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authorBjorn Helgaas <bjorn.helgaas@hp.com>2006-05-05 17:19:50 -0600
committerTony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>2006-05-08 16:32:05 -0700
commit32e62c636a728cb39c0b3bd191286f2ca65d4028 (patch)
tree656454a01e720819103c172daae15b5f2fd85d68 /include/asm-ia64/pgtable.h
parent6810b548b25114607e0814612d84125abccc0a4f (diff)
[IA64] rework memory attribute aliasing
This closes a couple holes in our attribute aliasing avoidance scheme: - The current kernel fails mmaps of some /dev/mem MMIO regions because they don't appear in the EFI memory map. This keeps X from working on the Intel Tiger box. - The current kernel allows UC mmap of the 0-1MB region of /sys/.../legacy_mem even when the chipset doesn't support UC access. This causes an MCA when starting X on HP rx7620 and rx8620 boxes in the default configuration. There's more detail in the Documentation/ia64/aliasing.txt file this adds, but the general idea is that if a region might be covered by a granule-sized kernel identity mapping, any access via /dev/mem or mmap must use the same attribute as the identity mapping. Otherwise, we fall back to using an attribute that is supported according to the EFI memory map, or to using UC if the EFI memory map doesn't mention the region. Signed-off-by: Bjorn Helgaas <bjorn.helgaas@hp.com> Signed-off-by: Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'include/asm-ia64/pgtable.h')
-rw-r--r--include/asm-ia64/pgtable.h22
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/include/asm-ia64/pgtable.h b/include/asm-ia64/pgtable.h
index c0f8144f234..90f3a232923 100644
--- a/include/asm-ia64/pgtable.h
+++ b/include/asm-ia64/pgtable.h
@@ -317,22 +317,20 @@ ia64_phys_addr_valid (unsigned long addr)
#define pte_mkhuge(pte) (__pte(pte_val(pte)))
/*
- * Macro to a page protection value as "uncacheable". Note that "protection" is really a
- * misnomer here as the protection value contains the memory attribute bits, dirty bits,
- * and various other bits as well.
+ * Make page protection values cacheable, uncacheable, or write-
+ * combining. Note that "protection" is really a misnomer here as the
+ * protection value contains the memory attribute bits, dirty bits, and
+ * various other bits as well.
*/
+#define pgprot_cacheable(prot) __pgprot((pgprot_val(prot) & ~_PAGE_MA_MASK) | _PAGE_MA_WB)
#define pgprot_noncached(prot) __pgprot((pgprot_val(prot) & ~_PAGE_MA_MASK) | _PAGE_MA_UC)
-
-/*
- * Macro to make mark a page protection value as "write-combining".
- * Note that "protection" is really a misnomer here as the protection
- * value contains the memory attribute bits, dirty bits, and various
- * other bits as well. Accesses through a write-combining translation
- * works bypasses the caches, but does allow for consecutive writes to
- * be combined into single (but larger) write transactions.
- */
#define pgprot_writecombine(prot) __pgprot((pgprot_val(prot) & ~_PAGE_MA_MASK) | _PAGE_MA_WC)
+struct file;
+extern pgprot_t phys_mem_access_prot(struct file *file, unsigned long pfn,
+ unsigned long size, pgprot_t vma_prot);
+#define __HAVE_PHYS_MEM_ACCESS_PROT
+
static inline unsigned long
pgd_index (unsigned long address)
{