Commit af0d8135 authored by Thierry Reding's avatar Thierry Reding Committed by Joerg Roedel

dt-bindings: reserved-memory: Document iommu-addresses

This adds the "iommu-addresses" property to reserved-memory nodes, which
allow describing the interaction of memory regions with IOMMUs. Two use-
cases are supported:

  1. Static mappings can be described by pairing the "iommu-addresses"
     property with a "reg" property. This is mostly useful for adopting
     firmware-allocated buffers via identity mappings. One common use-
     case where this is required is if early firmware or bootloaders
     have set up a bootsplash framebuffer that a display controller is
     actively scanning out from during the operating system boot
     process.

  2. If an "iommu-addresses" property exists without a "reg" property,
     the reserved-memory node describes an IOVA reservation. Such memory
     regions are excluded from the IOVA space available to operating
     system drivers and can be used for regions that must not be used to
     map arbitrary buffers.

Each mapping or reservation is tied to a specific device via a phandle
to the device's device tree node. This allows a reserved-memory region
to be reused across multiple devices.
Reviewed-by: default avatarRob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: default avatarRobin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarThierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230120174251.4004100-3-thierry.reding@gmail.comSigned-off-by: default avatarJoerg Roedel <jroedel@suse.de>
parent e251c213
......@@ -52,6 +52,30 @@ properties:
Address and Length pairs. Specifies regions of memory that are
acceptable to allocate from.
iommu-addresses:
$ref: /schemas/types.yaml#/definitions/phandle-array
description: >
A list of phandle and specifier pairs that describe static IO virtual
address space mappings and carveouts associated with a given reserved
memory region. The phandle in the first cell refers to the device for
which the mapping or carveout is to be created.
The specifier consists of an address/size pair and denotes the IO
virtual address range of the region for the given device. The exact
format depends on the values of the "#address-cells" and "#size-cells"
properties of the device referenced via the phandle.
When used in combination with a "reg" property, an IOVA mapping is to
be established for this memory region. One example where this can be
useful is to create an identity mapping for physical memory that the
firmware has configured some hardware to access (such as a bootsplash
framebuffer).
If no "reg" property is specified, the "iommu-addresses" property
defines carveout regions in the IOVA space for the given device. This
can be useful if a certain memory region should not be mapped through
the IOMMU.
no-map:
type: boolean
description: >
......@@ -89,12 +113,69 @@ allOf:
- no-map
oneOf:
- oneOf:
- required:
- reg
- required:
- size
- oneOf:
# IOMMU reservations
- required:
- iommu-addresses
# IOMMU mappings
- required:
- reg
- iommu-addresses
additionalProperties: true
examples:
- |
/ {
compatible = "foo";
model = "foo";
#address-cells = <2>;
#size-cells = <2>;
reserved-memory {
#address-cells = <2>;
#size-cells = <2>;
ranges;
adsp_resv: reservation-adsp {
/*
* Restrict IOVA mappings for ADSP buffers to the 512 MiB region
* from 0x40000000 - 0x5fffffff. Anything outside is reserved by
* the ADSP for I/O memory and private memory allocations.
*/
iommu-addresses = <&adsp 0x0 0x00000000 0x00 0x40000000>,
<&adsp 0x0 0x60000000 0xff 0xa0000000>;
};
fb: framebuffer@90000000 {
reg = <0x0 0x90000000 0x0 0x00800000>;
iommu-addresses = <&dc0 0x0 0x90000000 0x0 0x00800000>;
};
};
bus@0 {
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <1>;
ranges = <0x0 0x0 0x0 0x40000000>;
adsp: adsp@2990000 {
reg = <0x2990000 0x2000>;
memory-region = <&adsp_resv>;
};
dc0: display@15200000 {
reg = <0x15200000 0x10000>;
memory-region = <&fb>;
};
};
};
...
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