On 2023-02-22 13:04, Jiaxun Yang wrote:
2023年2月22日 12:55,Robin Murphy <robin.mur...@arm.com> 写道:
On 2023-02-21 19:55, Jiaxun Yang wrote:
2023年2月21日 19:46,Robin Murphy <robin.mur...@arm.com> 写道:
On 2023-02-21 18:15, Jiaxun Yang wrote:
2023年2月21日 17:54,Christoph Hellwig <h...@lst.de> 写道:
Can you explain the motivation here? Also why riscv patches are at
the end of a mips fіxes series?
Ah sorry for any confusion.
So the main purpose of this patch is to fix MIPS’s broken per-device coherency.
To be more precise, we want to be able to control the default coherency for all
devices probed from
devicetree in early boot code.
Including the patch which actually does that would be helpful. As it is,
patches 4-7 here just appear to be moving an option around for no practical
effect.
Well the affect is default coherency of devicetree probed devices are now
following dma_default_coherent
instead of a static Kconfig option. For MIPS platform, dma_default_coherent
will be determined by boot code.
"Will be" is the issue I'm getting at. We can't review some future promise of a
patch, we can only review actual patches. And it's hard to meaningfully review
preparatory patches for some change without the full context of that change.
Actually this already present in current MIPS platform code.
arch/mips/mti-malta is setting dma_default_coherent on boot, and it’s
devicetree does not explicitly specify coherency.
OK, this really needs to be explained much more clearly. I read this
series as 3 actual fix patches, then 3 patches adding a new option to
replace an existing one on the grounds that it "can be useful" for
unspecified purposes, then a final cleanup patch removing the old option
that has now been superseded.
Going back and looking closely I see there is actually a brief mention
in the cleanup patch that it also happens to fix some issue, but even
then it doesn't clearly explain what the issue really is or how and why
the fix works and is appropriate.
Ideally, functional fixes and cleanup should be in distinct patches
whenever that is reasonable. Sometimes the best fix is inherently a
cleanup, but in such cases the patch should always be presented as the
fix being its primary purpose. Please also use the cover letter to give
reviewers an overview of the whole series if it's not merely a set of
loosely-related patches that just happened to be convenient so send all
together.
I think I do at least now understand the underlying problem well enough
to have a think about whether this is the best way to address it.
Thanks,
Robin.