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* Question regarding "reserved-memory"
@ 2019-10-24 14:22 Ayan Halder
  2019-10-24 14:51 ` Rob Herring
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Ayan Halder @ 2019-10-24 14:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: robh+dt@kernel.org, Mark Rutland, devicetree@vger.kernel.org,
	m.szyprowski@samsung.com
  Cc: dri-devel@lists.freedesktop.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org,
	Liviu Dudau, Mihail Atanassov,
	james qian wang (Arm Technology China), Brian Starkey, nd


Hi Folks,

I have a question regarding "reserved-memory". I am using an Arm Juno
platform which has a chunk of ram in its fpga. I intend to make this
memory as reserved so that it can be shared between various devices
for passing framebuffer.

My dts looks like the following:-

/ {
        .... // some nodes

        tlx@60000000 {
                compatible = "simple-bus";
                ...

                juno_wrapper {

                        ... /* here we have all the nodes */
                            /* corresponding to the devices in the fpga */

                        memory@d000000 {
                               device_type = "memory";
                               reg = <0x00 0x60000000 0x00 0x8000000>;
                        };

                        reserved-memory {
                               #address-cells = <0x01>;
                               #size-cells = <0x01>;
                               ranges;

                               framebuffer@d000000 {
                                        compatible = "shared-dma-pool";
                                        linux,cma-default;
                                        reusable;
                                        reg = <0x00 0x60000000 0x00 0x8000000>;
                                        phandle = <0x44>;
                                };
                        };
                        ...
                }
        }
...
}

Note that the depth of the "reserved-memory" node is 3.

Refer __fdt_scan_reserved_mem() :-

        if (!found && depth == 1 && strcmp(uname, "reserved-memory") == 0) {

                if (__reserved_mem_check_root(node) != 0) {
                        pr_err("Reserved memory: unsupported node
format, ignoring\n");
                        /* break scan */
                        return 1;
                }
                found = 1;

                /* scan next node */
                return 0;
        }

It expects the "reserved-memory" node to be at depth == 1 and so it
does not probe it in our case.

Niether from the
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/reserved-memory/reserved-memory.txt
 nor from commit - e8d9d1f5485b52ec3c4d7af839e6914438f6c285,
I could understand the reason for such restriction.

So, I seek the community's advice as to whether I should fix up
__fdt_scan_reserved_mem() so as to do away with the restriction or
put the "reserved-memory" node outside of 'tlx@60000000' (which looks
 logically incorrect as the memory is on the fpga platform).


Thanks,
Ayan


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: Question regarding "reserved-memory"
  2019-10-24 14:22 Question regarding "reserved-memory" Ayan Halder
@ 2019-10-24 14:51 ` Rob Herring
  2019-10-24 15:19   ` Ayan Halder
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Rob Herring @ 2019-10-24 14:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Ayan Halder
  Cc: Mark Rutland, devicetree@vger.kernel.org,
	m.szyprowski@samsung.com, dri-devel@lists.freedesktop.org,
	linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, Liviu Dudau, Mihail Atanassov,
	james qian wang (Arm Technology China), Brian Starkey, nd

On Thu, Oct 24, 2019 at 9:22 AM Ayan Halder <Ayan.Halder@arm.com> wrote:
>
>
> Hi Folks,
>
> I have a question regarding "reserved-memory". I am using an Arm Juno
> platform which has a chunk of ram in its fpga. I intend to make this
> memory as reserved so that it can be shared between various devices
> for passing framebuffer.
>
> My dts looks like the following:-
>
> / {
>         .... // some nodes
>
>         tlx@60000000 {
>                 compatible = "simple-bus";
>                 ...
>
>                 juno_wrapper {
>
>                         ... /* here we have all the nodes */
>                             /* corresponding to the devices in the fpga */
>
>                         memory@d000000 {
>                                device_type = "memory";
>                                reg = <0x00 0x60000000 0x00 0x8000000>;
>                         };
>
>                         reserved-memory {
>                                #address-cells = <0x01>;
>                                #size-cells = <0x01>;
>                                ranges;
>
>                                framebuffer@d000000 {
>                                         compatible = "shared-dma-pool";
>                                         linux,cma-default;
>                                         reusable;
>                                         reg = <0x00 0x60000000 0x00 0x8000000>;
>                                         phandle = <0x44>;
>                                 };
>                         };
>                         ...
>                 }
>         }
> ...
> }
>
> Note that the depth of the "reserved-memory" node is 3.
>
> Refer __fdt_scan_reserved_mem() :-
>
>         if (!found && depth == 1 && strcmp(uname, "reserved-memory") == 0) {
>
>                 if (__reserved_mem_check_root(node) != 0) {
>                         pr_err("Reserved memory: unsupported node
> format, ignoring\n");
>                         /* break scan */
>                         return 1;
>                 }
>                 found = 1;
>
>                 /* scan next node */
>                 return 0;
>         }
>
> It expects the "reserved-memory" node to be at depth == 1 and so it
> does not probe it in our case.
>
> Niether from the
> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/reserved-memory/reserved-memory.txt
>  nor from commit - e8d9d1f5485b52ec3c4d7af839e6914438f6c285,
> I could understand the reason for such restriction.
>
> So, I seek the community's advice as to whether I should fix up
> __fdt_scan_reserved_mem() so as to do away with the restriction or
> put the "reserved-memory" node outside of 'tlx@60000000' (which looks
>  logically incorrect as the memory is on the fpga platform).

For now, I'm going to say it must be at the root level. I'd guess the
memory@d000000 node is also just ignored (wrong unit-address BTW).

I think you're also forgetting the later unflattened parsing of
/reserved-memory. The other complication IIRC is booting with UEFI
does it's own reserved memory table which often uses the DT table as
its source.

Rob

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: Question regarding "reserved-memory"
  2019-10-24 14:51 ` Rob Herring
@ 2019-10-24 15:19   ` Ayan Halder
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Ayan Halder @ 2019-10-24 15:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Herring
  Cc: Mark Rutland, devicetree@vger.kernel.org,
	m.szyprowski@samsung.com, dri-devel@lists.freedesktop.org,
	linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, Liviu Dudau, Mihail Atanassov,
	james qian wang (Arm Technology China), Brian Starkey, nd

On Thu, Oct 24, 2019 at 09:51:04AM -0500, Rob Herring wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 24, 2019 at 9:22 AM Ayan Halder <Ayan.Halder@arm.com> wrote:
Hi Bob,

Thanks for your quick response.
> >
> >
> > Hi Folks,
> >
> > I have a question regarding "reserved-memory". I am using an Arm Juno
> > platform which has a chunk of ram in its fpga. I intend to make this
> > memory as reserved so that it can be shared between various devices
> > for passing framebuffer.
> >
> > My dts looks like the following:-
> >
> > / {
> >         .... // some nodes
> >
> >         tlx@60000000 {
> >                 compatible = "simple-bus";
> >                 ...
> >
> >                 juno_wrapper {
> >
> >                         ... /* here we have all the nodes */
> >                             /* corresponding to the devices in the fpga */
> >
> >                         memory@d000000 {
> >                                device_type = "memory";
> >                                reg = <0x00 0x60000000 0x00 0x8000000>;
> >                         };
> >
> >                         reserved-memory {
> >                                #address-cells = <0x01>;
> >                                #size-cells = <0x01>;
> >                                ranges;
> >
> >                                framebuffer@d000000 {
> >                                         compatible = "shared-dma-pool";
> >                                         linux,cma-default;
> >                                         reusable;
> >                                         reg = <0x00 0x60000000 0x00 0x8000000>;
> >                                         phandle = <0x44>;
> >                                 };
> >                         };
> >                         ...
> >                 }
> >         }
> > ...
> > }
> >
> > Note that the depth of the "reserved-memory" node is 3.
> >
> > Refer __fdt_scan_reserved_mem() :-
> >
> >         if (!found && depth == 1 && strcmp(uname, "reserved-memory") == 0) {
> >
> >                 if (__reserved_mem_check_root(node) != 0) {
> >                         pr_err("Reserved memory: unsupported node
> > format, ignoring\n");
> >                         /* break scan */
> >                         return 1;
> >                 }
> >                 found = 1;
> >
> >                 /* scan next node */
> >                 return 0;
> >         }
> >
> > It expects the "reserved-memory" node to be at depth == 1 and so it
> > does not probe it in our case.
> >
> > Niether from the
> > Documentation/devicetree/bindings/reserved-memory/reserved-memory.txt
> >  nor from commit - e8d9d1f5485b52ec3c4d7af839e6914438f6c285,
> > I could understand the reason for such restriction.
> >
> > So, I seek the community's advice as to whether I should fix up
> > __fdt_scan_reserved_mem() so as to do away with the restriction or
> > put the "reserved-memory" node outside of 'tlx@60000000' (which looks
> >  logically incorrect as the memory is on the fpga platform).
> 
> For now, I'm going to say it must be at the root level. 
Can you mention it in the Documentation/.../reserved-memory.txt,
please?

> I'd guess the
> memory@d000000 node is also just ignored (wrong unit-address BTW).
I would request you to ignore the address for the time being. In
juno_wrapper{}, we have a complex remapping of addresses of all the
sub-devices. I deliberately did not put that in the snippet, so as to
prevent any distraction from the core issue.

> 
> I think you're also forgetting the later unflattened parsing of
> /reserved-memory.
Are you talking about the remaining part of the
__fdt_scan_reserved_mem() ie

       ....
        } else if (found && depth < 2) {
                /* scanning of /reserved-memory has been finished */
                return 1;
        }

        if (!of_fdt_device_is_available(initial_boot_params, node))
                return 0;

        err = __reserved_mem_reserve_reg(node, uname);
        if (err == -ENOENT && of_get_flat_dt_prop(node, "size", NULL))
                fdt_reserved_mem_save_node(node, uname, 0, 0);

        /* scan next node */
        return 0;

If so, I agree with you that it needs to be changed as well (if we
were to do away with the restriction).

> The other complication IIRC is booting with UEFI
> does it's own reserved memory table which often uses the DT table as
> its source.
I have no knowledge of UEFI booting. So if UEFI expects
"reserved-memory" nodes to be at root level, then we must adhere to
the restriction. :)

Ayan
> 
> Rob

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

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2019-10-24 14:51 ` Rob Herring
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