[PATCH/WIP/RFC 02/14] shmobile-iommu: Move IPMMU driver to drivers/iommu
Laurent Pinchart
laurent.pinchart at ideasonboard.com
Mon Dec 17 03:45:03 EST 2012
Hi Damian,
(CC'ing iommu at lists.linux-foundation.org)
On Monday 17 December 2012 12:10:28 Damian Hobson-Garcia wrote:
> On 2012/12/17 2:25, Laurent Pinchart wrote:
> > Signed-off-by: Laurent Pinchart
> > <laurent.pinchart+renesas at ideasonboard.com>
> > ---
> >
> > arch/arm/mach-shmobile/Kconfig | 6 ------
> > arch/arm/mach-shmobile/Makefile | 3 ---
> > drivers/iommu/Kconfig | 6 ++++++
> > drivers/iommu/Makefile | 1 +
> > .../ipmmu.c => drivers/iommu/shmobile-ipmmu.c | 0
> > 5 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)
> > rename arch/arm/mach-shmobile/ipmmu.c => drivers/iommu/shmobile-ipmmu.c
> > (100%)
>
> I agree that arch/arm is not a good place, but I'm not completely sure that
> ipmmu.c belongs in drivers/iommu. The reason is because of the PMB
> functionality provided by the IPMMU. The PMB provides a fixed address
> remapping capability that is completely unrelated to the IOMMU
> functionality. Since this remapping is done by writing the IPMMU registers
> directly, instead of via a page table it doesn't really fit in well with the
> IOMMU API (it also supports things like tiled/linear address translation,
> which require some other method to set up). Since the PMB and the IOMMU
> functions of the IPPMU share the same register address space, we would like
> to have one driver to handle the register accesses of both of these
> functions. That driver is ipmmu.c. So if ipmmu.c is in drivers/iommu, the
> entire IOMMU subsystem must be enabled in order to use the PMB
> functionality. So maybe it might be better to treat the IPMMU like a
> multifuction device, with a core driver (ipmmu.c) in one location and the
> function implementations in their own respective directories. Does
> drivers/mfd sound like a good place for it?
I've thought about this as well. The IPMMU indeed provides two different
functions, so drivers/mfd/ could be a candidate. This being said, both the
IOMMU function and the PMB function are related to virtual memory space
management, so they're not totally unrelated. I agree that the PMB function
isn't really an IOMMU in the sense that it will likely not be exposed through
the existing IOMMU API.
However, drivers/iommu/ seems to me like a more natural place to store the
IPMMU driver compared to drivers/mfd/. Enabling IOMMU support
(CONFIG_IOMMU_SUPPORT) doesn't mean the IOMMU core (CONFIG_IOMMU_API) will be
compiled in. There would thus be no extra code compiled in if the IOMMU
function of the IPMMU is disabled.
--
Regards,
Laurent Pinchart
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list