[PATCH] ARM: supplementing IO accessors with 64 bit capability

Catalin Marinas catalin.marinas at arm.com
Fri Oct 24 09:16:34 PDT 2014


On Fri, Oct 24, 2014 at 04:05:13PM +0100, Mathieu Poirier wrote:
> On 24 October 2014 03:28, Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas at arm.com> wrote:
> > On Wed, Oct 22, 2014 at 08:10:27PM +0100, Mathieu Poirier wrote:
> >> On 22 October 2014 18:44, Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas at arm.com> wrote:
> >> > On Wed, Oct 22, 2014 at 05:06:23PM +0100, mathieu.poirier at linaro.org wrote:
> >> >> +static inline void __raw_writeq(u64 val, volatile void __iomem *addr)
> >> >> +{
> >> >> +     asm volatile("strd %1, %0"
> >> >> +                  : "+Qo" (*(volatile u64 __force *)addr)
> >> >> +                  : "r" (val));
> >> >> +}
> >> >> +
> >> >> +static inline u64 __raw_readq(const volatile void __iomem *addr)
> >> >> +{
> >> >> +     u64 val;
> >> >> +     asm volatile("ldrd %1, %0"
> >> >> +                  : "+Qo" (*(volatile u64 __force *)addr),
> >> >> +                    "=r" (val));
> >> >> +     return val;
> >> >> +}
> >> >> +#endif
> >> >
> >> > I'm curious why you need these. Do you have a device that needs a 64-bit
> >> > single access or you are trying to read two consecutive registers?
> >>
> >> The fundamental data size of Coresight STM32 for ARMv7 is
> >> implementation defined and can be 32 or 64bit.  As such stimulus ports
> >> can support transaction sizes of up to 64 bit.
> >
> > The STM programmer's model spec recommends something else (though I find
> > the "3.6 Data sizes" chapter a bit confusing):
> >
> >   To ensure that code is portable between processor micro-architectures
> >   and system implementations, ARM recommends that only the native data
> >   size of the machine is used, and smaller sizes. For the 32-bit ARMv7
> >   architecture, only 8, 16, and 32-bit transfers are recommended. For an
> >   ARMv8 processor that supports the AArch64 Execution state, it is
> >   recommended that the fundamental data size of 64-bits is implemented.
> >
> > Which means that you should not use readq/writeq on a 32-bit system.
> 
> Not quite.  ARM documentation IHI0054B (ARM System Trace Macrocell:
> Programmers' Model Architecture Specification) stipulate that "For
> systems with an ARMv7 processor, ARM recommends configuration 1 or
> configuration 2.", where configuration 2 has a fundamental size of 64
> bit.

As I said, it's confusing. Anyway, you can go ahead and add the
readq/writeq for ARMv6 and later, though it won't be guaranteed to have
a 64-bit access, it depends on the bus.

BTW, do you need to define the non-relaxed accessors as well? That would
be readq/writeq.

-- 
Catalin



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