memory barriers in bus_dmamap_sync() ?
John Baldwin
jhb at freebsd.org
Wed Jan 11 15:14:06 UTC 2012
On Tuesday, January 10, 2012 5:41:00 pm Luigi Rizzo wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 10, 2012 at 01:52:49PM -0800, Adrian Chadd wrote:
> > On 10 January 2012 13:37, Luigi Rizzo <rizzo at iet.unipi.it> wrote:
> > > I was glancing through manpages and implementations of bus_dma(9)
> > > and i am a bit unclear on what this API (in particular, bus_dmamap_sync() )
> > > does in terms of memory barriers.
> > >
> > > I see that the x86/amd64 and ia64 code only does the bounce buffers.
That is because x86 in general does not need memory barriers. Other platforms
have them (alpha had them in bus_dmamap_sync()).
> > > The mips seems to do some coherency-related calls.
> > >
> > > How do we guarantee, say, that a recently built packet is
> > > to memory before issuing the tx command to the NIC ?
> >
> > The drivers should be good examples of doing the right thing. You just
> > do pre-map and post-map calls as appropriate.
> >
> > Some devices don't bother with this on register accesses and this is a
> > bug. (eg, ath/ath_hal.) Others (eg iwn) do explicit flushes where
> > needed.
>
> so you are saying that drivers are correct unless they are buggy :)
For bus_dma, just use bus_dmamap_sync() and you will be fine.
> Anyways... i see that some drivers use wmb() and rmb() and redefine
> their own version, usually based on lfence/sfence even on i386
>
> #define rmb() __asm volatile("lfence" ::: "memory")
> #define wmb() __asm volatile("sfence" ::: "memory")
>
> whereas the standard definitions are slightly different, e.g.
> sys/i386/include/atomic.h:
>
> #define rmb() __asm __volatile("lock; addl $0,(%%esp)" : : : "memory")
> #define wmb() __asm __volatile("lock; addl $0,(%%esp)" : : : "memory")
>
> and our bus_space API in sys/x86/include/bus.h is a bit unclear to
> me (other than the fact that having 4 unused arguments don't really
> encourage its use...)
We could use lfence/sfence on amd64, but on i386 not all processors support
those. The broken drivers doing it by hand don't work on early i386 CPUs.
Also, I personally don't like using membars like rmb() and wmb() by hand.
If you are operating on normal memory I think atomic_load_acq() and
atomic_store_rel() are better.
> static __inline void
> bus_space_barrier(bus_space_tag_t tag __unused, bus_space_handle_t bsh __unused,
> bus_size_t offset __unused, bus_size_t len __unused, int flags)
> {
> #ifdef __GNUCLIKE_ASM
> if (flags & BUS_SPACE_BARRIER_READ)
> #ifdef __amd64__
> __asm __volatile("lock; addl $0,0(%%rsp)" : : : "memory");
> #else
> __asm __volatile("lock; addl $0,0(%%esp)" : : : "memory");
> #endif
> else
> __asm __volatile("" : : : "memory");
> #endif
> }
This is only for use with something accessed via bus_space(9). Often these
are not needed however. For example, on x86 all bus_space memory is mapped
uncached, so no actual barrier is needed except for a compiler barrier.
--
John Baldwin
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