[RFC 1/3 v3] mm: iommu: An API to unify IOMMU, CPU and device memory management
Zach Pfeffer
zpfeffer at codeaurora.org
Thu Jul 22 12:44:56 EDT 2010
On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 01:43:26PM +0900, FUJITA Tomonori wrote:
> On Wed, 21 Jul 2010 21:30:34 -0700
> Zach Pfeffer <zpfeffer at codeaurora.org> wrote:
>
> > On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 10:44:37AM +0900, FUJITA Tomonori wrote:
> > > On Tue, 20 Jul 2010 15:20:01 -0700
> > > Zach Pfeffer <zpfeffer at codeaurora.org> wrote:
> > >
> > > > > I'm not saying that it's reasonable to pass (or even allocate) a 1MB
> > > > > buffer via the DMA API.
> > > >
> > > > But given a bunch of large chunks of memory, is there any API that can
> > > > manage them (asked this on the other thread as well)?
> > >
> > > What is the problem about mapping a 1MB buffer with the DMA API?
> > >
> > > Possibly, an IOMMU can't find space for 1MB but it's not the problem
> > > of the DMA API.
> >
> > This goes to the nub of the issue. We need a lot of 1 MB physically
> > contiguous chunks. The system is going to fragment and we'll never get
> > our 12 1 MB chunks that we'll need, since the DMA API allocator uses
> > the system pool it will never succeed. For this reason we reserve a
> > pool of 1 MB chunks (and 16 MB, 64 KB etc...) to satisfy our
> > requests. This same use case is seen on most embedded "media" engines
> > that are getting built today.
>
> We don't need a new abstraction to reserve some memory.
>
> If you want pre-allocated memory pool per device (and share them with
> some), the DMA API can for coherent memory (see
> dma_alloc_from_coherent). You can extend the DMA API if necessary.
That function won't work for us. We can't use
bitmap_find_free_region(), we need to use our own allocator. If
anything we need a dma_alloc_from_custom(my_allocator). Take a look
at:
mm: iommu: A physical allocator for the VCMM
vcm_alloc_max_munch()
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