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From: Nicolin Chen <nicoleotsuka@gmail.com>
To: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Cc: linux-mm@kvack.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: mm/hmm: a simple question regarding devm_request_mem_region()
Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2018 17:23:55 -0700	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20180322002352.GA12673@Asurada-Nvidia> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20180321225632.GI3214@redhat.com>

On Wed, Mar 21, 2018 at 06:56:32PM -0400, Jerome Glisse wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 21, 2018 at 03:23:57PM -0700, Nicolin Chen wrote:
> > Hello Jerome,
> > 
> > I started to looking at the mm/hmm code and having a question at the
> > devm_request_mem_region() call in the hmm_devmem_add() implementation:
> > 
> > >	addr = min((unsigned long)iomem_resource.end,
> > >		   (1UL << MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS) - 1);
> > 
> > The main question is here as I am a bit confused by this addr. The code
> > is trying to get an addr from the end of memory space. However, I have
> > tried on an ARM64 platform where ioport_resource.end is -1, so it takes
> > "(1UL << MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS) - 1" as the addr base, while this addr is way
> > beyond the actual main memory size that's available on my board. Is HMM
> > supposed to get an memory region like this? Would it be possible for you
> > to give some hint to help me understand it?
> 
> What are you trying to do ? hmm_devmem_add() is use either for device
> private memory or device public memory. Device private memory is memory
> that is not accessible by the CPU, the code you are pointing to is for
> that case where i try to find a range of physical address not currently
> use (memory not being accessible means that there is not any valid
> physical address reserved for it). On x86 MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS is defined
> to something that make sense, but as it is often the case for those
> define, it seems that arm define an unreal value. My advice fix the
> definition for ARM iirc it depends on the SOC dunno if you can know
> that at build time. You can probably know the biggest one at build time
> (1 << 47 or something like that).
> 
> But this all assume that you have a device with its own memory that is
> not accessible from the CPU. Which is very uncommon on ARM, only case
> i know of is regular PCIE GPU on a ARM system with PCIE.

I am testing with drivers/char/hmm_dmirror.c from your git repository.

The addr I got (before "- size") is actually 0x7fffffffff, so equally
(1 << 40).

So from your reply, it seems to me that HMM is supposed to request a
region like it.

Thanks
Nicolin

  reply	other threads:[~2018-03-22  0:23 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2018-03-21 22:23 mm/hmm: a simple question regarding devm_request_mem_region() Nicolin Chen
2018-03-21 22:56 ` Jerome Glisse
2018-03-22  0:23   ` Nicolin Chen [this message]
2018-03-22  0:32     ` Jerome Glisse
2018-03-22  2:00       ` Nicolin Chen

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