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From: ezequiel.garcia@free-electrons.com (Ezequiel Garcia)
To: linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org
Subject: [PATCH 1/3] ARM: Introduce atomic MMIO clear/set
Date: Mon, 19 Aug 2013 13:59:56 -0300	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20130819165955.GA20522@localhost> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20130812182942.GA28695@mudshark.cambridge.arm.com>

On Mon, Aug 12, 2013 at 07:29:42PM +0100, Will Deacon wrote:
> On Sat, Aug 10, 2013 at 01:43:00PM +0100, Ezequiel Garcia wrote:
> > Some SoC have MMIO regions that are shared across orthogonal
> > subsystems. This commit implements a possible solution for the
> > thread-safe access of such regions through a spinlock-protected API
> > with clear-set semantics.
> > 
> > Concurrent access is protected with a single spinlock for the
> > entire MMIO address space. While this protects shared-registers,
> > it also serializes access to unrelated/unshared registers.
> > 
> > Signed-off-by: Ezequiel Garcia <ezequiel.garcia@free-electrons.com>
> 
> [...]
> 
> > +void atomic_io_clear_set(void __iomem *reg, u32 clear, u32 set)
> > +{
> > +	spin_lock(&__io_lock);
> > +	writel((readl(reg) & ~clear) | set, reg);
> > +	spin_unlock(&__io_lock);
> > +}
> 
> I appreciate that you've lifted this code from a previous driver, but this
> doesn't really make any sense to me. The spin_unlock operation is
> essentially a store to normal, cacheable memory, whilst the writel is an
> __iowmb followed by a store to device memory.
> 
> This means that you don't have ordering guarantees between the two accesses
> outside of the CPU, potentially giving you:
> 
> 	spin_lock(&__io_lock);
> 	spin_unlock(&__io_lock);
> 	writel((readl(reg) & ~clear) | set, reg);
> 
> which is probably not what you want.
> 
> I suggest adding an iowmb after the writel if you really need this ordering
> to be enforced (but this may have a significant performance impact,
> depending on your SoC).
> 

I don't want to argue with you, given I have zero knowledge about this
ordering issue. However let me ask you a question.

In arch/arm/include/asm/spinlock.h I'm seeing this comment:

""ARMv6 ticket-based spin-locking.
A memory barrier is required after we get a lock, and before we
release it, because V6 CPUs are assumed to have weakly ordered
memory.""

and also:

static inline void arch_spin_unlock(arch_spinlock_t *lock)
{
	smp_mb();
	lock->tickets.owner++;
	dsb_sev();
}

So, knowing this atomic API should work for every ARMv{N}, and not being very
sure what the call to dsb_sev() does. Would you care to explain how the above
is *not* enough to guarantee a memory barrier before the spin unlocking?

Thanks!
-- 
Ezequiel Garc?a, Free Electrons
Embedded Linux, Kernel and Android Engineering
http://free-electrons.com

  reply	other threads:[~2013-08-19 16:59 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 17+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2013-08-10 12:42 [PATCH 0/3] Introduce atomic MMIO register clear-set Ezequiel Garcia
2013-08-10 12:43 ` [PATCH 1/3] ARM: Introduce atomic MMIO clear/set Ezequiel Garcia
2013-08-10 12:49   ` Alexander Shiyan
2013-08-10 14:02     ` Ezequiel Garcia
2013-08-10 14:09       ` Ezequiel Garcia
2013-08-10 15:43         ` Alexander Shiyan
2013-08-10 15:55           ` Ezequiel Garcia
2013-08-12 15:46             ` Ezequiel Garcia
2013-08-12 16:44               ` Sebastian Hesselbarth
2013-08-12 17:09                 ` Ezequiel Garcia
2013-08-12 18:29   ` Will Deacon
2013-08-19 16:59     ` Ezequiel Garcia [this message]
2013-08-20 14:32       ` Matt Sealey
2013-08-20 14:52         ` Ezequiel Garcia
2013-08-20 15:04           ` Will Deacon
2013-08-10 12:43 ` [PATCH 2/3] clocksource: orion: Use atomic access for shared registers Ezequiel Garcia
2013-08-10 12:43 ` [PATCH 3/3] watchdog: " Ezequiel Garcia

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