* Russell King - ARM Linux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [080904 02:47]:
> On Wed, Sep 03, 2008 at 11:33:51AM -0400, Eduardo Valentin wrote:
> > > @@ -159,7 +159,7 @@ static struct omap_mcbsp_platform_data 
> > > omap730_mcbsp_pdata[] = {
> > >  #ifdef CONFIG_ARCH_OMAP15XX
> > >  static struct omap_mcbsp_platform_data omap15xx_mcbsp_pdata[] = {
> > >        {
> > > -               .virt_base      = OMAP1510_MCBSP1_BASE,
> > > +               .virt_base      = OMAP1510_MCBSP1_BASE, /* FIXME: virtual 
> > > or physical */
> > AFAIK, OMAP1510_MCBSP1_BASE is physical. So, I'd say:
> > +               .virt_base      = IO_ADDRESS(OMAP1510_MCBSP1_BASE),
> > 
> > Because, plat-omap/mcbsp.c expect .virt_base to be a virtual address.
> 
> And today, the story is completely different, having looked through more
> of the code and some documentation.
> 
> - OMAPxxxx_MCBSPx_BASE are all physical addresses.  Fine.
> - physical addresses > 0xfffb0000 are subject to an offset (IO_OFFSET)
>   but others for the DSP located and DSP shared peripherals aren't.
> 
> So, applying the IO_OFFSET via IO_ADDRESS() or io_p2v() to all addresses
> breaks.  Meaning it's completely random whether something should be put
> through IO_ADDRESS() and similar.
> 
> This isn't obvious.  It isn't readable.  It isn't maintainable.  It doesn't
> lend itself to compile time checking.

Ouch. Looking at the history of the mcbsp.c the MCBSPX_BASE defines have
been a mix of virt and phys addresses to start with.

Looks like in the short term we need to define both virt_base and phys_base
for omap_mcbsp_platform_data.

Then define __arch_ioremap that understands also the DSP mappings and get
rid of the remaining hardcoded virtual DSP defines.

At that point we can also remove the virt_base from omap_mcbsp_platform_data.

Tony
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