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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v5 4/4] xen: introduce XENMEM_exchange_and_pin and XENMEM_unpin



At 19:32 +0100 on 10 Sep (1378841575), Stefano Stabellini wrote:
> On Tue, 10 Sep 2013, Jan Beulich wrote:
> > >>> On 10.09.13 at 14:50, Ian Campbell <Ian.Campbell@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > On Tue, 2013-09-10 at 13:15 +0100, Jan Beulich wrote:
> > > 
> > >> > @@ -459,6 +460,52 @@ DEFINE_XEN_GUEST_HANDLE(xen_mem_sharing_op_t);
> > >> >   * The zero value is appropiate.
> > >> >   */
> > >> >  
> > >> > +#define XENMEM_exchange_and_pin             26
> > >> > +/*
> > >> > + * This hypercall is similar to XENMEM_exchange: it takes the same
> > >> > + * struct as an argument and it exchanges the pages passed in with a 
> > >> > new
> > >> > + * set of pages. The new pages are going to be "pinned": it's 
> > >> > guaranteed
> > >> > + * that their p2m mapping won't be changed until explicitly 
> > >> > "unpinned".
> > >> > + * The content of the exchanged pages is lost.
> > >> > + * Only normal guest r/w memory can be pinned: no granted pages or
> > >> > + * ballooned pages.
> > >> > + * If return code is zero then @out.extent_list provides the DMA frame
> > >> > + * numbers of the newly-allocated memory.
> > >> 
> > >> "DMA"? I don't think that term is universally true across all possible
> > >> architectures (but we're in an architecture independent header
> > >> here). "Machine" would probably be better (as it implies CPU
> > >> perspective, whereas DMA hints at device perspective).
> > > 
> > > I think DMA here is correct. The purpose of exchange and pin is so that
> > > the page can be safely handed to a device for DMA.
> > > 
> > > On an architecture where DMA address != Machine address then this should
> > > indeed return the DMA addresses.
> > 
> > One problem is that I think there are architectures where there's no
> > single canonical DMA address; such an address may depend on the
> > placement of a device in the system's topology. Hence I don't think
> > it would even be possible to return "the" DMA address here. It ought
> > to be the machine address (CPU view), and the consumer ought to
> > know how to translate this to a DMA address for a particular device.
> 
> We could leave it up to each architecture to specify whether the
> hypercall returns a DMA address or a Machine address (according to
> their definition of DMA address and Machine address).
> Even if this is a common header.

Is this going to be needed on architectures other than arm?  It's not
useful for x86, AFAICT.

Tim.

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