1 /*
2  * Copyright 2013-2015 Analog Devices Inc.
3  *  Author: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
4  *
5  * Licensed under the GPL-2.
6  */
7 
8 #include <linux/slab.h>
9 #include <linux/kernel.h>
10 #include <linux/module.h>
11 #include <linux/device.h>
12 #include <linux/workqueue.h>
13 #include <linux/mutex.h>
14 #include <linux/sched.h>
15 #include <linux/poll.h>
16 #include <linux/iio/buffer.h>
17 #include <linux/iio/buffer-dma.h>
18 #include <linux/dma-mapping.h>
19 #include <linux/sizes.h>
20 
21 /*
22  * For DMA buffers the storage is sub-divided into so called blocks. Each block
23  * has its own memory buffer. The size of the block is the granularity at which
24  * memory is exchanged between the hardware and the application. Increasing the
25  * basic unit of data exchange from one sample to one block decreases the
26  * management overhead that is associated with each sample. E.g. if we say the
27  * management overhead for one exchange is x and the unit of exchange is one
28  * sample the overhead will be x for each sample. Whereas when using a block
29  * which contains n samples the overhead per sample is reduced to x/n. This
30  * allows to achieve much higher samplerates than what can be sustained with
31  * the one sample approach.
32  *
33  * Blocks are exchanged between the DMA controller and the application via the
34  * means of two queues. The incoming queue and the outgoing queue. Blocks on the
35  * incoming queue are waiting for the DMA controller to pick them up and fill
36  * them with data. Block on the outgoing queue have been filled with data and
37  * are waiting for the application to dequeue them and read the data.
38  *
39  * A block can be in one of the following states:
40  *  * Owned by the application. In this state the application can read data from
41  *    the block.
42  *  * On the incoming list: Blocks on the incoming list are queued up to be
43  *    processed by the DMA controller.
44  *  * Owned by the DMA controller: The DMA controller is processing the block
45  *    and filling it with data.
46  *  * On the outgoing list: Blocks on the outgoing list have been successfully
47  *    processed by the DMA controller and contain data. They can be dequeued by
48  *    the application.
49  *  * Dead: A block that is dead has been marked as to be freed. It might still
50  *    be owned by either the application or the DMA controller at the moment.
51  *    But once they are done processing it instead of going to either the
52  *    incoming or outgoing queue the block will be freed.
53  *
54  * In addition to this blocks are reference counted and the memory associated
55  * with both the block structure as well as the storage memory for the block
56  * will be freed when the last reference to the block is dropped. This means a
57  * block must not be accessed without holding a reference.
58  *
59  * The iio_dma_buffer implementation provides a generic infrastructure for
60  * managing the blocks.
61  *
62  * A driver for a specific piece of hardware that has DMA capabilities need to
63  * implement the submit() callback from the iio_dma_buffer_ops structure. This
64  * callback is supposed to initiate the DMA transfer copying data from the
65  * converter to the memory region of the block. Once the DMA transfer has been
66  * completed the driver must call iio_dma_buffer_block_done() for the completed
67  * block.
68  *
69  * Prior to this it must set the bytes_used field of the block contains
70  * the actual number of bytes in the buffer. Typically this will be equal to the
71  * size of the block, but if the DMA hardware has certain alignment requirements
72  * for the transfer length it might choose to use less than the full size. In
73  * either case it is expected that bytes_used is a multiple of the bytes per
74  * datum, i.e. the block must not contain partial samples.
75  *
76  * The driver must call iio_dma_buffer_block_done() for each block it has
77  * received through its submit_block() callback, even if it does not actually
78  * perform a DMA transfer for the block, e.g. because the buffer was disabled
79  * before the block transfer was started. In this case it should set bytes_used
80  * to 0.
81  *
82  * In addition it is recommended that a driver implements the abort() callback.
83  * It will be called when the buffer is disabled and can be used to cancel
84  * pending and stop active transfers.
85  *
86  * The specific driver implementation should use the default callback
87  * implementations provided by this module for the iio_buffer_access_funcs
88  * struct. It may overload some callbacks with custom variants if the hardware
89  * has special requirements that are not handled by the generic functions. If a
90  * driver chooses to overload a callback it has to ensure that the generic
91  * callback is called from within the custom callback.
92  */
93 
94 static void iio_buffer_block_release(struct kref *kref)
95 {
96 	struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block = container_of(kref,
97 		struct iio_dma_buffer_block, kref);
98 
99 	WARN_ON(block->state != IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DEAD);
100 
101 	dma_free_coherent(block->queue->dev, PAGE_ALIGN(block->size),
102 					block->vaddr, block->phys_addr);
103 
104 	iio_buffer_put(&block->queue->buffer);
105 	kfree(block);
106 }
107 
108 static void iio_buffer_block_get(struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block)
109 {
110 	kref_get(&block->kref);
111 }
112 
113 static void iio_buffer_block_put(struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block)
114 {
115 	kref_put(&block->kref, iio_buffer_block_release);
116 }
117 
118 /*
119  * dma_free_coherent can sleep, hence we need to take some special care to be
120  * able to drop a reference from an atomic context.
121  */
122 static LIST_HEAD(iio_dma_buffer_dead_blocks);
123 static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(iio_dma_buffer_dead_blocks_lock);
124 
125 static void iio_dma_buffer_cleanup_worker(struct work_struct *work)
126 {
127 	struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block, *_block;
128 	LIST_HEAD(block_list);
129 
130 	spin_lock_irq(&iio_dma_buffer_dead_blocks_lock);
131 	list_splice_tail_init(&iio_dma_buffer_dead_blocks, &block_list);
132 	spin_unlock_irq(&iio_dma_buffer_dead_blocks_lock);
133 
134 	list_for_each_entry_safe(block, _block, &block_list, head)
135 		iio_buffer_block_release(&block->kref);
136 }
137 static DECLARE_WORK(iio_dma_buffer_cleanup_work, iio_dma_buffer_cleanup_worker);
138 
139 static void iio_buffer_block_release_atomic(struct kref *kref)
140 {
141 	struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block;
142 	unsigned long flags;
143 
144 	block = container_of(kref, struct iio_dma_buffer_block, kref);
145 
146 	spin_lock_irqsave(&iio_dma_buffer_dead_blocks_lock, flags);
147 	list_add_tail(&block->head, &iio_dma_buffer_dead_blocks);
148 	spin_unlock_irqrestore(&iio_dma_buffer_dead_blocks_lock, flags);
149 
150 	schedule_work(&iio_dma_buffer_cleanup_work);
151 }
152 
153 /*
154  * Version of iio_buffer_block_put() that can be called from atomic context
155  */
156 static void iio_buffer_block_put_atomic(struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block)
157 {
158 	kref_put(&block->kref, iio_buffer_block_release_atomic);
159 }
160 
161 static struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *iio_buffer_to_queue(struct iio_buffer *buf)
162 {
163 	return container_of(buf, struct iio_dma_buffer_queue, buffer);
164 }
165 
166 static struct iio_dma_buffer_block *iio_dma_buffer_alloc_block(
167 	struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue, size_t size)
168 {
169 	struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block;
170 
171 	block = kzalloc(sizeof(*block), GFP_KERNEL);
172 	if (!block)
173 		return NULL;
174 
175 	block->vaddr = dma_alloc_coherent(queue->dev, PAGE_ALIGN(size),
176 		&block->phys_addr, GFP_KERNEL);
177 	if (!block->vaddr) {
178 		kfree(block);
179 		return NULL;
180 	}
181 
182 	block->size = size;
183 	block->state = IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DEQUEUED;
184 	block->queue = queue;
185 	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&block->head);
186 	kref_init(&block->kref);
187 
188 	iio_buffer_get(&queue->buffer);
189 
190 	return block;
191 }
192 
193 static void _iio_dma_buffer_block_done(struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block)
194 {
195 	struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue = block->queue;
196 
197 	/*
198 	 * The buffer has already been freed by the application, just drop the
199 	 * reference.
200 	 */
201 	if (block->state != IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DEAD) {
202 		block->state = IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DONE;
203 		list_add_tail(&block->head, &queue->outgoing);
204 	}
205 }
206 
207 /**
208  * iio_dma_buffer_block_done() - Indicate that a block has been completed
209  * @block: The completed block
210  *
211  * Should be called when the DMA controller has finished handling the block to
212  * pass back ownership of the block to the queue.
213  */
214 void iio_dma_buffer_block_done(struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block)
215 {
216 	struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue = block->queue;
217 	unsigned long flags;
218 
219 	spin_lock_irqsave(&queue->list_lock, flags);
220 	_iio_dma_buffer_block_done(block);
221 	spin_unlock_irqrestore(&queue->list_lock, flags);
222 
223 	iio_buffer_block_put_atomic(block);
224 	wake_up_interruptible_poll(&queue->buffer.pollq, POLLIN | POLLRDNORM);
225 }
226 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_block_done);
227 
228 /**
229  * iio_dma_buffer_block_list_abort() - Indicate that a list block has been
230  *   aborted
231  * @queue: Queue for which to complete blocks.
232  * @list: List of aborted blocks. All blocks in this list must be from @queue.
233  *
234  * Typically called from the abort() callback after the DMA controller has been
235  * stopped. This will set bytes_used to 0 for each block in the list and then
236  * hand the blocks back to the queue.
237  */
238 void iio_dma_buffer_block_list_abort(struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue,
239 	struct list_head *list)
240 {
241 	struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block, *_block;
242 	unsigned long flags;
243 
244 	spin_lock_irqsave(&queue->list_lock, flags);
245 	list_for_each_entry_safe(block, _block, list, head) {
246 		list_del(&block->head);
247 		block->bytes_used = 0;
248 		_iio_dma_buffer_block_done(block);
249 		iio_buffer_block_put_atomic(block);
250 	}
251 	spin_unlock_irqrestore(&queue->list_lock, flags);
252 
253 	wake_up_interruptible_poll(&queue->buffer.pollq, POLLIN | POLLRDNORM);
254 }
255 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_block_list_abort);
256 
257 static bool iio_dma_block_reusable(struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block)
258 {
259 	/*
260 	 * If the core owns the block it can be re-used. This should be the
261 	 * default case when enabling the buffer, unless the DMA controller does
262 	 * not support abort and has not given back the block yet.
263 	 */
264 	switch (block->state) {
265 	case IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DEQUEUED:
266 	case IIO_BLOCK_STATE_QUEUED:
267 	case IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DONE:
268 		return true;
269 	default:
270 		return false;
271 	}
272 }
273 
274 /**
275  * iio_dma_buffer_request_update() - DMA buffer request_update callback
276  * @buffer: The buffer which to request an update
277  *
278  * Should be used as the iio_dma_buffer_request_update() callback for
279  * iio_buffer_access_ops struct for DMA buffers.
280  */
281 int iio_dma_buffer_request_update(struct iio_buffer *buffer)
282 {
283 	struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue = iio_buffer_to_queue(buffer);
284 	struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block;
285 	bool try_reuse = false;
286 	size_t size;
287 	int ret = 0;
288 	int i;
289 
290 	/*
291 	 * Split the buffer into two even parts. This is used as a double
292 	 * buffering scheme with usually one block at a time being used by the
293 	 * DMA and the other one by the application.
294 	 */
295 	size = DIV_ROUND_UP(queue->buffer.bytes_per_datum *
296 		queue->buffer.length, 2);
297 
298 	mutex_lock(&queue->lock);
299 
300 	/* Allocations are page aligned */
301 	if (PAGE_ALIGN(queue->fileio.block_size) == PAGE_ALIGN(size))
302 		try_reuse = true;
303 
304 	queue->fileio.block_size = size;
305 	queue->fileio.active_block = NULL;
306 
307 	spin_lock_irq(&queue->list_lock);
308 	for (i = 0; i < 2; i++) {
309 		block = queue->fileio.blocks[i];
310 
311 		/* If we can't re-use it free it */
312 		if (block && (!iio_dma_block_reusable(block) || !try_reuse))
313 			block->state = IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DEAD;
314 	}
315 
316 	/*
317 	 * At this point all blocks are either owned by the core or marked as
318 	 * dead. This means we can reset the lists without having to fear
319 	 * corrution.
320 	 */
321 	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&queue->outgoing);
322 	spin_unlock_irq(&queue->list_lock);
323 
324 	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&queue->incoming);
325 
326 	for (i = 0; i < 2; i++) {
327 		if (queue->fileio.blocks[i]) {
328 			block = queue->fileio.blocks[i];
329 			if (block->state == IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DEAD) {
330 				/* Could not reuse it */
331 				iio_buffer_block_put(block);
332 				block = NULL;
333 			} else {
334 				block->size = size;
335 			}
336 		} else {
337 			block = NULL;
338 		}
339 
340 		if (!block) {
341 			block = iio_dma_buffer_alloc_block(queue, size);
342 			if (!block) {
343 				ret = -ENOMEM;
344 				goto out_unlock;
345 			}
346 			queue->fileio.blocks[i] = block;
347 		}
348 
349 		block->state = IIO_BLOCK_STATE_QUEUED;
350 		list_add_tail(&block->head, &queue->incoming);
351 	}
352 
353 out_unlock:
354 	mutex_unlock(&queue->lock);
355 
356 	return ret;
357 }
358 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_request_update);
359 
360 static void iio_dma_buffer_submit_block(struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue,
361 	struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block)
362 {
363 	int ret;
364 
365 	/*
366 	 * If the hardware has already been removed we put the block into
367 	 * limbo. It will neither be on the incoming nor outgoing list, nor will
368 	 * it ever complete. It will just wait to be freed eventually.
369 	 */
370 	if (!queue->ops)
371 		return;
372 
373 	block->state = IIO_BLOCK_STATE_ACTIVE;
374 	iio_buffer_block_get(block);
375 	ret = queue->ops->submit(queue, block);
376 	if (ret) {
377 		/*
378 		 * This is a bit of a problem and there is not much we can do
379 		 * other then wait for the buffer to be disabled and re-enabled
380 		 * and try again. But it should not really happen unless we run
381 		 * out of memory or something similar.
382 		 *
383 		 * TODO: Implement support in the IIO core to allow buffers to
384 		 * notify consumers that something went wrong and the buffer
385 		 * should be disabled.
386 		 */
387 		iio_buffer_block_put(block);
388 	}
389 }
390 
391 /**
392  * iio_dma_buffer_enable() - Enable DMA buffer
393  * @buffer: IIO buffer to enable
394  * @indio_dev: IIO device the buffer is attached to
395  *
396  * Needs to be called when the device that the buffer is attached to starts
397  * sampling. Typically should be the iio_buffer_access_ops enable callback.
398  *
399  * This will allocate the DMA buffers and start the DMA transfers.
400  */
401 int iio_dma_buffer_enable(struct iio_buffer *buffer,
402 	struct iio_dev *indio_dev)
403 {
404 	struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue = iio_buffer_to_queue(buffer);
405 	struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block, *_block;
406 
407 	mutex_lock(&queue->lock);
408 	queue->active = true;
409 	list_for_each_entry_safe(block, _block, &queue->incoming, head) {
410 		list_del(&block->head);
411 		iio_dma_buffer_submit_block(queue, block);
412 	}
413 	mutex_unlock(&queue->lock);
414 
415 	return 0;
416 }
417 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_enable);
418 
419 /**
420  * iio_dma_buffer_disable() - Disable DMA buffer
421  * @buffer: IIO DMA buffer to disable
422  * @indio_dev: IIO device the buffer is attached to
423  *
424  * Needs to be called when the device that the buffer is attached to stops
425  * sampling. Typically should be the iio_buffer_access_ops disable callback.
426  */
427 int iio_dma_buffer_disable(struct iio_buffer *buffer,
428 	struct iio_dev *indio_dev)
429 {
430 	struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue = iio_buffer_to_queue(buffer);
431 
432 	mutex_lock(&queue->lock);
433 	queue->active = false;
434 
435 	if (queue->ops && queue->ops->abort)
436 		queue->ops->abort(queue);
437 	mutex_unlock(&queue->lock);
438 
439 	return 0;
440 }
441 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_disable);
442 
443 static void iio_dma_buffer_enqueue(struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue,
444 	struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block)
445 {
446 	if (block->state == IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DEAD) {
447 		iio_buffer_block_put(block);
448 	} else if (queue->active) {
449 		iio_dma_buffer_submit_block(queue, block);
450 	} else {
451 		block->state = IIO_BLOCK_STATE_QUEUED;
452 		list_add_tail(&block->head, &queue->incoming);
453 	}
454 }
455 
456 static struct iio_dma_buffer_block *iio_dma_buffer_dequeue(
457 	struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue)
458 {
459 	struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block;
460 
461 	spin_lock_irq(&queue->list_lock);
462 	block = list_first_entry_or_null(&queue->outgoing, struct
463 		iio_dma_buffer_block, head);
464 	if (block != NULL) {
465 		list_del(&block->head);
466 		block->state = IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DEQUEUED;
467 	}
468 	spin_unlock_irq(&queue->list_lock);
469 
470 	return block;
471 }
472 
473 /**
474  * iio_dma_buffer_read() - DMA buffer read callback
475  * @buffer: Buffer to read form
476  * @n: Number of bytes to read
477  * @user_buffer: Userspace buffer to copy the data to
478  *
479  * Should be used as the read_first_n callback for iio_buffer_access_ops
480  * struct for DMA buffers.
481  */
482 int iio_dma_buffer_read(struct iio_buffer *buffer, size_t n,
483 	char __user *user_buffer)
484 {
485 	struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue = iio_buffer_to_queue(buffer);
486 	struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block;
487 	int ret;
488 
489 	if (n < buffer->bytes_per_datum)
490 		return -EINVAL;
491 
492 	mutex_lock(&queue->lock);
493 
494 	if (!queue->fileio.active_block) {
495 		block = iio_dma_buffer_dequeue(queue);
496 		if (block == NULL) {
497 			ret = 0;
498 			goto out_unlock;
499 		}
500 		queue->fileio.pos = 0;
501 		queue->fileio.active_block = block;
502 	} else {
503 		block = queue->fileio.active_block;
504 	}
505 
506 	n = rounddown(n, buffer->bytes_per_datum);
507 	if (n > block->bytes_used - queue->fileio.pos)
508 		n = block->bytes_used - queue->fileio.pos;
509 
510 	if (copy_to_user(user_buffer, block->vaddr + queue->fileio.pos, n)) {
511 		ret = -EFAULT;
512 		goto out_unlock;
513 	}
514 
515 	queue->fileio.pos += n;
516 
517 	if (queue->fileio.pos == block->bytes_used) {
518 		queue->fileio.active_block = NULL;
519 		iio_dma_buffer_enqueue(queue, block);
520 	}
521 
522 	ret = n;
523 
524 out_unlock:
525 	mutex_unlock(&queue->lock);
526 
527 	return ret;
528 }
529 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_read);
530 
531 /**
532  * iio_dma_buffer_data_available() - DMA buffer data_available callback
533  * @buf: Buffer to check for data availability
534  *
535  * Should be used as the data_available callback for iio_buffer_access_ops
536  * struct for DMA buffers.
537  */
538 size_t iio_dma_buffer_data_available(struct iio_buffer *buf)
539 {
540 	struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue = iio_buffer_to_queue(buf);
541 	struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block;
542 	size_t data_available = 0;
543 
544 	/*
545 	 * For counting the available bytes we'll use the size of the block not
546 	 * the number of actual bytes available in the block. Otherwise it is
547 	 * possible that we end up with a value that is lower than the watermark
548 	 * but won't increase since all blocks are in use.
549 	 */
550 
551 	mutex_lock(&queue->lock);
552 	if (queue->fileio.active_block)
553 		data_available += queue->fileio.active_block->size;
554 
555 	spin_lock_irq(&queue->list_lock);
556 	list_for_each_entry(block, &queue->outgoing, head)
557 		data_available += block->size;
558 	spin_unlock_irq(&queue->list_lock);
559 	mutex_unlock(&queue->lock);
560 
561 	return data_available;
562 }
563 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_data_available);
564 
565 /**
566  * iio_dma_buffer_set_bytes_per_datum() - DMA buffer set_bytes_per_datum callback
567  * @buffer: Buffer to set the bytes-per-datum for
568  * @bpd: The new bytes-per-datum value
569  *
570  * Should be used as the set_bytes_per_datum callback for iio_buffer_access_ops
571  * struct for DMA buffers.
572  */
573 int iio_dma_buffer_set_bytes_per_datum(struct iio_buffer *buffer, size_t bpd)
574 {
575 	buffer->bytes_per_datum = bpd;
576 
577 	return 0;
578 }
579 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_set_bytes_per_datum);
580 
581 /**
582  * iio_dma_buffer_set_length - DMA buffer set_length callback
583  * @buffer: Buffer to set the length for
584  * @length: The new buffer length
585  *
586  * Should be used as the set_length callback for iio_buffer_access_ops
587  * struct for DMA buffers.
588  */
589 int iio_dma_buffer_set_length(struct iio_buffer *buffer, int length)
590 {
591 	/* Avoid an invalid state */
592 	if (length < 2)
593 		length = 2;
594 	buffer->length = length;
595 	buffer->watermark = length / 2;
596 
597 	return 0;
598 }
599 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_set_length);
600 
601 /**
602  * iio_dma_buffer_init() - Initialize DMA buffer queue
603  * @queue: Buffer to initialize
604  * @dev: DMA device
605  * @ops: DMA buffer queue callback operations
606  *
607  * The DMA device will be used by the queue to do DMA memory allocations. So it
608  * should refer to the device that will perform the DMA to ensure that
609  * allocations are done from a memory region that can be accessed by the device.
610  */
611 int iio_dma_buffer_init(struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue,
612 	struct device *dev, const struct iio_dma_buffer_ops *ops)
613 {
614 	iio_buffer_init(&queue->buffer);
615 	queue->buffer.length = PAGE_SIZE;
616 	queue->buffer.watermark = queue->buffer.length / 2;
617 	queue->dev = dev;
618 	queue->ops = ops;
619 
620 	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&queue->incoming);
621 	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&queue->outgoing);
622 
623 	mutex_init(&queue->lock);
624 	spin_lock_init(&queue->list_lock);
625 
626 	return 0;
627 }
628 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_init);
629 
630 /**
631  * iio_dma_buffer_exit() - Cleanup DMA buffer queue
632  * @queue: Buffer to cleanup
633  *
634  * After this function has completed it is safe to free any resources that are
635  * associated with the buffer and are accessed inside the callback operations.
636  */
637 void iio_dma_buffer_exit(struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue)
638 {
639 	unsigned int i;
640 
641 	mutex_lock(&queue->lock);
642 
643 	spin_lock_irq(&queue->list_lock);
644 	for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(queue->fileio.blocks); i++) {
645 		if (!queue->fileio.blocks[i])
646 			continue;
647 		queue->fileio.blocks[i]->state = IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DEAD;
648 	}
649 	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&queue->outgoing);
650 	spin_unlock_irq(&queue->list_lock);
651 
652 	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&queue->incoming);
653 
654 	for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(queue->fileio.blocks); i++) {
655 		if (!queue->fileio.blocks[i])
656 			continue;
657 		iio_buffer_block_put(queue->fileio.blocks[i]);
658 		queue->fileio.blocks[i] = NULL;
659 	}
660 	queue->fileio.active_block = NULL;
661 	queue->ops = NULL;
662 
663 	mutex_unlock(&queue->lock);
664 }
665 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_exit);
666 
667 /**
668  * iio_dma_buffer_release() - Release final buffer resources
669  * @queue: Buffer to release
670  *
671  * Frees resources that can't yet be freed in iio_dma_buffer_exit(). Should be
672  * called in the buffers release callback implementation right before freeing
673  * the memory associated with the buffer.
674  */
675 void iio_dma_buffer_release(struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue)
676 {
677 	mutex_destroy(&queue->lock);
678 }
679 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_release);
680 
681 MODULE_AUTHOR("Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>");
682 MODULE_DESCRIPTION("DMA buffer for the IIO framework");
683 MODULE_LICENSE("GPL v2");
684