From: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com>
To: Robert Hancock <hancockr@shaw.ca>
Cc: Alan Cox <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk>, Alexander <aledin@mail.ru>,
linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, ide <linux-ide@vger.kernel.org>,
Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>, Tejun Heo <htejun@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: PROBLEM REMAINS: [sata_nv ADMA breaks ATAPI] Crash on accessing DVD-RAM
Date: Mon, 14 Jan 2008 20:23:43 -0600 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1200363823.3159.107.camel@localhost.localdomain> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <478C0F61.7030002@shaw.ca>
On Mon, 2008-01-14 at 19:41 -0600, Robert Hancock wrote:
> James Bottomley wrote:
> > On Sun, 2008-01-13 at 16:29 +0000, Alan Cox wrote:
> >>> Yes, I concur for the short term. The other two possible courses of
> >>> action either involve long discussions (the different device one) or
> >>> you'll never quite be sure you got all the paths (the GFP_DMA32 one).
> >>> At least with this one, you know everything will work.
> >> The different device one is tricky because the PCI layer is involved in
> >> mapping on some systems so you can't just magic up a platform device for
> >> it. Putting a mask on the block queue might perhaps work as a model
> >> which avoids breaking stuff by suprise, with the device left at 32bit
> >> masking.
> >
> > Actually, you might be able to ... that's why I'm suggesting it. There
> > are two pieces of information the arch layer needs to know: what is the
> > dma_mask and where is the iommu/bridge/whatever. When we went to the
> > generic dma_map_ API on parisc, we found you simply get the one from
> > struct device and for the other you walk up the device tree until you
> > find what you're looking for.
> >
> > I'm not suggesting we invent a dummy pci_device ... I'm suggesting we
> > dma_map on the existing scsi_device, which is properly parented to the
> > pci_device. The problem with this approach will be any architecture
> > which blindly expects dma_map converts to pci_dma_map; however, I'm not
> > sure we have any of those left.
>
> I've tried the dumb solution of setting the mask on the PCI device (for
> both ports) whenever an ATAPI device is detected, and ran into problems
> with that. If we really need to keep the block queue bounce limit and
> DMA mask the same, then we then have to set the bounce limit on both
> ports as well. If you blindly do that from slave_config, though, then
> you blow up since on the first port's initial slave_config the block
> queue for the second port isn't allocated yet, so you'd have to detect
> that case somehow. And if it's done via hotplug after the other port is
> already in use, it'll be changing the limits on a port that's in active
> use, which seems like it could be a bit racy.
>
> So, any ideas? Maybe using the separate struct device is the easiest
> solution, if it'll work..
Right, and the separate struct device exists already in the
scsi_device ... the problem currently is that this isn't the device we
map with, but it could easily become so ... provided the architectures
support it.
This isn't a quick fix solution ... it will involve quite a bit of
device use rethreading through both scsi and ata, so it might be wise to
get linux-arch buy in first.
James
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2008-01-15 2:23 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 17+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
[not found] <fa.krOVfyFmB2aqGjJIoHCLmQxecWc@ifi.uio.no>
2008-01-11 5:46 ` PROBLEM REMAINS: [sata_nv ADMA breaks ATAPI] Crash on accessing DVD-RAM Robert Hancock
2008-01-12 8:25 ` Alexander
2008-01-12 19:25 ` Robert Hancock
2008-01-12 20:35 ` James Bottomley
2008-01-12 23:04 ` Robert Hancock
2008-01-12 23:27 ` James Bottomley
2008-01-13 1:38 ` Robert Hancock
2008-01-13 3:12 ` James Bottomley
2008-01-13 13:33 ` Alan Cox
2008-01-13 15:38 ` James Bottomley
2008-01-13 16:29 ` Alan Cox
2008-01-13 16:51 ` James Bottomley
2008-01-15 1:41 ` Robert Hancock
2008-01-15 2:23 ` James Bottomley [this message]
2008-02-01 0:09 ` Robert Hancock
2008-02-01 9:59 ` Alexander
2008-02-04 8:29 ` Alexander
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