runtime check for omap-aes bus access permission (was: Re: 3.13-rc3 (commit 7ce93f3) breaks Nokia N900 DT boot)
Tony Lindgren
tony at atomide.com
Fri May 29 08:50:31 PDT 2015
* Matthijs van Duin <matthijsvanduin at gmail.com> [150528 18:37]:
> On 29 May 2015 at 02:58, Matthijs van Duin <matthijsvanduin at gmail.com> wrote:
> > It is only guaranteed to happen immediately (before the next
> > instruction is executed) if the error occurs before the posting-point
> > of the write. However, in that case the error is reported in-band to
> > the cpu, resulting in a (synchronous) bus error which takes precedence
> > over the out-of-band error irq (if any is signalled).
>
> OK, all this was actually assuming linux uses device-type mappings for
> device mappings, which was also the impression I got from
> build_mem_type_table() in arch/arm/mm/mmu.c (although it's a bit of a
> maze). A quick test however seems to imply otherwise:
>
> ~# ./bogus-dev-write
> Bus error
>
> So... linux actually uses strongly-ordered mappings? I really didn't
> expect that, given the performance implications (especially on a
> strictly in-order cpu like the Cortex-A8 which will really just sit
> there picking its nose until the write completes) and I think I recall
> having seen an OCP barrier being used somewhere in driver code...
I believe some TI kernels use strongly-ordered mappings, mainline
kernel does not. Which kernel version are you using?
> Well, in that case everything I said is technically still true, except
> the posting point is the peripheral itself. That also means the
> interconnect error reporting mechanism is not really useful for
> probing since you'll get a bus error before any error irq is
> delivered.
Hmm if that's the case then yes we can't use the error irq. However,
what I've seen so far is that we only get the bus error if the
l3_* drivers are configured. I guess some more testing is needed.
> So I'd say you're back at having to trap that bus error using the
> exception handling mechanism, which I still suspect shouldn't be hard
> to do.
And in that case it makes sense to do that in the bootloader to
avoid adding any custom early boot code to Linux kernel.
> Or perhaps you could probe the device using a DMA access and combine
> that with the interconnect error reporting irq... ;-)
Heh too many dependencies :)
Tony
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