Tearing down DMA transfer setup after DMA client has finished

Måns Rullgård mans at mansr.com
Fri Nov 25 06:03:20 PST 2016


Russell King - ARM Linux <linux at armlinux.org.uk> writes:

> On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 01:50:35PM +0000, Måns Rullgård wrote:
>> Russell King - ARM Linux <linux at armlinux.org.uk> writes:
>> > It would be unfair to augment the API and add the burden on everyone
>> > for the new API when 99.999% of the world doesn't require it.
>> 
>> I don't think making this particular dma driver wait for the descriptor
>> callback to return before reusing a channel quite amounts to a horrid
>> hack.  It certainly wouldn't burden anyone other than the poor drivers
>> for devices connected to it, all of which are specific to Sigma AFAIK.
>
> Except when you stop to think that delaying in a tasklet is exactly
> the same as randomly delaying in an interrupt handler - the tasklet
> runs on the return path back to the parent context of an interrupt
> handler.  Even if you sleep in the tasklet, you're sleeping on behalf
> of the currently executing thread - if it's a RT thread, you effectively
> destroy the RT-ness of the thread.  Let's hope no one cares about RT
> performance on that hardware...

That's why I suggested to do this only if the needed delay is known to
be no more than a few bus cycles.  The completion callback is currently
the only post-transfer interaction we have between the dma and device
drivers.  To handle an arbitrarily long delay, some new interface will
be required.

-- 
Måns Rullgård



More information about the linux-arm-kernel mailing list