On Mon, Jun 30, 2025 at 06:41:38PM +0200, Maxime Ripard wrote:
Hi Rob,
On Fri, Jun 27, 2025 at 02:31:32PM -0500, Rob Herring wrote:
On Tue, Jun 17, 2025 at 02:25:40PM +0200, Maxime Ripard wrote:
Some parts of the memory can be dedicated to specific purposes and exposed as a dedicated memory allocator.
This is especially useful if that particular region has a particular properties the rest of the memory doesn't have. For example, some platforms have their entire RAM covered by ECC but for a small area meant to be used by applications that don't need ECC, and its associated overhead.
Let's introduce a binding to describe such a region and allow the OS to create a dedicated memory allocator for it.
Signed-off-by: Maxime Ripard mripard@kernel.org
.../bindings/reserved-memory/carved-out.yaml | 49 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 49 insertions(+)
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/reserved-memory/carved-out.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/reserved-memory/carved-out.yaml new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..9ab5d1ebd9ebd9111b7c064fabe1c45e752da83b --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/reserved-memory/carved-out.yaml @@ -0,0 +1,49 @@ +# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only OR BSD-2-Clause +%YAML 1.2 +--- +$id: http://devicetree.org/schemas/reserved-memory/carved-out.yaml# +$schema: http://devicetree.org/meta-schemas/core.yaml#
+title: Carved-out Memory Region
+description: |
Don't need '|'.
- Specifies that the reserved memory region has been carved out of the
- main memory allocator, and is intended to be used by the OS as a
- dedicated memory allocator.
Other than the commit msg, it is completely lost that this is for ECC-less memory.
Because it's not. One of the first feedback I got was that the way to identify what a heap provides was the heap name.
So, as far as the binding go, a heap just exposes a chunk of memory the memory allocator wouldn't use. The actual semantics of that chunk of memory don't matter.
But they do because you use one carve out for one thing and another carve out for another purpose and they probably aren't interchangeable. For the most part, everything in /reserved-memory is a carve out from regular memory though we failed to enforce that.
This description applies to CMA area as well. So what's the difference?
Yeah, I kind of agree, which is why I initially started with a property, and you then asked for a compatible.
My issues with properties is we have to support N factorial cases for combinations of N properties. It's already fragile. Whereas a compatible is (hopefully) well defined as to what's needed and is only 1 more case to support.
Rob