On 2/12/21 10:27 PM, Mathieu Poirier wrote:
> [...]
> 
>>>
>>>
>>>> +  if (nr_pages < 2)
>>>> +          return NULL;
>>>> +
>>>> +  buf = kzalloc_node(sizeof(*buf), GFP_KERNEL, trbe_alloc_node(event));
>>>> +  if (IS_ERR(buf))
>>>> +          return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
>>>> +
>>>> +  pglist = kcalloc(nr_pages, sizeof(*pglist), GFP_KERNEL);
>>>> +  if (IS_ERR(pglist)) {
>>>> +          kfree(buf);
>>>> +          return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
>>>> +  }
>>>> +
>>>> +  for (i = 0; i < nr_pages; i++)
>>>> +          pglist[i] = virt_to_page(pages[i]);
>>>> +
>>>> +  buf->trbe_base = (unsigned long) vmap(pglist, nr_pages, VM_MAP, 
>>>> PAGE_KERNEL);
>>>> +  if (IS_ERR((void *)buf->trbe_base)) {
>>>
>>> Why not simply make buf->trbe_base a void * instead of having to do all this
>>
>> There are many arithmetic and comparison operations involving trbe_base
>> element. Hence it might be better to keep it as unsigned long, also to
>> keeps it consistent with other pointers i.e trbe_write, trbe_limit.
> 
> That is a fair point.  Please add a comment to explain your design choice and
> make sure the sparse checker is happy with all of it.

Added a comment.

> 
>>
>> Snippet from $cat drivers/hwtracing/coresight/coresight-trbe.c | grep 
>> "trbe_base"
>> There are just two places type casting trbe_base back to (void *).
>>
>>      memset((void *)buf->trbe_base + head, ETE_IGNORE_PACKET, len);
>>      return buf->trbe_base + offset;
>>      WARN_ON(buf->trbe_write < buf->trbe_base);
>>      set_trbe_base_pointer(buf->trbe_base);
>>      buf->trbe_base = (unsigned long)vmap(pglist, nr_pages, VM_MAP, 
>> PAGE_KERNEL);
>>      if (IS_ERR((void *)buf->trbe_base)) {
>>              return ERR_PTR(buf->trbe_base);
>>      buf->trbe_limit = buf->trbe_base + nr_pages * PAGE_SIZE;
>>      buf->trbe_write = buf->trbe_base;
>>      vunmap((void *)buf->trbe_base);
>>      base = get_trbe_base_pointer();
>>      buf->trbe_write = buf->trbe_base + PERF_IDX2OFF(handle->head, buf);
>>      if (buf->trbe_limit == buf->trbe_base) {
>>      buf->trbe_write = buf->trbe_base + PERF_IDX2OFF(handle->head, buf);
>>      if (buf->trbe_limit == buf->trbe_base) {
>>      offset = get_trbe_limit_pointer() - get_trbe_base_pointer();
>>      buf->trbe_write = buf->trbe_base + PERF_IDX2OFF(handle->head, buf);
>>      if (buf->trbe_limit == buf->trbe_base) {
>>      WARN_ON(buf->trbe_base != get_trbe_base_pointer());
>>              if (get_trbe_write_pointer() == get_trbe_base_pointer())
>>   
>>> casting?  And IS_ERR() doesn't work with vmap().
>>
>> Sure, will drop IS_ERR() here.
>>
> 
> [...]
> 
> 
>>>
>>>> +
>>>> +static ssize_t dbm_show(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute 
>>>> *attr, char *buf)
>>>> +{
>>>> +  struct trbe_cpudata *cpudata = dev_get_drvdata(dev);
>>>> +
>>>> +  return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", cpudata->trbe_dbm);
>>>> +}
>>>> +static DEVICE_ATTR_RO(dbm);
>>>
>>> What does "dbm" stand for?  Looking at the documentation for TRBIDR_EL1.F, I
>>> don't see what "dbm" relates to.
>>
>> I made it up to refer TRBIDR_EL1.F as "Dirty (and Access Flag) Bit 
>> Management".
>> Could change it as "afdbm" to be more specific or if it is preferred.
>>
> 
> I don't see "afdbm" being a better solution - why not simply "flag"?

Replaced all reference for "dbm" with "flag".

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