#ifndef _LINUX_SCATTERLIST_H #define _LINUX_SCATTERLIST_H #include #include #include #include #include struct sg_table { struct scatterlist *sgl; /* the list */ unsigned int nents; /* number of mapped entries */ unsigned int orig_nents; /* original size of list */ }; /* * Notes on SG table design. * * Architectures must provide an unsigned long page_link field in the * scatterlist struct. We use that to place the page pointer AND encode * information about the sg table as well. The two lower bits are reserved * for this information. * * If bit 0 is set, then the page_link contains a pointer to the next sg * table list. Otherwise the next entry is at sg + 1. * * If bit 1 is set, then this sg entry is the last element in a list. * * See sg_next(). * */ #define SG_MAGIC 0x87654321 /* * We overload the LSB of the page pointer to indicate whether it's * a valid sg entry, or whether it points to the start of a new scatterlist. * Those low bits are there for everyone! (thanks mason :-) */ #define sg_is_chain(sg) ((sg)->page_link & 0x01) #define sg_is_last(sg) ((sg)->page_link & 0x02) #define sg_chain_ptr(sg) \ ((struct scatterlist *) ((sg)->page_link & ~0x03)) /** * sg_assign_page - Assign a given page to an SG entry * @sg: SG entry * @page: The page * * Description: * Assign page to sg entry. Also see sg_set_page(), the most commonly used * variant. * **/ static inline void sg_assign_page(struct scatterlist *sg, struct page *page) { unsigned long page_link = sg->page_link & 0x3; /* * In order for the low bit stealing approach to work, pages * must be aligned at a 32-bit boundary as a minimum. */ BUG_ON((unsigned long) page & 0x03); #ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_SG BUG_ON(sg->sg_magic != SG_MAGIC); BUG_ON(sg_is_chain(sg)); #endif sg->page_link = page_link | (unsigned long) page; } /** * sg_set_page - Set sg entry to point at given page * @sg: SG entry * @page: The page * @len: Length of data * @offset: Offset into page * * Description: * Use this function to set an sg entry pointing at a page, never assign * the page directly. We encode sg table information in the lower bits * of the page pointer. See sg_page() for looking up the page belonging * to an sg entry. * **/ static inline void sg_set_page(struct scatterlist *sg, struct page *page, unsigned int len, unsigned int offset) { sg_assign_page(sg, page); sg->offset = offset; sg->length = len; } static inline struct page *sg_page(struct scatterlist *sg) { #ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_SG BUG_ON(sg->sg_magic != SG_MAGIC); BUG_ON(sg_is_chain(sg)); #endif return (struct page *)((sg)->page_link & ~0x3); } /** * sg_set_buf - Set sg entry to point at given data * @sg: SG entry * @buf: Data * @buflen: Data length * **/ static inline void sg_set_buf(struct scatterlist *sg, const void *buf, unsigned int buflen) { sg_set_page(sg, virt_to_page(buf), buflen, offset_in_page(buf)); } /* * Loop over each sg element, following the pointer to a new list if necessary */ #define for_each_sg(sglist, sg, nr, __i) \ for (__i = 0, sg = (sglist); __i < (nr); __i++, sg = sg_next(sg)) /** * sg_chain - Chain two sglists together * @prv: First scatterlist * @prv_nents: Number of entries in prv * @sgl: Second scatterlist * * Description: * Links @prv@ and @sgl@ together, to form a longer scatterlist. * **/ static inline void sg_chain(struct scatterlist *prv, unsigned int prv_nents, struct scatterlist *sgl) { #ifndef ARCH_HAS_SG_CHAIN BUG(); #endif /* * offset and length are unused for chain entry. Clear them. */ prv[prv_nents - 1].offset = 0; prv[prv_nents - 1].length = 0; /* * Set lowest bit to indicate a link pointer, and make sure to clear * the termination bit if it happens to be set. */ prv[prv_nents - 1].page_link = ((unsigned long) sgl | 0x01) & ~0x02; } /** * sg_mark_end - Mark the end of the scatterlist * @sg: SG entryScatterlist * * Description: * Marks the passed in sg entry as the termination point for the sg * table. A call to sg_next() on this entry will return NULL. * **/ static inline void sg_mark_end(struct scatterlist *sg) { #ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_SG BUG_ON(sg->sg_magic != SG_MAGIC); #endif /* * Set termination bit, clear potential chain bit */ sg->page_link |= 0x02; sg->page_link &= ~0x01; } /** * sg_phys - Return physical address of an sg entry * @sg: SG entry * * Description: * This calls page_to_phys() on the page in this sg entry, and adds the * sg offset. The caller must know that it is legal to call page_to_phys() * on the sg page. * **/ static inline dma_addr_t sg_phys(struct scatterlist *sg) { return page_to_phys(sg_page(sg)) + sg->offset; } /** * sg_virt - Return virtual address of an sg entry * @sg: SG entry * * Description: * This calls page_address() on the page in this sg entry, and adds the * sg offset. The caller must know that the sg page has a valid virtual * mapping. * **/ static inline void *sg_virt(struct scatterlist *sg) { return page_address(sg_page(sg)) + sg->offset; } struct scatterlist *sg_next(struct scatterlist *); struct scatterlist *sg_last(struct scatterlist *s, unsigned int); void sg_init_table(struct scatterlist *, unsigned int); void sg_init_one(struct scatterlist *, const void *, unsigned int); typedef struct scatterlist *(sg_alloc_fn)(unsigned int, gfp_t); typedef void (sg_free_fn)(struct scatterlist *, unsigned int); void __sg_free_table(struct sg_table *, unsigned int, sg_free_fn *); void sg_free_table(struct sg_table *); int __sg_alloc_table(struct sg_table *, unsigned int, unsigned int, gfp_t, sg_alloc_fn *); int sg_alloc_table(struct sg_table *, unsigned int, gfp_t); size_t sg_copy_from_buffer(struct scatterlist *sgl, unsigned int nents, void *buf, size_t buflen); size_t sg_copy_to_buffer(struct scatterlist *sgl, unsigned int nents, void *buf, size_t buflen); /* * Maximum number of entries that will be allocated in one piece, if * a list larger than this is required then chaining will be utilized. */ #define SG_MAX_SINGLE_ALLOC (PAGE_SIZE / sizeof(struct scatterlist)) /* * Mapping sg iterator * * Iterates over sg entries mapping page-by-page. On each successful * iteration, @miter->page points to the mapped page and * @miter->length bytes of data can be accessed at @miter->addr. As * long as an interation is enclosed between start and stop, the user * is free to choose control structure and when to stop. * * @miter->consumed is set to @miter->length on each iteration. It * can be adjusted if the user can't consume all the bytes in one go. * Also, a stopped iteration can be resumed by calling next on it. * This is useful when iteration needs to release all resources and * continue later (e.g. at the next interrupt). */ #define SG_MITER_ATOMIC (1 << 0) /* use kmap_atomic */ #define SG_MITER_TO_SG (1 << 1) /* flush back to phys on unmap */ #define SG_MITER_FROM_SG (1 << 2) /* nop */ struct sg_mapping_iter { /* the following three fields can be accessed directly */ struct page *page; /* currently mapped page */ void *addr; /* pointer to the mapped area */ size_t length; /* length of the mapped area */ size_t consumed; /* number of consumed bytes */ /* these are internal states, keep away */ struct scatterlist *__sg; /* current entry */ unsigned int __nents; /* nr of remaining entries */ unsigned int __offset; /* offset within sg */ unsigned int __flags; }; void sg_miter_start(struct sg_mapping_iter *miter, struct scatterlist *sgl, unsigned int nents, unsigned int flags); bool sg_miter_next(struct sg_mapping_iter *miter); void sg_miter_stop(struct sg_mapping_iter *miter); #endif /* _LINUX_SCATTERLIST_H */