John-Mark Gurney wrote:
Hans Petter Selasky wrote this message on Mon, May 28, 2007 at 08:53 +0200:
On Sunday 27 May 2007 23:53, John-Mark Gurney wrote:
Hans Petter Selasky wrote this message on Sun, May 27, 2007 at 22:35 +0200:
I've got some reports back that some USB host controllers do not support
transferring memory from a location higher than 2GB.

What should we do about this?

Should we limit all USB DMA allocations to the lower 2GB of the memory?
No, a quirk table should be setup and pass the restriction to bus_dma
at tag initalization time when a broken controller is detected..
Yes, I can do that. But I am also thinking about a static quirk, like a sysctl you can set at boot time.

The only issue w/ this is that it would also effect add in USB PCI cards
that aren't effected by the bug...  Which means a sysctl would limit the
hardware to the lowest common denominator...

I hope that this is not a wide-spread problem.

And I am not surprised that hardware manufacturers are not specification compliant, which really makes me wonder if they support a true 64-bit address bus on the EHCI controller at all. I would maybe cost too much money? And therefore we should just stick with 32-bit addressing on 32-bit platforms aswell.

Don't forget we have PAE for i386...  so restricting to 32bit addressing
for i386 would have an impact...

As for it being an intermediate bus being the issue, I'd be surprised
as that would mean that pci bridge to the USB controller is seriously
broken...  At least dealing w/ a intermediate bus is easier now that
was have bus_get_dma_tag...


I'd rather it were a screwed up MB than a screwed up chip :-)


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