Re[2]: mmap CMA area on /dev/mem

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Sorry, I forgot it. I use i386 processor


Вторник, 21 января 2014, 17:05 UTC от Jeff Haran <Jeff.Haran@xxxxxxxxxx>:

 

 

From: kernelnewbies-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:kernelnewbies-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of ?????? ???????
Sent: Tuesday, January 21, 2014 1:45 AM
To: kernelnewbies@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: mmap CMA area on /dev/mem

 

Hello everyone!
I need reserve 256-512 Mb of continuous physical memory and have access to this memory from the user space.
I decided to use CMA for memory reserving.
Here are the steps on my idea that must be performed:
1. Reservation required amount of memory by CMA during system booting.
2. Parsing of CMA patch output which looks like for example: "CMA: reserved 256 MiB at 27400000" and saving two parameters: size of CMA area = 256*1024*1024 bytes and phys address of CMA area = 0x27400000.
3. Mapping of CMA area at /dev/mem file with offset = 0x27400000 using mmap(). (Of course, 
CONFIG_STRICT_DEVMEM is disabled)
It would let me to read data directly from phys memory from user space.

But the next code make segmentation fault(there size = 1Mb):

int file;
void* start;

file=open("/dev/mem", O_RDWR | O_SYNC);

if ( (start = mmap(0, 1024*1024, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED, file, 0x27400000)) == MAP_FAILED ){
    perror("mmap");
}

for (int offs = 0; offs<50; offs++){
     cout<<((char *)start)[offs];
}

Output of this code: "mmap: Invalid argument".

When I changed offset = 0x27400000 on 0, this code worked fine and program displayed trash. It also work for alot of offsets which I looked at /proc/iomem.
According to information from /proc/iomem, phys addr of CMA area (0x27400000 on my system) always situated in System RAM.

Does anyone have any ideas, how to mmap CMA area on /dev/mem? What am I doing wrong?
Thanks alot for any help!


You don’t say what kind of processor you are running this on, but if its x86_64 you might want to look at your kernel configuration. If CONFIG_X86_PAT is configured you will have problems mapping memory to user space. It basically implements the same restrictions as CONFIG_STRICT_DEVMEM.

Jeff Haran

 

 

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