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Linus Walleij authored
This option is activated by all multiplatform configs and what not so we almost always have it turned on, and the memory it saves is negligible, even more so moving forward. The actual bounce buffer only gets allocated only when used, the only thing the ifdefs are saving is a little bit of code. It is highly improper to have this as a Kconfig option that get turned on by Kconfig, make this a pure runtime-thing and let the host decide whether we use bounce buffers. We add a new property "disable_bounce" to the host struct. Notice that mmc_queue_calc_bouncesz() already disables the bounce buffers if host->max_segs != 1, so any arch that has a maximum number of segments higher than 1 will have bounce buffers disabled. The option CONFIG_MMC_BLOCK_BOUNCE is default y so the majority of platforms in the kernel already have it on, and it then gets turned off at runtime since most of these have a host->max_segs > 1. The few exceptions that have host->max_segs == 1 and still turn off the bounce buffering are those that disable it in their defconfig. Those are the following: arch/arm/configs/colibri_pxa300_defconfig arch/arm/configs/zeus_defconfig - Uses MMC_PXA, drivers/mmc/host/pxamci.c - Sets host->max_segs = NR_SG, which is 1 - This needs its bounce buffer deactivated so we set host->disable_bounce to true in the host driver arch/arm/configs/davinci_all_defconfig - Uses MMC_DAVINCI, drivers/mmc/host/davinci_mmc.c - This driver sets host->max_segs to MAX_NR_SG, which is 16 - That means this driver anyways disabled bounce buffers - No special action needed for this platform arch/arm/configs/lpc32xx_defconfig arch/arm/configs/nhk8815_defconfig arch/arm/configs/u300_defconfig - Uses MMC_ARMMMCI, drivers/mmc/host/mmci.[c|h] - This driver by default sets host->max_segs to NR_SG, which is 128, unless a DMA engine is used, and in that case the number of segments are also > 1 - That means this driver already disables bounce buffers - No special action needed for these platforms arch/arm/configs/sama5_defconfig - Uses MMC_SDHCI, MMC_SDHCI_PLTFM, MMC_SDHCI_OF_AT91, MMC_ATMELMCI - Uses drivers/mmc/host/sdhci.c - Normally sets host->max_segs to SDHCI_MAX_SEGS which is 128 and thus disables bounce buffers - Sets host->max_segs to 1 if SDHCI_USE_SDMA is set - SDHCI_USE_SDMA is only set by SDHCI on PCI adapers - That means that for this platform bounce buffers are already disabled at runtime - No special action needed for this platform arch/blackfin/configs/CM-BF533_defconfig arch/blackfin/configs/CM-BF537E_defconfig - Uses MMC_SPI (a simple MMC card connected on SPI pins) - Uses drivers/mmc/host/mmc_spi.c - Sets host->max_segs to MMC_SPI_BLOCKSATONCE which is 128 - That means this platform already disables bounce buffers at runtime - No special action needed for these platforms arch/mips/configs/cavium_octeon_defconfig - Uses MMC_CAVIUM_OCTEON, drivers/mmc/host/cavium.c - Sets host->max_segs to 16 or 1 - Setting host->disable_bounce to be sure for the 1 case arch/mips/configs/qi_lb60_defconfig - Uses MMC_JZ4740, drivers/mmc/host/jz4740_mmc.c - This sets host->max_segs to 128 so bounce buffers are already runtime disabled - No action needed for this platform It would be interesting to come up with a list of the platforms that actually end up using bounce buffers. I have not been able to infer such a list, but it occurs when host->max_segs == 1 and the bounce buffering is not explicitly disabled. Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Ulf Hansson <ulf.hansson@linaro.org>
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