| 12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546474849505152535455565758596061626364656667 |
- .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
- ==============================
- Allocating dma-buf using heaps
- ==============================
- Dma-buf Heaps are a way for userspace to allocate dma-buf objects. They are
- typically used to allocate buffers from a specific allocation pool, or to share
- buffers across frameworks.
- Heaps
- =====
- A heap represents a specific allocator. The Linux kernel currently supports the
- following heaps:
- - The ``system`` heap allocates virtually contiguous, cacheable, buffers.
- - The ``default_cma_region`` heap allocates physically contiguous,
- cacheable, buffers. Only present if a CMA region is present. Such a
- region is usually created either through the kernel commandline
- through the ``cma`` parameter, a memory region Device-Tree node with
- the ``linux,cma-default`` property set, or through the
- ``CMA_SIZE_MBYTES`` or ``CMA_SIZE_PERCENTAGE`` Kconfig options. Prior
- to Linux 6.17, its name wasn't stable and could be called
- ``reserved``, ``linux,cma``, or ``default-pool``, depending on the
- platform.
- - A heap will be created for each reusable region in the device tree
- with the ``shared-dma-pool`` compatible, using the full device tree
- node name as its name. The buffer semantics are identical to
- ``default-cma-region``.
- Naming Convention
- =================
- ``dma-buf`` heaps name should meet a number of constraints:
- - The name must be stable, and must not change from one version to the other.
- Userspace identifies heaps by their name, so if the names ever change, we
- would be likely to introduce regressions.
- - The name must describe the memory region the heap will allocate from, and
- must uniquely identify it in a given platform. Since userspace applications
- use the heap name as the discriminant, it must be able to tell which heap it
- wants to use reliably if there's multiple heaps.
- - The name must not mention implementation details, such as the allocator. The
- heap driver will change over time, and implementation details when it was
- introduced might not be relevant in the future.
- - The name should describe properties of the buffers that would be allocated.
- Doing so will make heap identification easier for userspace. Such properties
- are:
- - ``contiguous`` for physically contiguous buffers;
- - ``protected`` for encrypted buffers not accessible the OS;
- - The name may describe intended usage. Doing so will make heap identification
- easier for userspace applications and users.
- For example, assuming a platform with a reserved memory region located
- at the RAM address 0x42000000, intended to allocate video framebuffers,
- physically contiguous, and backed by the CMA kernel allocator, good
- names would be ``memory@42000000-contiguous`` or ``video@42000000``, but
- ``cma-video`` wouldn't.
|