
On 11/23/2015 08:24 AM, Scott Wood wrote:
On Sat, 2015-11-21 at 15:29 -0800, York Sun wrote:
On 11/21/2015 02:55 PM, York Sun wrote:
Roy,
Do you remember the reason why we use different virtual memory address from pci bus address with 36-bit? For example
include/configs/P1022DS.h-496-#define CONFIG_SYS_PCIE1_MEM_VIRT 0xc0000000 include/configs/P1022DS.h-497-#ifdef CONFIG_PHYS_64BIT include/configs/P1022DS.h:498:#define CONFIG_SYS_PCIE1_MEM_BUS 0xe0000000 include/configs/P1022DS.h-499-#define CONFIG_SYS_PCIE1_MEM_PHYS 0xc40000000ull include/configs/P1022DS.h-500-#else include/configs/P1022DS.h:501:#define CONFIG_SYS_PCIE1_MEM_BUS 0xc0000000 include/configs/P1022DS.h-502-#define CONFIG_SYS_PCIE1_MEM_PHYS 0xc0000000 include/configs/P1022DS.h-503-#endif
As far as I can tell, the following is the mapping
TLB: MEM_VIRT=>MEM_PHYS PCI: MEM_BUS=>MEM_PHYS LAW: MEM_PHYS=>pcie interface
Being different for MEM_VIRT and MEM_BUS cause confusion. When I run "pci header" command to show the BARs, I expect I can use "md" to access the BAR address. That's not the case if MEM_BUS is different from MEM_VIRT.
I forget why we did this for 36-bit addressing. The MEM_VIRT is the same as MEM_BUS for 32-bit addressing. And why do we use the same MEM_BUS address for all PCIe hose? I know they are not conflicting, but is it necessary?
(I hope Becky and Kumar still follow this mailing list)
I dug out an old commit 4c78d4a6c01621721b732418e1c6da684a56bbb1 by Becky Bruce. She believed overlapping the bus address for PCI controllers leaves more space. That's true. But we haven't use more than 512MB in u-boot. If we do need more space, we can easily move things around if we have PHYS_64BIT. If no objection, I'd like to change this back.
I object. It's not about how much RAM is used in U-Boot; it's about how much memory the OS needs to bounce-buffer for DMA. The addresses set up by U-Boot should match what's in the device tree. Yes, on 85xx Linux reprograms the ATMU based on the device tree rather than trusting U-Boot, but that doesn't mean every OS does.
Isn't this backward? I mean the device tree should match u-boot, or u-boot should fix up the device tree, right? I checked several device tree files in kernel. We are not using more than 512MB for each PCI. What's the benefit of using the same address 0xe0000000?
York