From: Mauro Carvalho Chehab Date: Mon, 18 Jul 2016 16:32:53 +0000 (-0300) Subject: [media] cx2341x.rst: add contents of fw-dma.txt X-Git-Url: https://git.karo-electronics.de/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=f8eb496f4cadb392f03f329bf586a8134174a502;p=linux-beck.git [media] cx2341x.rst: add contents of fw-dma.txt Add the contents of fw-dma.txt, converted to ReST, and drop the old file. Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab --- diff --git a/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/cx2341x.rst b/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/cx2341x.rst index cbfa14eccd76..ca2f15c5b8f7 100644 --- a/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/cx2341x.rst +++ b/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/cx2341x.rst @@ -2703,3 +2703,102 @@ out what values are bad when it hangs. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The cx231xx DMA engine +---------------------- + + +This page describes the structures and procedures used by the cx2341x DMA +engine. + +Introduction +~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The cx2341x PCI interface is busmaster capable. This means it has a DMA +engine to efficiently transfer large volumes of data between the card and main +memory without requiring help from a CPU. Like most hardware, it must operate +on contiguous physical memory. This is difficult to come by in large quantities +on virtual memory machines. + +Therefore, it also supports a technique called "scatter-gather". The card can +transfer multiple buffers in one operation. Instead of allocating one large +contiguous buffer, the driver can allocate several smaller buffers. + +In practice, I've seen the average transfer to be roughly 80K, but transfers +above 128K were not uncommon, particularly at startup. The 128K figure is +important, because that is the largest block that the kernel can normally +allocate. Even still, 128K blocks are hard to come by, so the driver writer is +urged to choose a smaller block size and learn the scatter-gather technique. + +Mailbox #10 is reserved for DMA transfer information. + +Note: the hardware expects little-endian data ('intel format'). + +Flow +~~~~ + +This section describes, in general, the order of events when handling DMA +transfers. Detailed information follows this section. + +- The card raises the Encoder interrupt. +- The driver reads the transfer type, offset and size from Mailbox #10. +- The driver constructs the scatter-gather array from enough free dma buffers + to cover the size. +- The driver schedules the DMA transfer via the ScheduleDMAtoHost API call. +- The card raises the DMA Complete interrupt. +- The driver checks the DMA status register for any errors. +- The driver post-processes the newly transferred buffers. + +NOTE! It is possible that the Encoder and DMA Complete interrupts get raised +simultaneously. (End of the last, start of the next, etc.) + +Mailbox #10 +~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The Flags, Command, Return Value and Timeout fields are ignored. + +- Name: Mailbox #10 +- Results[0]: Type: 0: MPEG. +- Results[1]: Offset: The position relative to the card's memory space. +- Results[2]: Size: The exact number of bytes to transfer. + +My speculation is that since the StartCapture API has a capture type of "RAW" +available, that the type field will have other values that correspond to YUV +and PCM data. + +Scatter-Gather Array +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The scatter-gather array is a contiguously allocated block of memory that +tells the card the source and destination of each data-block to transfer. +Card "addresses" are derived from the offset supplied by Mailbox #10. Host +addresses are the physical memory location of the target DMA buffer. + +Each S-G array element is a struct of three 32-bit words. The first word is +the source address, the second is the destination address. Both take up the +entire 32 bits. The lowest 18 bits of the third word is the transfer byte +count. The high-bit of the third word is the "last" flag. The last-flag tells +the card to raise the DMA_DONE interrupt. From hard personal experience, if +you forget to set this bit, the card will still "work" but the stream will +most likely get corrupted. + +The transfer count must be a multiple of 256. Therefore, the driver will need +to track how much data in the target buffer is valid and deal with it +accordingly. + +Array Element: + +- 32-bit Source Address +- 32-bit Destination Address +- 14-bit reserved (high bit is the last flag) +- 18-bit byte count + +DMA Transfer Status +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Register 0x0004 holds the DMA Transfer Status: + +- bit 0: read completed +- bit 1: write completed +- bit 2: DMA read error +- bit 3: DMA write error +- bit 4: Scatter-Gather array error diff --git a/Documentation/video4linux/cx2341x/fw-dma.txt b/Documentation/video4linux/cx2341x/fw-dma.txt deleted file mode 100644 index be52b6fd1e9a..000000000000 --- a/Documentation/video4linux/cx2341x/fw-dma.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,96 +0,0 @@ -This page describes the structures and procedures used by the cx2341x DMA -engine. - -Introduction -============ - -The cx2341x PCI interface is busmaster capable. This means it has a DMA -engine to efficiently transfer large volumes of data between the card and main -memory without requiring help from a CPU. Like most hardware, it must operate -on contiguous physical memory. This is difficult to come by in large quantities -on virtual memory machines. - -Therefore, it also supports a technique called "scatter-gather". The card can -transfer multiple buffers in one operation. Instead of allocating one large -contiguous buffer, the driver can allocate several smaller buffers. - -In practice, I've seen the average transfer to be roughly 80K, but transfers -above 128K were not uncommon, particularly at startup. The 128K figure is -important, because that is the largest block that the kernel can normally -allocate. Even still, 128K blocks are hard to come by, so the driver writer is -urged to choose a smaller block size and learn the scatter-gather technique. - -Mailbox #10 is reserved for DMA transfer information. - -Note: the hardware expects little-endian data ('intel format'). - -Flow -==== - -This section describes, in general, the order of events when handling DMA -transfers. Detailed information follows this section. - -- The card raises the Encoder interrupt. -- The driver reads the transfer type, offset and size from Mailbox #10. -- The driver constructs the scatter-gather array from enough free dma buffers - to cover the size. -- The driver schedules the DMA transfer via the ScheduleDMAtoHost API call. -- The card raises the DMA Complete interrupt. -- The driver checks the DMA status register for any errors. -- The driver post-processes the newly transferred buffers. - -NOTE! It is possible that the Encoder and DMA Complete interrupts get raised -simultaneously. (End of the last, start of the next, etc.) - -Mailbox #10 -=========== - -The Flags, Command, Return Value and Timeout fields are ignored. - -Name: Mailbox #10 -Results[0]: Type: 0: MPEG. -Results[1]: Offset: The position relative to the card's memory space. -Results[2]: Size: The exact number of bytes to transfer. - -My speculation is that since the StartCapture API has a capture type of "RAW" -available, that the type field will have other values that correspond to YUV -and PCM data. - -Scatter-Gather Array -==================== - -The scatter-gather array is a contiguously allocated block of memory that -tells the card the source and destination of each data-block to transfer. -Card "addresses" are derived from the offset supplied by Mailbox #10. Host -addresses are the physical memory location of the target DMA buffer. - -Each S-G array element is a struct of three 32-bit words. The first word is -the source address, the second is the destination address. Both take up the -entire 32 bits. The lowest 18 bits of the third word is the transfer byte -count. The high-bit of the third word is the "last" flag. The last-flag tells -the card to raise the DMA_DONE interrupt. From hard personal experience, if -you forget to set this bit, the card will still "work" but the stream will -most likely get corrupted. - -The transfer count must be a multiple of 256. Therefore, the driver will need -to track how much data in the target buffer is valid and deal with it -accordingly. - -Array Element: - -- 32-bit Source Address -- 32-bit Destination Address -- 14-bit reserved (high bit is the last flag) -- 18-bit byte count - -DMA Transfer Status -=================== - -Register 0x0004 holds the DMA Transfer Status: - -Bit -0 read completed -1 write completed -2 DMA read error -3 DMA write error -4 Scatter-Gather array error