[skipping the DT bits, as I'm everything but an expert on that..] On Mon, Jan 27, 2020 at 04:00:30PM +0200, Peter Ujfalusi wrote: > I agree on the phys_to_dma(). It should fail for addresses which does > not fall into any of the ranges. > It is just a that we in Linux don't have the concept atm for ranges, we > have only _one_ range which applies to every memory address.
what does atm here mean? We have needed multi-range support for quite a while, as common broadcom SOCs do need it. So patches for that are welcome at least from the DMA layer perspective (kinda similar to your pseudo code earlier) > > Nobody's disputing that the current dma_direct_supported() > > implementation is broken for the case where ZONE_DMA itself is offset > > from PA 0; the more pressing question is why Christoph's diff, which was > > trying to take that into account, still didn't work. > > I understand that this is a bit more complex than I interpret it, but > the k2g is broken and currently the simplest way to make it work is to > use the arm dma_ops in case the pfn_offset is not 0. > It will be easy to test dma-direct changes trying to address the issue > in hand, but will allow k2g to be usable at the same time. Well, using the legacy arm dma ops means we can't use swiotlb if there is an offset, which is also wrong for lots of common cases, including the Rpi 4. I'm still curious why my patch didn't work, as I thought it should. We'll need to find the minimum change to make it work for now without switching ops, even if it isn't the correct one, and then work from there. _______________________________________________ iommu mailing list iommu@lists.linux-foundation.org https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/iommu