1================================== 2DMAengine controller documentation 3================================== 4 5Hardware Introduction 6===================== 7 8Most of the Slave DMA controllers have the same general principles of 9operations. 10 11They have a given number of channels to use for the DMA transfers, and 12a given number of requests lines. 13 14Requests and channels are pretty much orthogonal. Channels can be used 15to serve several to any requests. To simplify, channels are the 16entities that will be doing the copy, and requests what endpoints are 17involved. 18 19The request lines actually correspond to physical lines going from the 20DMA-eligible devices to the controller itself. Whenever the device 21will want to start a transfer, it will assert a DMA request (DRQ) by 22asserting that request line. 23 24A very simple DMA controller would only take into account a single 25parameter: the transfer size. At each clock cycle, it would transfer a 26byte of data from one buffer to another, until the transfer size has 27been reached. 28 29That wouldn't work well in the real world, since slave devices might 30require a specific number of bits to be transferred in a single 31cycle. For example, we may want to transfer as much data as the 32physical bus allows to maximize performances when doing a simple 33memory copy operation, but our audio device could have a narrower FIFO 34that requires data to be written exactly 16 or 24 bits at a time. This 35is why most if not all of the DMA controllers can adjust this, using a 36parameter called the transfer width. 37 38Moreover, some DMA controllers, whenever the RAM is used as a source 39or destination, can group the reads or writes in memory into a buffer, 40so instead of having a lot of small memory accesses, which is not 41really efficient, you'll get several bigger transfers. This is done 42using a parameter called the burst size, that defines how many single 43reads/writes it's allowed to do without the controller splitting the 44transfer into smaller sub-transfers. 45 46Our theoretical DMA controller would then only be able to do transfers 47that involve a single contiguous block of data. However, some of the 48transfers we usually have are not, and want to copy data from 49non-contiguous buffers to a contiguous buffer, which is called 50scatter-gather. 51 52DMAEngine, at least for mem2dev transfers, require support for 53scatter-gather. So we're left with two cases here: either we have a 54quite simple DMA controller that doesn't support it, and we'll have to 55implement it in software, or we have a more advanced DMA controller, 56that implements in hardware scatter-gather. 57 58The latter are usually programmed using a collection of chunks to 59transfer, and whenever the transfer is started, the controller will go 60over that collection, doing whatever we programmed there. 61 62This collection is usually either a table or a linked list. You will 63then push either the address of the table and its number of elements, 64or the first item of the list to one channel of the DMA controller, 65and whenever a DRQ will be asserted, it will go through the collection 66to know where to fetch the data from. 67 68Either way, the format of this collection is completely dependent on 69your hardware. Each DMA controller will require a different structure, 70but all of them will require, for every chunk, at least the source and 71destination addresses, whether it should increment these addresses or 72not and the three parameters we saw earlier: the burst size, the 73transfer width and the transfer size. 74 75The one last thing is that usually, slave devices won't issue DRQ by 76default, and you have to enable this in your slave device driver first 77whenever you're willing to use DMA. 78 79These were just the general memory-to-memory (also called mem2mem) or 80memory-to-device (mem2dev) kind of transfers. Most devices often 81support other kind of transfers or memory operations that dmaengine 82support and will be detailed later in this document. 83 84DMA Support in Linux 85==================== 86 87Historically, DMA controller drivers have been implemented using the 88async TX API, to offload operations such as memory copy, XOR, 89cryptography, etc., basically any memory to memory operation. 90 91Over time, the need for memory to device transfers arose, and 92dmaengine was extended. Nowadays, the async TX API is written as a 93layer on top of dmaengine, and acts as a client. Still, dmaengine 94accommodates that API in some cases, and made some design choices to 95ensure that it stayed compatible. 96 97For more information on the Async TX API, please look the relevant 98documentation file in Documentation/crypto/async-tx-api.rst. 99 100DMAEngine APIs 101============== 102 103``struct dma_device`` Initialization 104------------------------------------ 105 106Just like any other kernel framework, the whole DMAEngine registration 107relies on the driver filling a structure and registering against the 108framework. In our case, that structure is dma_device. 109 110The first thing you need to do in your driver is to allocate this 111structure. Any of the usual memory allocators will do, but you'll also 112need to initialize a few fields in there: 113 114- ``channels``: should be initialized as a list using the 115 INIT_LIST_HEAD macro for example 116 117- ``src_addr_widths``: 118 should contain a bitmask of the supported source transfer width 119 120- ``dst_addr_widths``: 121 should contain a bitmask of the supported destination transfer width 122 123- ``directions``: 124 should contain a bitmask of the supported slave directions 125 (i.e. excluding mem2mem transfers) 126 127- ``residue_granularity``: 128 granularity of the transfer residue reported to dma_set_residue. 129 This can be either: 130 131 - Descriptor: 132 your device doesn't support any kind of residue 133 reporting. The framework will only know that a particular 134 transaction descriptor is done. 135 136 - Segment: 137 your device is able to report which chunks have been transferred 138 139 - Burst: 140 your device is able to report which burst have been transferred 141 142- ``dev``: should hold the pointer to the ``struct device`` associated 143 to your current driver instance. 144 145Supported transaction types 146--------------------------- 147 148The next thing you need is to set which transaction types your device 149(and driver) supports. 150 151Our ``dma_device structure`` has a field called cap_mask that holds the 152various types of transaction supported, and you need to modify this 153mask using the dma_cap_set function, with various flags depending on 154transaction types you support as an argument. 155 156All those capabilities are defined in the ``dma_transaction_type enum``, 157in ``include/linux/dmaengine.h`` 158 159Currently, the types available are: 160 161- DMA_MEMCPY 162 163 - The device is able to do memory to memory copies 164 165- DMA_XOR 166 167 - The device is able to perform XOR operations on memory areas 168 169 - Used to accelerate XOR intensive tasks, such as RAID5 170 171- DMA_XOR_VAL 172 173 - The device is able to perform parity check using the XOR 174 algorithm against a memory buffer. 175 176- DMA_PQ 177 178 - The device is able to perform RAID6 P+Q computations, P being a 179 simple XOR, and Q being a Reed-Solomon algorithm. 180 181- DMA_PQ_VAL 182 183 - The device is able to perform parity check using RAID6 P+Q 184 algorithm against a memory buffer. 185 186- DMA_INTERRUPT 187 188 - The device is able to trigger a dummy transfer that will 189 generate periodic interrupts 190 191 - Used by the client drivers to register a callback that will be 192 called on a regular basis through the DMA controller interrupt 193 194- DMA_PRIVATE 195 196 - The devices only supports slave transfers, and as such isn't 197 available for async transfers. 198 199- DMA_ASYNC_TX 200 201 - Must not be set by the device, and will be set by the framework 202 if needed 203 204 - TODO: What is it about? 205 206- DMA_SLAVE 207 208 - The device can handle device to memory transfers, including 209 scatter-gather transfers. 210 211 - While in the mem2mem case we were having two distinct types to 212 deal with a single chunk to copy or a collection of them, here, 213 we just have a single transaction type that is supposed to 214 handle both. 215 216 - If you want to transfer a single contiguous memory buffer, 217 simply build a scatter list with only one item. 218 219- DMA_CYCLIC 220 221 - The device can handle cyclic transfers. 222 223 - A cyclic transfer is a transfer where the chunk collection will 224 loop over itself, with the last item pointing to the first. 225 226 - It's usually used for audio transfers, where you want to operate 227 on a single ring buffer that you will fill with your audio data. 228 229- DMA_INTERLEAVE 230 231 - The device supports interleaved transfer. 232 233 - These transfers can transfer data from a non-contiguous buffer 234 to a non-contiguous buffer, opposed to DMA_SLAVE that can 235 transfer data from a non-contiguous data set to a continuous 236 destination buffer. 237 238 - It's usually used for 2d content transfers, in which case you 239 want to transfer a portion of uncompressed data directly to the 240 display to print it 241 242- DMA_REPEAT 243 244 - The device supports repeated transfers. A repeated transfer, indicated by 245 the DMA_PREP_REPEAT transfer flag, is similar to a cyclic transfer in that 246 it gets automatically repeated when it ends, but can additionally be 247 replaced by the client. 248 249 - This feature is limited to interleaved transfers, this flag should thus not 250 be set if the DMA_INTERLEAVE flag isn't set. This limitation is based on 251 the current needs of DMA clients, support for additional transfer types 252 should be added in the future if and when the need arises. 253 254- DMA_LOAD_EOT 255 256 - The device supports replacing repeated transfers at end of transfer (EOT) 257 by queuing a new transfer with the DMA_PREP_LOAD_EOT flag set. 258 259 - Support for replacing a currently running transfer at another point (such 260 as end of burst instead of end of transfer) will be added in the future 261 based on DMA clients needs, if and when the need arises. 262 263These various types will also affect how the source and destination 264addresses change over time. 265 266Addresses pointing to RAM are typically incremented (or decremented) 267after each transfer. In case of a ring buffer, they may loop 268(DMA_CYCLIC). Addresses pointing to a device's register (e.g. a FIFO) 269are typically fixed. 270 271Per descriptor metadata support 272------------------------------- 273Some data movement architecture (DMA controller and peripherals) uses metadata 274associated with a transaction. The DMA controller role is to transfer the 275payload and the metadata alongside. 276The metadata itself is not used by the DMA engine itself, but it contains 277parameters, keys, vectors, etc for peripheral or from the peripheral. 278 279The DMAengine framework provides a generic ways to facilitate the metadata for 280descriptors. Depending on the architecture the DMA driver can implement either 281or both of the methods and it is up to the client driver to choose which one 282to use. 283 284- DESC_METADATA_CLIENT 285 286 The metadata buffer is allocated/provided by the client driver and it is 287 attached (via the dmaengine_desc_attach_metadata() helper to the descriptor. 288 289 From the DMA driver the following is expected for this mode: 290 291 - DMA_MEM_TO_DEV / DEV_MEM_TO_MEM 292 293 The data from the provided metadata buffer should be prepared for the DMA 294 controller to be sent alongside of the payload data. Either by copying to a 295 hardware descriptor, or highly coupled packet. 296 297 - DMA_DEV_TO_MEM 298 299 On transfer completion the DMA driver must copy the metadata to the client 300 provided metadata buffer before notifying the client about the completion. 301 After the transfer completion, DMA drivers must not touch the metadata 302 buffer provided by the client. 303 304- DESC_METADATA_ENGINE 305 306 The metadata buffer is allocated/managed by the DMA driver. The client driver 307 can ask for the pointer, maximum size and the currently used size of the 308 metadata and can directly update or read it. dmaengine_desc_get_metadata_ptr() 309 and dmaengine_desc_set_metadata_len() is provided as helper functions. 310 311 From the DMA driver the following is expected for this mode: 312 313 - get_metadata_ptr() 314 315 Should return a pointer for the metadata buffer, the maximum size of the 316 metadata buffer and the currently used / valid (if any) bytes in the buffer. 317 318 - set_metadata_len() 319 320 It is called by the clients after it have placed the metadata to the buffer 321 to let the DMA driver know the number of valid bytes provided. 322 323 Note: since the client will ask for the metadata pointer in the completion 324 callback (in DMA_DEV_TO_MEM case) the DMA driver must ensure that the 325 descriptor is not freed up prior the callback is called. 326 327Device operations 328----------------- 329 330Our dma_device structure also requires a few function pointers in 331order to implement the actual logic, now that we described what 332operations we were able to perform. 333 334The functions that we have to fill in there, and hence have to 335implement, obviously depend on the transaction types you reported as 336supported. 337 338- ``device_alloc_chan_resources`` 339 340- ``device_free_chan_resources`` 341 342 - These functions will be called whenever a driver will call 343 ``dma_request_channel`` or ``dma_release_channel`` for the first/last 344 time on the channel associated to that driver. 345 346 - They are in charge of allocating/freeing all the needed 347 resources in order for that channel to be useful for your driver. 348 349 - These functions can sleep. 350 351- ``device_prep_dma_*`` 352 353 - These functions are matching the capabilities you registered 354 previously. 355 356 - These functions all take the buffer or the scatterlist relevant 357 for the transfer being prepared, and should create a hardware 358 descriptor or a list of hardware descriptors from it 359 360 - These functions can be called from an interrupt context 361 362 - Any allocation you might do should be using the GFP_NOWAIT 363 flag, in order not to potentially sleep, but without depleting 364 the emergency pool either. 365 366 - Drivers should try to pre-allocate any memory they might need 367 during the transfer setup at probe time to avoid putting to 368 much pressure on the nowait allocator. 369 370 - It should return a unique instance of the 371 ``dma_async_tx_descriptor structure``, that further represents this 372 particular transfer. 373 374 - This structure can be initialized using the function 375 ``dma_async_tx_descriptor_init``. 376 377 - You'll also need to set two fields in this structure: 378 379 - flags: 380 TODO: Can it be modified by the driver itself, or 381 should it be always the flags passed in the arguments 382 383 - tx_submit: A pointer to a function you have to implement, 384 that is supposed to push the current transaction descriptor to a 385 pending queue, waiting for issue_pending to be called. 386 387 - In this structure the function pointer callback_result can be 388 initialized in order for the submitter to be notified that a 389 transaction has completed. In the earlier code the function pointer 390 callback has been used. However it does not provide any status to the 391 transaction and will be deprecated. The result structure defined as 392 ``dmaengine_result`` that is passed in to callback_result 393 has two fields: 394 395 - result: This provides the transfer result defined by 396 ``dmaengine_tx_result``. Either success or some error condition. 397 398 - residue: Provides the residue bytes of the transfer for those that 399 support residue. 400 401- ``device_issue_pending`` 402 403 - Takes the first transaction descriptor in the pending queue, 404 and starts the transfer. Whenever that transfer is done, it 405 should move to the next transaction in the list. 406 407 - This function can be called in an interrupt context 408 409- ``device_tx_status`` 410 411 - Should report the bytes left to go over on the given channel 412 413 - Should only care about the transaction descriptor passed as 414 argument, not the currently active one on a given channel 415 416 - The tx_state argument might be NULL 417 418 - Should use dma_set_residue to report it 419 420 - In the case of a cyclic transfer, it should only take into 421 account the current period. 422 423 - This function can be called in an interrupt context. 424 425- device_config 426 427 - Reconfigures the channel with the configuration given as argument 428 429 - This command should NOT perform synchronously, or on any 430 currently queued transfers, but only on subsequent ones 431 432 - In this case, the function will receive a ``dma_slave_config`` 433 structure pointer as an argument, that will detail which 434 configuration to use. 435 436 - Even though that structure contains a direction field, this 437 field is deprecated in favor of the direction argument given to 438 the prep_* functions 439 440 - This call is mandatory for slave operations only. This should NOT be 441 set or expected to be set for memcpy operations. 442 If a driver support both, it should use this call for slave 443 operations only and not for memcpy ones. 444 445- device_pause 446 447 - Pauses a transfer on the channel 448 449 - This command should operate synchronously on the channel, 450 pausing right away the work of the given channel 451 452- device_resume 453 454 - Resumes a transfer on the channel 455 456 - This command should operate synchronously on the channel, 457 resuming right away the work of the given channel 458 459- device_terminate_all 460 461 - Aborts all the pending and ongoing transfers on the channel 462 463 - For aborted transfers the complete callback should not be called 464 465 - Can be called from atomic context or from within a complete 466 callback of a descriptor. Must not sleep. Drivers must be able 467 to handle this correctly. 468 469 - Termination may be asynchronous. The driver does not have to 470 wait until the currently active transfer has completely stopped. 471 See device_synchronize. 472 473- device_synchronize 474 475 - Must synchronize the termination of a channel to the current 476 context. 477 478 - Must make sure that memory for previously submitted 479 descriptors is no longer accessed by the DMA controller. 480 481 - Must make sure that all complete callbacks for previously 482 submitted descriptors have finished running and none are 483 scheduled to run. 484 485 - May sleep. 486 487 488Misc notes 489========== 490 491(stuff that should be documented, but don't really know 492where to put them) 493 494``dma_run_dependencies`` 495 496- Should be called at the end of an async TX transfer, and can be 497 ignored in the slave transfers case. 498 499- Makes sure that dependent operations are run before marking it 500 as complete. 501 502dma_cookie_t 503 504- it's a DMA transaction ID that will increment over time. 505 506- Not really relevant any more since the introduction of ``virt-dma`` 507 that abstracts it away. 508 509DMA_CTRL_ACK 510 511- If clear, the descriptor cannot be reused by provider until the 512 client acknowledges receipt, i.e. has has a chance to establish any 513 dependency chains 514 515- This can be acked by invoking async_tx_ack() 516 517- If set, does not mean descriptor can be reused 518 519DMA_CTRL_REUSE 520 521- If set, the descriptor can be reused after being completed. It should 522 not be freed by provider if this flag is set. 523 524- The descriptor should be prepared for reuse by invoking 525 ``dmaengine_desc_set_reuse()`` which will set DMA_CTRL_REUSE. 526 527- ``dmaengine_desc_set_reuse()`` will succeed only when channel support 528 reusable descriptor as exhibited by capabilities 529 530- As a consequence, if a device driver wants to skip the 531 ``dma_map_sg()`` and ``dma_unmap_sg()`` in between 2 transfers, 532 because the DMA'd data wasn't used, it can resubmit the transfer right after 533 its completion. 534 535- Descriptor can be freed in few ways 536 537 - Clearing DMA_CTRL_REUSE by invoking 538 ``dmaengine_desc_clear_reuse()`` and submitting for last txn 539 540 - Explicitly invoking ``dmaengine_desc_free()``, this can succeed only 541 when DMA_CTRL_REUSE is already set 542 543 - Terminating the channel 544 545- DMA_PREP_CMD 546 547 - If set, the client driver tells DMA controller that passed data in DMA 548 API is command data. 549 550 - Interpretation of command data is DMA controller specific. It can be 551 used for issuing commands to other peripherals/register reads/register 552 writes for which the descriptor should be in different format from 553 normal data descriptors. 554 555- DMA_PREP_REPEAT 556 557 - If set, the transfer will be automatically repeated when it ends until a 558 new transfer is queued on the same channel with the DMA_PREP_LOAD_EOT flag. 559 If the next transfer to be queued on the channel does not have the 560 DMA_PREP_LOAD_EOT flag set, the current transfer will be repeated until the 561 client terminates all transfers. 562 563 - This flag is only supported if the channel reports the DMA_REPEAT 564 capability. 565 566- DMA_PREP_LOAD_EOT 567 568 - If set, the transfer will replace the transfer currently being executed at 569 the end of the transfer. 570 571 - This is the default behaviour for non-repeated transfers, specifying 572 DMA_PREP_LOAD_EOT for non-repeated transfers will thus make no difference. 573 574 - When using repeated transfers, DMA clients will usually need to set the 575 DMA_PREP_LOAD_EOT flag on all transfers, otherwise the channel will keep 576 repeating the last repeated transfer and ignore the new transfers being 577 queued. Failure to set DMA_PREP_LOAD_EOT will appear as if the channel was 578 stuck on the previous transfer. 579 580 - This flag is only supported if the channel reports the DMA_LOAD_EOT 581 capability. 582 583General Design Notes 584==================== 585 586Most of the DMAEngine drivers you'll see are based on a similar design 587that handles the end of transfer interrupts in the handler, but defer 588most work to a tasklet, including the start of a new transfer whenever 589the previous transfer ended. 590 591This is a rather inefficient design though, because the inter-transfer 592latency will be not only the interrupt latency, but also the 593scheduling latency of the tasklet, which will leave the channel idle 594in between, which will slow down the global transfer rate. 595 596You should avoid this kind of practice, and instead of electing a new 597transfer in your tasklet, move that part to the interrupt handler in 598order to have a shorter idle window (that we can't really avoid 599anyway). 600 601Glossary 602======== 603 604- Burst: A number of consecutive read or write operations that 605 can be queued to buffers before being flushed to memory. 606 607- Chunk: A contiguous collection of bursts 608 609- Transfer: A collection of chunks (be it contiguous or not) 610