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DMA Resource
Contents
DMA Engine
Some hardware targets include a DMA engine which can be used for general purpose copying. This article describes the DMA engines available and how to use them.
Hardware Features
The Direct Memory Access (DMA) Engines found in the NXP/Freescale p5020, p5040 and p1022 System On a Chip (SoC)s, found in the AmigaONE X5000/20, X5000/40 and A1222 respectively, are quite flexible and powerful. Each of these chips contains two distinct engines with four data channels each. This provides the ability to have a total of eight DMA Channels working at once, with up to two DMA transactions actually being executed at the same time (one on each of the two DMA Engines).
Further, each of the four DMA Channels found in a DMA Engine may be individually programmed to handle either; a single transaction, a Chain of transactions, or even Lists of Chains of transactions. The DMA Engines automatically arbitrate between each DMA Channel following programmed bandwidth settings for each Channel (typically 1024 bytes).
This means that after completing a transfer of 1024 bytes (for example), the hardware will consider switching to the next Channel to allow it to move another block of data, and so on in a round-robin fashion. If all other DMA Channels on a given DMA Engine are idle when arbitration would take place, the hardware will not arbitrate and simply continue processing the transaction(s) for the Channel it is on.
fsldma.resource
The fsldma.resource API is provided automatically in the kernel for all supported machines (Currently the AmigaONE X5000/20, X5000/40 and A1222).
Example usage
#include <interfaces/fsldma.h> // Obtain the fsldma.resource struct fslDMAIFace *IfslDMA = IExec->OpenResource(FSLDMA_NAME); if ( NULL != IfslDMA ) { uint32 lTestSize = 1024; CONST_APTR pPhysicalSrcAddr = NULL; APTR pPhysicalDestAddr = NULL; // Allocate the Source Buffer (for DMA) // and set the contents to 0xB3 (just an example value) pPhysicalSrcAddr = (CONST_APTR)IfslDMA->DMAAllocPhysicalMemoryTags(lTestSize, FSLDMA_APM_ClearWithValue, 0xB3, TAG_END); if ( NULL != pPhysicalSrcAddr ) { // Allocate the Destination Buffer (for DMA) // - contents will by cleared by default pPhysicalDestAddr = IfslDMA->DMAAllocPhysicalMemory(lTestSize); if ( NULL != pPhysicalDestAddr ) { // Call IfslDMA->DMAPhysicalCopyMem() // to perform the memory copy using the DMA hardware if ( TRUE == IfslDMA->DMAPhysicalCopyMem(pPhysicalSrcAddr, pPhysicalDestAddr,lTestSize) ) { // Success - Do something with the copied data } else { // Fallback and use CPU Copy instead (or do something else) // Since we allocated the memory buffers using the FslDMA API, // which returns the Physical address to that memory, and the // IExec->CopyMemQuick() function expects the Virtual address, // we first need to obtain the Virtual address for the Physical // ones (using the FslDMA API again) before we can call our // fallback copy function. CONST_APTR pVirtualSrcAddr = NULL; APTR pVirtualDestAddr = NULL; pVirtualSrcAddr = IfslDMA->DMAGetVirtualAddress((APTR)pPhysicalSrcAddr); pVirtualDestAddr = IfslDMA->DMAGetVirtualAddress(pPhysicalDestAddr); IExec->CopyMemQuick(pVirtualSrcAddr,pVirtualDestAddr,lTestSize); } // We *must* use DMAFreePhysicalMemory() to free the memory // that we allocated with DMAAllocPhysicalMemory() IfslDMA->DMAFreePhysicalMemory(pPhysicalDestAddr); } // We *must* use DMAFreePhysicalMemory() to free the memory // that we allocated with DMAAllocPhysicalMemory() IfslDMA->DMAFreePhysicalMemory((APTR)pPhysicalSrcAddr); } }
Obtaining the fsldma.resource
Breaking this example down the first thing we do is include the interface header for the fsldma.resource and obtain the resource itself.
#include <interfaces/fsldma.h> struct fslDMAIFace *IfslDMA = IExec->OpenResource(FSLDMA_NAME);
Allocating DMA Compliant Memory
Once we have successfully obtained the DMA resource we can directly use its API. The next step we need to do is to allocate some memory which we know is DMA compliant for use by the resource. The easiest way to accomplish this is to use the IfslDMA->DMAAllocPhysicalMemory() function. This will automatically take care of ensuring the memory that is returned is properly aligned, contiguous, cache-inhibited and coherent.
We use the Tags version of the allocate memory function first so we can allocate a block of memory for our source buffer and fill it with some test value (in this case the byte value 0xB3).
pPhysicalSrcAddr = (CONST_APTR)IfslDMA->DMAAllocPhysicalMemoryTags(lTestSize, FSLDMA_APM_ClearWithValue, 0xB3, TAG_END);
We also need a destination buffer for our test. Since it only needs to start out being cleared (filled with zeroes), we can use the simplest form of the allocate memory function here as the allocated memory is cleared by default.
pPhysicalDestAddr = IfslDMA->DMAAllocPhysicalMemory(lTestSize);