finish accessing the data with the CPU, and then before actually 645 giving the buffer to the hardware call either:: 646 647 dma_sync_single_for_device(dev, dma_handle, size, direction); 648 649 or:: 650 651 dma_sync_sg_for_device(dev, sglist, nents, direction); 652 653 as appropriate. 654 655 .. note:: 656 657 The 'nents' argument to dma_sync_sg_for_cpu() and 658 dma_sync_sg_for_device() must be the same passed to 659 dma_map_sg(). It is _NOT_ the count returned by 660 dma_map_sg(). 661 662 After the last DMA transfer call one of the DMA unmap routines 663 dma_unmap_{single,sg}(). If you don't touch the data from the first 664 dma_map_*() call till dma_unmap_*(), then you don't have to call the 665 dma_sync_*() routines at all. 666 667 Here is pseudo code which shows a situation in which you would need 668 to use the dma_sync_*() interfaces:: 669 670 my_card_setup_receive_buffer(struct my_card *cp, char *buffer, int len) 671 { 672 dma_addr_t mapping; 673 674 mapping = dma_map_single(cp->dev, buffer, len, DMA_FROM_DEVICE); 675 if (dma_mapping_error(cp->dev, mapping)) { 676 /* 677 * reduce current DMA mapping usage, 678 * delay and try again later or 679 * reset driver. 680 */ 681 goto map_error_handling; 682 } 683 684 cp->rx_buf = buffer; 685 cp->rx_len = len; 686 cp->rx_dma = mapping; 687 688 give_rx_buf_to_card(cp); 689 } 690 691 ... 692 693 my_card_interrupt_handler(int irq, void *devid, struct pt_regs *regs) 694 { 695 struct my_card *cp = devid; 696 697 ... 698 if (read_card_status(cp) == RX_BUF_TRANSFERRED) { 699 struct my_card_header *hp; 700 701 /* Examine the header to see if we wish 702 * to accept the data. But synchronize 703 * the DMA transfer with the CPU first 704 * so that we see updated contents. 705 */ 706 dma_sync_single_for_cpu(&cp->dev, cp->rx_dma, 707 cp->rx_len, 708 DMA_FROM_DEVICE); 709 710 /* Now it is safe to examine the buffer. */ 711 hp = (struct my_card_header *) cp->rx_buf; 712 if (header_is_ok(hp)) { 713 dma_unmap_single(&cp->dev, cp->rx_dma, cp->rx_len, 714 DMA_FROM_DEVICE); 715 pass_to_upper_layers(cp->rx_buf); 716 make_and_setup_new_rx_buf(cp); 717 } else { 718 /* CPU should not write to 719 * DMA_FROM_DEVICE-mapped area, 720 * so dma_sync_single_for_device() is 721 * not needed here. It would be required 722 * for DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL mapping if 723 * the memory was modified. 724 */ 725 give_rx_buf_to_card(cp); 726 } 727 } 728 } 729 730 Handling Errors 731 =============== 732 733 DMA address space is limited on some architectures and an allocation 734 failure can be determined by: 735 736 - checking if dma_alloc_coherent() returns NULL or dma_map_sg returns 0 737 738 - checking the dma_addr_t returned from dma_map_single() and dma_map_page() 739 by using dma_mapping_error():: 740 741 dma_addr_t dma_handle; 742 743 dma_handle = dma_map_single(dev, addr, size, direction); 744 if (dma_mapping_error(dev, dma_handle)) { 745 /* 746 * reduce current DMA mapping usage, 747 * delay and try again later or 748 * reset driver. 749 */ 750 goto map_error_handling; 751 } 752 753 - unmap pages that are already mapped, when mapping error occurs in the middle 754 of a multiple page mapping attempt. These example are applicable to 755 dma_map_page() as well. 756 757 Example 1:: 758 759 dma_addr_t dma_handle1; 760 dma_addr_t dma_handle2; 761 762 dma_handle1 = dma_map_single(dev, addr, size, direction); 763 if (dma_mapping_error(dev, dma_handle1)) { 764 /* 765 * reduce current DMA mapping usage, 766 * delay and try again later or 767 * reset driver. 768 */ 769 goto map_error_handling1; 770 } 771 dma_handle2 = dma_map_single(dev, addr, size, direction); 772 if (dma_mapping_error(dev, dma_handle2)) { 773 /* 774 * reduce current DMA mapping usage, 775 * delay and try again later or 776 * reset driver. 777 */ 778 goto map_error_handling2; 779 } 780 781 ... 782 783 map_error_handling2: 784 dma_unmap_single(dma_handle1); 785 map_error_handling1: 786 787 Example 2:: 788 789 /* 790 * if buffers are allocated in a loop, unmap all mapped buffers when 791 * mapping error is detected in the middle 792 */ 793 794 dma_addr_t dma_addr; 795 dma_addr_t array[DMA_BUFFERS]; 796 int save_index = 0; 797 798 for (i = 0; i < DMA_BUFFERS; i++) { 799 800 ... 801 802 dma_addr = dma_map_single(dev, addr, size, direction); 803 if (dma_mapping_error(dev, dma_addr)) { 804 /* 805 * reduce current DMA mapping usage, 806 * delay and try again later or 807 * reset driver. 808 */ 809 goto map_error_handling; 810 } 811 array[i].dma_addr = dma_addr; 812 save_index++; 813 } 814 815 ... 816 817 map_error_handling: 818 819 for (i = 0; i < save_index; i++) { 820 821 ... 822 823 dma_unmap_single(array[i].dma_addr); 824 } 825 826 Networking drivers must call dev_kfree_skb() to free the socket buffer 827 and return NETDEV_TX_OK if the DMA mapping fails on the transmit hook 828 (ndo_start_xmit). This means that the socket buffer is just dropped in 829 the failure case. 830 831 SCSI drivers must return SCSI_MLQUEUE_HOST_BUSY if the DMA mapping 832 fails in the queuecommand hook. This means that the SCSI subsystem 833 passes the command to the driver again later. 834 835 Optimizing Unmap State Space Consumption 836 ======================================== 837 838 On many platforms, dma_unmap_{single,page}() is simply a nop. 839 Therefore, keeping track of the mapping address and length is a waste 840 of space. Instead of filling your drivers up with ifdefs and the like 841 to "work around" this (which would defeat the whole purpose of a 842 portable API) the following facilities are provided. 843 844 Actually, instead of describing the macros one by one, we'll 845 transform some example code. 846 847 1) Use DEFINE_DMA_UNMAP_{ADDR,LEN} in state saving structures. 848 Example, before:: 849 850 struct ring_state { 851 struct sk_buff *skb; 852 dma_addr_t mapping; 853 __u32 len; 854 }; 855 856 after:: 857 858 struct ring_state { 859 struct sk_buff *skb; 860 DEFINE_DMA_UNMAP_ADDR(mapping); 861 DEFINE_DMA_UNMAP_LEN(len); 862 }; 863 864 2) Use dma_unmap_{addr,len}_set() to set these values. 865 Example, before:: 866 867 ringp->mapping = FOO; 868 ringp->len = BAR; 869 870 after:: 871 872 dma_unmap_addr_set(ringp, mapping, FOO); 873 dma_unmap_len_set(ringp, len, BAR); 874 875 3) Use dma_unmap_{addr,len}() to access these values. 876 Example, before:: 877 878 dma_unmap_single(dev, ringp->mapping, ringp->len, 879 DMA_FROM_DEVICE); 880 881 after:: 882 883 dma_unmap_single(dev, 884 dma_unmap_addr(ringp, mapping), 885 dma_unmap_len(ringp, len), 886 DMA_FROM_DEVICE); 887 888 It really should be self-explanatory. We treat the ADDR and LEN 889 separately, because it is possible for an implementation to only 890 need the address in order to perform the unmap operation. 891 892 Platform Issues 893 =============== 894 895 If you are just writing drivers for Linux and do not maintain 896 an architecture port for the kernel, you can safely skip down 897 to "Closing". 898 899 1) Struct scatterlist requirements. 900 901 You need to enable CONFIG_NEED_SG_DMA_LENGTH if the architecture 902 supports IOMMUs (including software IOMMU). 903 904 2) ARCH_DMA_MINALIGN 905 906 Architectures must ensure that kmalloc'ed buffer is 907 DMA-safe. Drivers and subsystems depend on it. If an architecture 908 isn't fully DMA-coherent (i.e. hardware doesn't ensure that data in 909 the CPU cache is identical to data in main memory), 910 ARCH_DMA_MINALIGN must be set so that the memory allocator 911 makes sure that kmalloc'ed buffer doesn't share a cache line with 912 the others. See arch/arm/include/asm/cache.h as an example. 913 914 Note that ARCH_DMA_MINALIGN is about DMA memory alignment 915 constraints. You don't need to worry about the architecture data 916 alignment constraints (e.g. the alignment constraints about 64-bit 917 objects). 918 919 Closing 920 ======= 921 922 This document, and the API itself, would not be in its current 923 form without the feedback and suggestions from numerous individuals. 924 We would like to specifically mention, in no particular order, the 925 following people:: 926 927 Russell King <rmk@arm.linux.org.uk> 928 Leo Dagum <dagum@barrel.engr.sgi.com> 929 Ralf Baechle <ralf@oss.sgi.com> 930 Grant Grundler <grundler@cup.hp.com> 931 Jay Estabrook <Jay.Estabrook@compaq.com> 932 Thomas Sailer <sailer@ife.ee.ethz.ch> 933 Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@suse.de> 934 Jens Axboe <jens.axboe@oracle.com> 935 David Mosberger-Tang <davidm@hpl.hp.com>
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