On Tuesday 19 August 2014 13:59:54 Joerg Roedel wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 03:47:56PM -0700, Olav Haugan wrote:
> > If the alignment is not correct then iommu_map() will return error. Not
> > sure what other option we have here (and why make it different behavior
> > than iommu_map which just return error when it is not aligned properly).
> > I don't think we want to force any kind of alignment automatically. I
> > would rather have the API tell me I am doing something wrong than having
> > the function aligning the values and possibly undermap or overmap.
> 
> But sg->offset is an offset into the page (at least it is used that way
> in the DMA-API and since you do 'page_len = s->offset + s->length' you
> use it the same way).
> So when you pass iova + offset the result will no longer be
> page-aligned. You should force sg->offset == 0 and sg->length to be
> page-aligned instead. This makes more sense because the IOMMU-API works
> on (io)-page granularity and not on arbitrary phys-addr ranges like the
> DMA-API.
> 
> > Yes, I am aware of that. However, several people prefer this than
> > passing in scatterlist. It is not very convenient to pass a scatterlist
> > in some use cases. Someone mentioned a use case where they would have to
> > create a dummy sg list and populate it with the iova just to do an
> > unmap. I believe we would have to do this also. There is no use for
> > sglist when unmapping. However, would like to keep separate API from
> > iommu_unmap() to keep the API function names symmetric (map_sg/unmap_sg).
> 
> Keeping it symetric is not more complicated, the caller just needs to
> keep the sg-list used for mapping around. I prefer the unmap_sg call to
> work in sg-lists too.

Do we have a use case where the unmap_sg() implementation would be different 
than a plain iommu_unmap() call ? If not I'd rather remove unmap_sg() 
completely.

> > I thought that was why we added the default fallback and set all the
> > drivers to point to these fallback functions. Several people wanted this
> > so that we don't have to have NULL-check in these functions (and have
> > the functions be simple inline functions).
> 
> Okay, since you add these call-backs to all drivers I think I can live
> with not doing a pointer check here.

I suggested doing a

if (ops is not NULL)
        return ops();
else
        return default_ops();

to avoid modifying all drivers. I'm not sure why that wasn't received with 
much enthusiasm.

-- 
Regards,

Laurent Pinchart

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