[U-Boot] [RFC] Long term ARM ISA/cpu/core code organization (was: [PATCH 3/3 v3] ARM: ARM926EJS - Add cache operations)
Marek Vasut
marek.vasut at gmail.com
Tue Sep 6 16:21:16 CEST 2011
On Tuesday, September 06, 2011 01:43:33 PM Albert ARIBAUD wrote:
> (splitting this discussion between the patch question and longer term
> RFC, here I follow the RFC and update the subject line accordingly)
>
> >> Seems like we're having two problems there:
> >>
> >> 1) at least some cpus or cores (xscale) do not implement all of what was
> >> thought to be armv5 cache operations, which suggests we should indeed
> >> keep this patch in arm926ejs;
> >>
> >> 2) that many cpus and cores implement a good subset of armv5 cache
> >> operations, which warrants having an armv5 directory where we would
> >> define them once only for all to use.
> >>
> >> I think the Right Way is to create an armv5 subtree with armv5-common
> >> operations, but with the capability of overruling these with cpu-level
> >> variants, themselves being possibly overridden by core-level variants.
> >
> > All right, but what about the CPUs that don't adapt so fast?
>
> Adapt to what?
Adapt to this new cache stuff. Some CPUs have no cache functions implemented at
all and therefore with the new stuff, they will use the generic ones -- which
might be not good.
>
> > There will be CPUs
> > with broken cache-ops. How do you intend to solve that ?
>
> If a cpu has partly broken cache ops, but its cache is still useable by
> not using the armv5-stock cache ops implementation, then the cpu should
> override the broken armv5 ops with its own version.
>
> For instance, say some armv5 based cpu badly implements full flush but
> correctly implements cache line flush. The cpu code should then provide
> its own version of the full cache flush op, based on looping through the
> cache lines instead of the armv5 single coprocessor instruction.
>
> If, OTOH, a cpu has broken cache ops, to the point that cache is
> unuseable, then it should have its cache disabled, which can be done
> through configuration options or by providing cpu-specific cache ops
> implementations that will emit appropriate messages.
Ack, agree.
>
> >> Now as to where to put this:
> >>
> >> As ARMv5 is an ISA, not a cpu or core, I'm uncomfortable with creating
> >> arch/arm/cpu/armv5 anyway. I'd prefer an ISA subtree, either in parallel
> >> with the cpu subtree: arch/arm/isa [/armv5], or, and I would slightly
> >> prefer that even though some paths would become rather long, a hierarchy
> >> withe cpus stand below their isa: arch/arm/isa [/armv5/cpu/arm926ejs].
> >> To reduce path length, we could remove the 'cpu' part and consider that
> >> anything below the 'isa' is a cpu, just like currently anything below
> >> the cpu is a core.
> >
> > This is completely out of scope for this patch. My proposal would be to
> > merge this, then start mucking with this moving files around.
>
> Indeed -- I was not suggestion a rework of the patch, only sending out
> an RFC of sorts.
>
> >> To sum it up, we would have
> >>
> >> arch/arm/isa/armv5 (where ARMv5t ISA common code would reside, including
> >> cache ops)
> >>
> >> arch/arm/isa/armv5/arm926ejs (where ARM926EJ-S cpu common code would
> >> reside, including cache ops)
> >>
> >> arch/arm/isa/armv5/arm926ejs/orion5x (a personal favorite :) where
> >> Orion5x core code would reside, including cache ops)
> >>
> >> Maybe we could even make do without the .../isa/... level and put ISAs
> >> directly under ARM -- I don't think any ARM ISA will ever be named
> >> 'include' or 'lib' or 'Makefile'. :)
> >>
> >> Comments?
> >
> > I'll have to think about it,
>
> By all means do. :)
>
> Amicalement,
Cheers
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