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author | David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> | 2010-02-28 19:23:06 -0800 |
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committer | David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> | 2010-02-28 19:23:06 -0800 |
commit | 47871889c601d8199c51a4086f77eebd77c29b0b (patch) | |
tree | 40cdcac3bff0ee40cc33dcca61d0577cdf965f77 /Documentation/cachetlb.txt | |
parent | c16cc0b464b8876cfd57ce1c1dbcb6f9a6a0bce3 (diff) | |
parent | 30ff056c42c665b9ea535d8515890857ae382540 (diff) | |
download | linux-47871889c601d8199c51a4086f77eebd77c29b0b.tar.bz2 |
Merge branch 'master' of /home/davem/src/GIT/linux-2.6/
Conflicts:
drivers/firmware/iscsi_ibft.c
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/cachetlb.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/cachetlb.txt | 24 |
1 files changed, 24 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/cachetlb.txt b/Documentation/cachetlb.txt index da42ab414c48..b231414bb8bc 100644 --- a/Documentation/cachetlb.txt +++ b/Documentation/cachetlb.txt @@ -377,3 +377,27 @@ maps this page at its virtual address. All the functionality of flush_icache_page can be implemented in flush_dcache_page and update_mmu_cache. In 2.7 the hope is to remove this interface completely. + +The final category of APIs is for I/O to deliberately aliased address +ranges inside the kernel. Such aliases are set up by use of the +vmap/vmalloc API. Since kernel I/O goes via physical pages, the I/O +subsystem assumes that the user mapping and kernel offset mapping are +the only aliases. This isn't true for vmap aliases, so anything in +the kernel trying to do I/O to vmap areas must manually manage +coherency. It must do this by flushing the vmap range before doing +I/O and invalidating it after the I/O returns. + + void flush_kernel_vmap_range(void *vaddr, int size) + flushes the kernel cache for a given virtual address range in + the vmap area. This is to make sure that any data the kernel + modified in the vmap range is made visible to the physical + page. The design is to make this area safe to perform I/O on. + Note that this API does *not* also flush the offset map alias + of the area. + + void invalidate_kernel_vmap_range(void *vaddr, int size) invalidates + the cache for a given virtual address range in the vmap area + which prevents the processor from making the cache stale by + speculatively reading data while the I/O was occurring to the + physical pages. This is only necessary for data reads into the + vmap area. |