Tom Rini | 10e4779 | 2018-05-06 17:58:06 -0400 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | /* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ */ |
Simon Glass | a87fc0a | 2015-09-02 17:24:57 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 2 | /* |
| 3 | * Copyright (c) 2015 Google, Inc |
Simon Glass | a87fc0a | 2015-09-02 17:24:57 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 4 | */ |
| 5 | |
| 6 | #ifndef __ALIGNMEM_H |
| 7 | #define __ALIGNMEM_H |
| 8 | |
| 9 | /* |
| 10 | * ARCH_DMA_MINALIGN is defined in asm/cache.h for each architecture. It |
| 11 | * is used to align DMA buffers. |
| 12 | */ |
| 13 | #ifndef __ASSEMBLY__ |
| 14 | #include <asm/cache.h> |
Simon Glass | a87fc0a | 2015-09-02 17:24:57 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 15 | #include <malloc.h> |
| 16 | |
Simon Glass | 2dd337a | 2015-09-02 17:24:58 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 17 | /* |
| 18 | * The ALLOC_CACHE_ALIGN_BUFFER macro is used to allocate a buffer on the |
| 19 | * stack that meets the minimum architecture alignment requirements for DMA. |
| 20 | * Such a buffer is useful for DMA operations where flushing and invalidating |
| 21 | * the cache before and after a read and/or write operation is required for |
| 22 | * correct operations. |
| 23 | * |
| 24 | * When called the macro creates an array on the stack that is sized such |
| 25 | * that: |
| 26 | * |
| 27 | * 1) The beginning of the array can be advanced enough to be aligned. |
| 28 | * |
| 29 | * 2) The size of the aligned portion of the array is a multiple of the minimum |
| 30 | * architecture alignment required for DMA. |
| 31 | * |
| 32 | * 3) The aligned portion contains enough space for the original number of |
| 33 | * elements requested. |
| 34 | * |
| 35 | * The macro then creates a pointer to the aligned portion of this array and |
| 36 | * assigns to the pointer the address of the first element in the aligned |
| 37 | * portion of the array. |
| 38 | * |
| 39 | * Calling the macro as: |
| 40 | * |
| 41 | * ALLOC_CACHE_ALIGN_BUFFER(uint32_t, buffer, 1024); |
| 42 | * |
| 43 | * Will result in something similar to saying: |
| 44 | * |
| 45 | * uint32_t buffer[1024]; |
| 46 | * |
| 47 | * The following differences exist: |
| 48 | * |
| 49 | * 1) The resulting buffer is guaranteed to be aligned to the value of |
| 50 | * ARCH_DMA_MINALIGN. |
| 51 | * |
| 52 | * 2) The buffer variable created by the macro is a pointer to the specified |
| 53 | * type, and NOT an array of the specified type. This can be very important |
| 54 | * if you want the address of the buffer, which you probably do, to pass it |
| 55 | * to the DMA hardware. The value of &buffer is different in the two cases. |
| 56 | * In the macro case it will be the address of the pointer, not the address |
| 57 | * of the space reserved for the buffer. However, in the second case it |
| 58 | * would be the address of the buffer. So if you are replacing hard coded |
| 59 | * stack buffers with this macro you need to make sure you remove the & from |
| 60 | * the locations where you are taking the address of the buffer. |
| 61 | * |
| 62 | * Note that the size parameter is the number of array elements to allocate, |
| 63 | * not the number of bytes. |
| 64 | * |
| 65 | * This macro can not be used outside of function scope, or for the creation |
| 66 | * of a function scoped static buffer. It can not be used to create a cache |
| 67 | * line aligned global buffer. |
| 68 | */ |
| 69 | #define PAD_COUNT(s, pad) (((s) - 1) / (pad) + 1) |
| 70 | #define PAD_SIZE(s, pad) (PAD_COUNT(s, pad) * pad) |
| 71 | #define ALLOC_ALIGN_BUFFER_PAD(type, name, size, align, pad) \ |
| 72 | char __##name[ROUND(PAD_SIZE((size) * sizeof(type), pad), align) \ |
| 73 | + (align - 1)]; \ |
| 74 | \ |
| 75 | type *name = (type *)ALIGN((uintptr_t)__##name, align) |
| 76 | #define ALLOC_ALIGN_BUFFER(type, name, size, align) \ |
| 77 | ALLOC_ALIGN_BUFFER_PAD(type, name, size, align, 1) |
| 78 | #define ALLOC_CACHE_ALIGN_BUFFER_PAD(type, name, size, pad) \ |
| 79 | ALLOC_ALIGN_BUFFER_PAD(type, name, size, ARCH_DMA_MINALIGN, pad) |
| 80 | #define ALLOC_CACHE_ALIGN_BUFFER(type, name, size) \ |
| 81 | ALLOC_ALIGN_BUFFER(type, name, size, ARCH_DMA_MINALIGN) |
| 82 | |
| 83 | /* |
| 84 | * DEFINE_CACHE_ALIGN_BUFFER() is similar to ALLOC_CACHE_ALIGN_BUFFER, but it's |
| 85 | * purpose is to allow allocating aligned buffers outside of function scope. |
| 86 | * Usage of this macro shall be avoided or used with extreme care! |
| 87 | */ |
| 88 | #define DEFINE_ALIGN_BUFFER(type, name, size, align) \ |
| 89 | static char __##name[ALIGN(size * sizeof(type), align)] \ |
| 90 | __aligned(align); \ |
| 91 | \ |
| 92 | static type *name = (type *)__##name |
| 93 | #define DEFINE_CACHE_ALIGN_BUFFER(type, name, size) \ |
| 94 | DEFINE_ALIGN_BUFFER(type, name, size, ARCH_DMA_MINALIGN) |
| 95 | |
| 96 | /** |
| 97 | * malloc_cache_aligned() - allocate a memory region aligned to cache line size |
| 98 | * |
| 99 | * This allocates memory at a cache-line boundary. The amount allocated may |
| 100 | * be larger than requested as it is rounded up to the nearest multiple of the |
| 101 | * cache-line size. This ensured that subsequent cache operations on this |
| 102 | * memory (flush, invalidate) will not affect subsequently allocated regions. |
| 103 | * |
| 104 | * @size: Minimum number of bytes to allocate |
| 105 | * |
| 106 | * @return pointer to new memory region, or NULL if there is no more memory |
| 107 | * available. |
| 108 | */ |
Simon Glass | a87fc0a | 2015-09-02 17:24:57 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 109 | static inline void *malloc_cache_aligned(size_t size) |
| 110 | { |
| 111 | return memalign(ARCH_DMA_MINALIGN, ALIGN(size, ARCH_DMA_MINALIGN)); |
| 112 | } |
| 113 | #endif |
| 114 | |
| 115 | #endif /* __ALIGNMEM_H */ |