linux/arch/sh/drivers
Jim Quinlan e0d072782c dma-mapping: introduce DMA range map, supplanting dma_pfn_offset
The new field 'dma_range_map' in struct device is used to facilitate the
use of single or multiple offsets between mapping regions of cpu addrs and
dma addrs.  It subsumes the role of "dev->dma_pfn_offset" which was only
capable of holding a single uniform offset and had no region bounds
checking.

The function of_dma_get_range() has been modified so that it takes a single
argument -- the device node -- and returns a map, NULL, or an error code.
The map is an array that holds the information regarding the DMA regions.
Each range entry contains the address offset, the cpu_start address, the
dma_start address, and the size of the region.

of_dma_configure() is the typical manner to set range offsets but there are
a number of ad hoc assignments to "dev->dma_pfn_offset" in the kernel
driver code.  These cases now invoke the function
dma_direct_set_offset(dev, cpu_addr, dma_addr, size).

Signed-off-by: Jim Quinlan <james.quinlan@broadcom.com>
[hch: various interface cleanups]
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Reviewed-by: Mathieu Poirier <mathieu.poirier@linaro.org>
Tested-by: Mathieu Poirier <mathieu.poirier@linaro.org>
Tested-by: Nathan Chancellor <natechancellor@gmail.com>
2020-09-17 18:43:56 +02:00
..
dma sh: Replace setup_irq() by request_irq() 2020-03-29 21:03:43 +02:00
pci dma-mapping: introduce DMA range map, supplanting dma_pfn_offset 2020-09-17 18:43:56 +02:00
superhyway sh: drivers: convert to SPDX identifiers 2018-12-28 12:11:44 -08:00
heartbeat.c remove ioremap_nocache and devm_ioremap_nocache 2020-01-06 09:45:59 +01:00
Kconfig License cleanup: add SPDX GPL-2.0 license identifier to files with no license 2017-11-02 11:10:55 +01:00
Makefile drivers: move the early platform device support to arch/sh 2019-10-07 13:50:47 +02:00
platform_early.c treewide: Use fallthrough pseudo-keyword 2020-08-23 17:36:59 -05:00
push-switch.c sh: drivers: convert to SPDX identifiers 2018-12-28 12:11:44 -08:00