[alsa-devel] Question on arm64 unaligned faults during playback
Will Deacon
will.deacon at arm.com
Mon Dec 8 12:31:19 CET 2014
On Mon, Dec 08, 2014 at 11:15:52AM +0000, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
> Added ARM64 folks to Cc.
>
> On 12/08/2014 11:41 AM, Takashi Iwai wrote:
> > At Mon, 08 Dec 2014 09:49:37 +0100,
> > Clemens Ladisch wrote:
> >>
> >> Abhilash Kesavan wrote:
> >>> I am working on a 64-bit ARM SoC (Samsung's Exynos7) and have observed
> >>> unaligned faults while testing certain sound streams with aplay.
> >>>
> >>> [ 24.535661] snd_pcm_lib_write_transfer:sound/core/pcm_lib.c hwbuf is ffffff8000085624, runtime->dma_area is ffffff8000080000, hwoff is 5513, frames_to_bytes is 22052, frames is 5513
> >>> [ 24.551244] Unhandled fault: alignment fault (0x96000061) at 0xffffff8000085624
> >>> [ 24.579944] PC is at __copy_from_user+0x14/0x60
> >>> [ 24.584450] LR is at snd_pcm_lib_write_transfer+0xe4/0x104
> >>> [ 24.922054] Call trace:
> >>> [ 24.924488] [<ffffffc0002d4784>] __copy_from_user+0x14/0x60
> >>> [ 24.930040] [<ffffffc0004b7574>] snd_pcm_lib_write1+0x1fc/0x384
> >>>
> >>> We are using the internal sram available for sound, for DMA buffer
> >>> allocation, using the generic SRAM driver. From the above log, the
> >>> buffer address offset is not 8-byte aligned and as we are using the
> >>> SRAM driver which maps the memory as device memory we are getting an
> >>> unaligned fault. Is it incorrect to use the generic sram driver for
> >>> arm64 or am I missing something ?
> >>
> >> When you give the ALSA framework a memory buffer, it is assumed that it
> >> is general-purpose memory, i.e., can be accessed with any alignment.
> >>
> >> If your memory does not allow such accesses, you have to do all the
> >> accesses in your driver, i.e., do everything in the .copy/.silence
> >> callbacks. (You also have to add constraints so that periods and buffer
> >> are correctly aligned.)
> >
> > You can set runtime->min_align in the own hw_params callback so that
> > the PCM core handle it well, at least, for non-mmap mode.
> >
> > But this feature has been rarely used (currently no driver sets it
> > explicitly), so there might be still some bugs there, too :)
>
> As far as I can see min_align only aligns the hardware pointer, but not the
> application pointer. The later causes the issue here.
>
> E.g. if a application writes a unaligned amount of bytes the next write will
> start at an unaligned buffer address.
>
> How safe is it in general to use IO mapped memory as general purpose memory
> on ARM64? Are there maybe even more constraints than just that access has to
> be aligned? Maybe the driver should rather use copy_from_user_toio() instead
> of copy_from_user() to make sure that things work correctly.
If you're simply mapping RAM as device memory, then you need to ensure:
- Naturally aligned access
- No exclusive instructions (e.g atomics, locks, semaphores ...)
Out of interest, why are you using device mappings for memory? By design,
they prohibit speculation (and, depending on the subtype, re-ordering,
gathering and early write response) and will be significantly slower than
normal memory accesses.
Could you use something like ioremap_wc, which will give you normal,
non-cacheable memory instead?
Will
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