Message ID | 20190505181235.14798-1-digetx@gmail.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Changes Requested |
Headers | show |
Series | [v1] dmaengine: tegra-apb: Handle DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag properly | expand |
On 05/05/2019 19:12, Dmitry Osipenko wrote: > The DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag means that descriptor's callback should be > invoked upon transfer completion and that's it. For some reason driver > completely disables the hardware interrupt handling, leaving channel in > unusable state if transfer is issued with the flag being unset. Note > that there are no occurrences in the relevant drivers that do not set > the flag, hence this patch doesn't fix any actual bug and merely fixes > potential problem. > > Signed-off-by: Dmitry Osipenko <digetx@gmail.com> From having a look at this, I am guessing that we have never really tested the case where DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag is not set because as you mentioned it does not look like this will work at all! Is there are use-case you are looking at where you don't set the DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag? If not I am wondering if we should even bother supporting this and warn if it is not set. AFAICT it does not appear to be mandatory, but maybe Vinod can comment more on this. Cheers Jon
08.05.2019 12:24, Jon Hunter пишет: > > On 05/05/2019 19:12, Dmitry Osipenko wrote: >> The DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag means that descriptor's callback should be >> invoked upon transfer completion and that's it. For some reason driver >> completely disables the hardware interrupt handling, leaving channel in >> unusable state if transfer is issued with the flag being unset. Note >> that there are no occurrences in the relevant drivers that do not set >> the flag, hence this patch doesn't fix any actual bug and merely fixes >> potential problem. >> >> Signed-off-by: Dmitry Osipenko <digetx@gmail.com> > > From having a look at this, I am guessing that we have never really > tested the case where DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag is not set because as you > mentioned it does not look like this will work at all! > > Is there are use-case you are looking at where you don't set the > DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag? No. I just noticed it while was checking whether we really need to handle the BUSY bit state for the Ben's "accurate reporting" patch. > If not I am wondering if we should even bother supporting this and warn > if it is not set. AFAICT it does not appear to be mandatory, but maybe > Vinod can comment more on this. The warning message will be also okay if it's not mandatory.
On 08-05-19, 10:24, Jon Hunter wrote: > > On 05/05/2019 19:12, Dmitry Osipenko wrote: > > The DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag means that descriptor's callback should be > > invoked upon transfer completion and that's it. For some reason driver > > completely disables the hardware interrupt handling, leaving channel in > > unusable state if transfer is issued with the flag being unset. Note > > that there are no occurrences in the relevant drivers that do not set > > the flag, hence this patch doesn't fix any actual bug and merely fixes > > potential problem. > > > > Signed-off-by: Dmitry Osipenko <digetx@gmail.com> > > >From having a look at this, I am guessing that we have never really > tested the case where DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag is not set because as you > mentioned it does not look like this will work at all! That is a fair argument > > Is there are use-case you are looking at where you don't set the > DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag? > > If not I am wondering if we should even bother supporting this and warn > if it is not set. AFAICT it does not appear to be mandatory, but maybe > Vinod can comment more on this. This is supposed to be used in the cases where you submit a bunch of descriptors and selectively dont want an interrupt in few cases... Is this such a case? Thanks ~Vinod
21.05.2019 7:55, Vinod Koul пишет: > On 08-05-19, 10:24, Jon Hunter wrote: >> >> On 05/05/2019 19:12, Dmitry Osipenko wrote: >>> The DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag means that descriptor's callback should be >>> invoked upon transfer completion and that's it. For some reason driver >>> completely disables the hardware interrupt handling, leaving channel in >>> unusable state if transfer is issued with the flag being unset. Note >>> that there are no occurrences in the relevant drivers that do not set >>> the flag, hence this patch doesn't fix any actual bug and merely fixes >>> potential problem. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Dmitry Osipenko <digetx@gmail.com> >> >> >From having a look at this, I am guessing that we have never really >> tested the case where DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag is not set because as you >> mentioned it does not look like this will work at all! > > That is a fair argument >> >> Is there are use-case you are looking at where you don't set the >> DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag? >> >> If not I am wondering if we should even bother supporting this and warn >> if it is not set. AFAICT it does not appear to be mandatory, but maybe >> Vinod can comment more on this. > > This is supposed to be used in the cases where you submit a bunch of > descriptors and selectively dont want an interrupt in few cases... > > Is this such a case? The flag is set by device drivers. AFAIK, none of the drivers that are used on Tegra SoC's make a use of that flag, at least not in upstream.
diff --git a/drivers/dma/tegra20-apb-dma.c b/drivers/dma/tegra20-apb-dma.c index cf462b1abc0b..29d972b7546f 100644 --- a/drivers/dma/tegra20-apb-dma.c +++ b/drivers/dma/tegra20-apb-dma.c @@ -561,6 +561,9 @@ static void tegra_dma_abort_all(struct tegra_dma_channel *tdc) dma_desc->dma_status = DMA_ERROR; list_add_tail(&dma_desc->node, &tdc->free_dma_desc); + if (dma_desc->cb_count < 0) + continue; + /* Add in cb list if it is not there. */ if (!dma_desc->cb_count) list_add_tail(&dma_desc->cb_node, @@ -616,9 +619,13 @@ static void handle_once_dma_done(struct tegra_dma_channel *tdc, if (sgreq->last_sg) { dma_desc->dma_status = DMA_COMPLETE; dma_cookie_complete(&dma_desc->txd); - if (!dma_desc->cb_count) - list_add_tail(&dma_desc->cb_node, &tdc->cb_desc); - dma_desc->cb_count++; + if (dma_desc->cb_count >= 0) { + if (!dma_desc->cb_count) + list_add_tail(&dma_desc->cb_node, + &tdc->cb_desc); + + dma_desc->cb_count++; + } list_add_tail(&dma_desc->node, &tdc->free_dma_desc); } list_add_tail(&sgreq->node, &tdc->free_sg_req); @@ -645,9 +652,11 @@ static void handle_cont_sngl_cycle_dma_done(struct tegra_dma_channel *tdc, dma_desc->bytes_requested; /* Callback need to be call */ - if (!dma_desc->cb_count) - list_add_tail(&dma_desc->cb_node, &tdc->cb_desc); - dma_desc->cb_count++; + if (dma_desc->cb_count >= 0) { + if (!dma_desc->cb_count) + list_add_tail(&dma_desc->cb_node, &tdc->cb_desc); + dma_desc->cb_count++; + } /* If not last req then put at end of pending list */ if (!list_is_last(&sgreq->node, &tdc->pending_sg_req)) { @@ -802,7 +811,7 @@ static int tegra_dma_terminate_all(struct dma_chan *dc) dma_desc = list_first_entry(&tdc->cb_desc, typeof(*dma_desc), cb_node); list_del(&dma_desc->cb_node); - dma_desc->cb_count = 0; + dma_desc->cb_count = -1; } spin_unlock_irqrestore(&tdc->lock, flags); return 0; @@ -988,8 +997,7 @@ static struct dma_async_tx_descriptor *tegra_dma_prep_slave_sg( csr |= tdc->slave_id << TEGRA_APBDMA_CSR_REQ_SEL_SHIFT; } - if (flags & DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT) - csr |= TEGRA_APBDMA_CSR_IE_EOC; + csr |= TEGRA_APBDMA_CSR_IE_EOC; apb_seq |= TEGRA_APBDMA_APBSEQ_WRAP_WORD_1; @@ -1000,11 +1008,15 @@ static struct dma_async_tx_descriptor *tegra_dma_prep_slave_sg( } INIT_LIST_HEAD(&dma_desc->tx_list); INIT_LIST_HEAD(&dma_desc->cb_node); - dma_desc->cb_count = 0; dma_desc->bytes_requested = 0; dma_desc->bytes_transferred = 0; dma_desc->dma_status = DMA_IN_PROGRESS; + if (flags & DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT) + dma_desc->cb_count = 0; + else + dma_desc->cb_count = -1; + /* Make transfer requests */ for_each_sg(sgl, sg, sg_len, i) { u32 len, mem; @@ -1131,8 +1143,7 @@ static struct dma_async_tx_descriptor *tegra_dma_prep_dma_cyclic( csr |= tdc->slave_id << TEGRA_APBDMA_CSR_REQ_SEL_SHIFT; } - if (flags & DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT) - csr |= TEGRA_APBDMA_CSR_IE_EOC; + csr |= TEGRA_APBDMA_CSR_IE_EOC; apb_seq |= TEGRA_APBDMA_APBSEQ_WRAP_WORD_1; @@ -1144,7 +1155,11 @@ static struct dma_async_tx_descriptor *tegra_dma_prep_dma_cyclic( INIT_LIST_HEAD(&dma_desc->tx_list); INIT_LIST_HEAD(&dma_desc->cb_node); - dma_desc->cb_count = 0; + + if (flags & DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT) + dma_desc->cb_count = 0; + else + dma_desc->cb_count = -1; dma_desc->bytes_transferred = 0; dma_desc->bytes_requested = buf_len;
The DMA_PREP_INTERRUPT flag means that descriptor's callback should be invoked upon transfer completion and that's it. For some reason driver completely disables the hardware interrupt handling, leaving channel in unusable state if transfer is issued with the flag being unset. Note that there are no occurrences in the relevant drivers that do not set the flag, hence this patch doesn't fix any actual bug and merely fixes potential problem. Signed-off-by: Dmitry Osipenko <digetx@gmail.com> --- drivers/dma/tegra20-apb-dma.c | 41 ++++++++++++++++++++++++----------- 1 file changed, 28 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)