From: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org>
To: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com>
Cc: Roland Dreier <rdreier@cisco.com>,
Thomas Bogendoerfer <tsbogend@alpha.franken.de>,
David Miller <davem@davemloft.net>,
linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org,
rmk@arm.linux.org.uk
Subject: Re: SCSI breakage on non-cache coherent architectures
Date: Wed, 21 Nov 2007 09:39:03 +1100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1195598343.6970.50.camel@pasglop> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1195593015.17601.10.camel@localhost.localdomain>
On Tue, 2007-11-20 at 15:10 -0600, James Bottomley wrote:
> We're talking about trying to fix this for 2.4; which is already at
> -rc3 ... Is an entire arch change for dma alignment really a merge
> candidate at this stage?
Well, as I said before... it's a matter of what seems to be the less
likely to break something right ?
On one side, I'm doing surgery on code I barely know, the scsi error
handling, and now it seems I also have to fixup a handful of drivers
that aren't the most obvious pieces of code around.
On the other side, Roland proposal is basically just adding a macro that
can be empty for everybody but a handful of archs, and stick it onto one
field in one structure...
The later has about 0 chances to actually break something or cause a
regression. I wouldn't say that about the former.
Now, I will see if I manage to fixup the NCR drivers to pass a
pre-allocated buffer (USB storage I think can pass NULL as it's not
calling prep in atomic context). But then, it complicates the matter
because that means "restore" will have to know whether prep allocated
the buffer or not, thus more fields to add to the save struct, it's
getting messy, unless we decide -all- callers are responsible for the
buffer allocation (hrm... maybe the best approach).
Ben.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2007-11-20 22:39 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 25+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2007-11-19 5:35 SCSI breakage on non-cache coherent architectures Benjamin Herrenschmidt
2007-11-19 8:38 ` David Miller
2007-11-19 19:51 ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt
2007-11-19 22:31 ` David Miller
2007-11-20 0:34 ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt
2007-11-20 0:46 ` David Miller
2007-11-20 0:55 ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt
2007-11-20 0:57 ` David Miller
2007-11-20 2:10 ` Roland Dreier
2007-11-20 2:35 ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt
2007-11-20 3:14 ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt
2007-11-20 19:35 ` James Bottomley
2007-11-20 8:29 ` Thomas Bogendoerfer
2007-11-20 14:36 ` James Bottomley
2007-11-20 20:05 ` Roland Dreier
2007-11-20 21:10 ` James Bottomley
2007-11-20 22:39 ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt [this message]
2007-11-20 23:09 ` James Bottomley
2007-11-19 12:32 ` Matthew Wilcox
2007-11-19 15:09 ` James Bottomley
2007-11-19 19:54 ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt
2007-11-19 19:55 ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt
2007-11-19 19:53 ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt
2007-11-19 21:43 ` Roland Dreier
2007-11-19 21:55 ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt
Reply instructions:
You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:
* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
and reply-to-all from there: mbox
Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style
* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
switches of git-send-email(1):
git send-email \
--in-reply-to=1195598343.6970.50.camel@pasglop \
--to=benh@kernel.crashing.org \
--cc=James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com \
--cc=davem@davemloft.net \
--cc=linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org \
--cc=linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org \
--cc=rdreier@cisco.com \
--cc=rmk@arm.linux.org.uk \
--cc=tsbogend@alpha.franken.de \
/path/to/YOUR_REPLY
https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html
* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line
before the message body.
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox