On 11/15/21 3:19 PM, Paul Cercueil wrote:
The buffer-dma code was using two queues, incoming and outgoing, to manage the state of the blocks in use.
While this totally works, it adds some complexity to the code, especially since the code only manages 2 blocks. It is much easier to just check each block's state manually, and keep a counter for the next block to dequeue.
Since the new DMABUF based API wouldn't use these incoming and outgoing queues anyway, getting rid of them now makes the upcoming changes simpler.
Signed-off-by: Paul Cercueil paul@crapouillou.net
The outgoing queue is going to be replaced by fences, but I think we need to keep the incoming queue.
[...] @@ -442,28 +435,33 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iio_dma_buffer_disable); static void iio_dma_buffer_enqueue(struct iio_dma_buffer_queue *queue, struct iio_dma_buffer_block *block) {
- if (block->state == IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DEAD) {
- if (block->state == IIO_BLOCK_STATE_DEAD) iio_buffer_block_put(block);
- } else if (queue->active) {
- else if (queue->active) iio_dma_buffer_submit_block(queue, block);
- } else {
- else block->state = IIO_BLOCK_STATE_QUEUED;
list_add_tail(&block->head, &queue->incoming);
If iio_dma_buffer_enqueue() is called with a dmabuf and the buffer is not active, it will be marked as queued, but we don't actually keep a reference to it anywhere. It will never be submitted to the DMA, and it will never be signaled as completed.