| From 384888707323e7ffcfff10dccf5dbf64cd21e2a7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 |
| From: Wolfram Sang <wsa+renesas@sang-engineering.com> |
| Date: Sat, 4 Nov 2017 21:20:07 +0100 |
| Subject: [PATCH 1800/1808] i2c: add docs to clarify DMA handling |
| |
| Reviewed-by: Jonathan Cameron <Jonathan.Cameron@huawei.com> |
| Reviewed-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@s-opensource.com> |
| Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa+renesas@sang-engineering.com> |
| Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de> |
| (cherry picked from commit d4e01186ae1c6045b5a508741f2446dffec7511c) |
| Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <horms+renesas@verge.net.au> |
| Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert+renesas@glider.be> |
| --- |
| Documentation/i2c/DMA-considerations | 67 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ |
| 1 file changed, 67 insertions(+) |
| create mode 100644 Documentation/i2c/DMA-considerations |
| |
| diff --git a/Documentation/i2c/DMA-considerations b/Documentation/i2c/DMA-considerations |
| new file mode 100644 |
| index 000000000000..966610aa4620 |
| --- /dev/null |
| +++ b/Documentation/i2c/DMA-considerations |
| @@ -0,0 +1,67 @@ |
| +================= |
| +Linux I2C and DMA |
| +================= |
| + |
| +Given that i2c is a low-speed bus, over which the majority of messages |
| +transferred are small, it is not considered a prime user of DMA access. At this |
| +time of writing, only 10% of I2C bus master drivers have DMA support |
| +implemented. And the vast majority of transactions are so small that setting up |
| +DMA for it will likely add more overhead than a plain PIO transfer. |
| + |
| +Therefore, it is *not* mandatory that the buffer of an I2C message is DMA safe. |
| +It does not seem reasonable to apply additional burdens when the feature is so |
| +rarely used. However, it is recommended to use a DMA-safe buffer if your |
| +message size is likely applicable for DMA. Most drivers have this threshold |
| +around 8 bytes (as of today, this is mostly an educated guess, however). For |
| +any message of 16 byte or larger, it is probably a really good idea. Please |
| +note that other subsystems you use might add requirements. E.g., if your |
| +I2C bus master driver is using USB as a bridge, then you need to have DMA |
| +safe buffers always, because USB requires it. |
| + |
| +Clients |
| +------- |
| + |
| +For clients, if you use a DMA safe buffer in i2c_msg, set the I2C_M_DMA_SAFE |
| +flag with it. Then, the I2C core and drivers know they can safely operate DMA |
| +on it. Note that using this flag is optional. I2C host drivers which are not |
| +updated to use this flag will work like before. And like before, they risk |
| +using an unsafe DMA buffer. To improve this situation, using I2C_M_DMA_SAFE in |
| +more and more clients and host drivers is the planned way forward. Note also |
| +that setting this flag makes only sense in kernel space. User space data is |
| +copied into kernel space anyhow. The I2C core makes sure the destination |
| +buffers in kernel space are always DMA capable. Also, when the core emulates |
| +SMBus transactions via I2C, the buffers for block transfers are DMA safe. Users |
| +of i2c_master_send() and i2c_master_recv() functions can now use DMA safe |
| +variants (i2c_master_send_dmasafe() and i2c_master_recv_dmasafe()) once they |
| +know their buffers are DMA safe. Users of i2c_transfer() must set the |
| +I2C_M_DMA_SAFE flag manually. |
| + |
| +Masters |
| +------- |
| + |
| +Bus master drivers wishing to implement safe DMA can use helper functions from |
| +the I2C core. One gives you a DMA-safe buffer for a given i2c_msg as long as a |
| +certain threshold is met:: |
| + |
| + dma_buf = i2c_get_dma_safe_msg_buf(msg, threshold_in_byte); |
| + |
| +If a buffer is returned, it is either msg->buf for the I2C_M_DMA_SAFE case or a |
| +bounce buffer. But you don't need to care about that detail, just use the |
| +returned buffer. If NULL is returned, the threshold was not met or a bounce |
| +buffer could not be allocated. Fall back to PIO in that case. |
| + |
| +In any case, a buffer obtained from above needs to be released. It ensures data |
| +is copied back to the message and a potentially used bounce buffer is freed:: |
| + |
| + i2c_release_dma_safe_msg_buf(msg, dma_buf); |
| + |
| +The bounce buffer handling from the core is generic and simple. It will always |
| +allocate a new bounce buffer. If you want a more sophisticated handling (e.g. |
| +reusing pre-allocated buffers), you are free to implement your own. |
| + |
| +Please also check the in-kernel documentation for details. The i2c-sh_mobile |
| +driver can be used as a reference example how to use the above helpers. |
| + |
| +Final note: If you plan to use DMA with I2C (or with anything else, actually) |
| +make sure you have CONFIG_DMA_API_DEBUG enabled during development. It can help |
| +you find various issues which can be complex to debug otherwise. |
| -- |
| 2.17.1 |
| |