On Fri, Feb 22, 2008 at 12:18:18PM +1300, Eliot Blennerhassett wrote:
Greetings,
first, the meta-help request: Is there another place that I should be making this request? (lkml, kernel newbies, linux driver project etc)?
lkml is best for this.
Theres quite a bit written about barriers, but most seems to be assuming SMP situation or memory mapped devices. Not much about devices doing DMA. I.e I have read Documentation/memory-barriers.txt
Now the actual question: Currently I have a driver that uses "volatile" - heres the relevant source. http://hg.alsa-project.org/alsa-driver/file/89222d702376/pci/asihpi/hpi6205....
The "volatile" is applied to structures that are either read or written by device DMA. Certainly the driver in its current state doesn't work without volatile qualifier. (BTW the device doesn't use host interrupts)
Structures ("interface") used for dma are allocated with dma_alloc_coherent()
In the following, am I using the barriers correctly?
- Reading something updated by DMA
volatile struct bus_master_interface *interface; while (interface->ack != OK) { sleep(a while) [ device changes interface->ack by dma ] }; === after conversion struct bus_master_interface *interface; while (interface->ack != OK) { sleep(a while); rmb(); };
Here the volatile or rmb is needed or the loop gets optimised away.
Using rmb() is correct, not volatile, as volatile might not really do what you are expecting it to do on all versions of gcc and architectures.
So please remove all instances of volatile, it is not correct to use it within kernel code.
thanks,
greg k-h