diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'lib')
-rw-r--r-- | lib/iov_iter.c | 36 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | lib/pci_iomap.c | 43 |
2 files changed, 79 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/lib/iov_iter.c b/lib/iov_iter.c index f2d50d69a6c3..755c10c5138c 100644 --- a/lib/iov_iter.c +++ b/lib/iov_iter.c @@ -1972,3 +1972,39 @@ int import_single_range(int rw, void __user *buf, size_t len, return 0; } EXPORT_SYMBOL(import_single_range); + +/** + * iov_iter_restore() - Restore a &struct iov_iter to the same state as when + * iov_iter_save_state() was called. + * + * @i: &struct iov_iter to restore + * @state: state to restore from + * + * Used after iov_iter_save_state() to bring restore @i, if operations may + * have advanced it. + * + * Note: only works on ITER_IOVEC, ITER_BVEC, and ITER_KVEC + */ +void iov_iter_restore(struct iov_iter *i, struct iov_iter_state *state) +{ + if (WARN_ON_ONCE(!iov_iter_is_bvec(i) && !iter_is_iovec(i)) && + !iov_iter_is_kvec(i)) + return; + i->iov_offset = state->iov_offset; + i->count = state->count; + /* + * For the *vec iters, nr_segs + iov is constant - if we increment + * the vec, then we also decrement the nr_segs count. Hence we don't + * need to track both of these, just one is enough and we can deduct + * the other from that. ITER_KVEC and ITER_IOVEC are the same struct + * size, so we can just increment the iov pointer as they are unionzed. + * ITER_BVEC _may_ be the same size on some archs, but on others it is + * not. Be safe and handle it separately. + */ + BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct iovec) != sizeof(struct kvec)); + if (iov_iter_is_bvec(i)) + i->bvec -= state->nr_segs - i->nr_segs; + else + i->iov -= state->nr_segs - i->nr_segs; + i->nr_segs = state->nr_segs; +} diff --git a/lib/pci_iomap.c b/lib/pci_iomap.c index 2d3eb1cb73b8..ce39ce9f3526 100644 --- a/lib/pci_iomap.c +++ b/lib/pci_iomap.c @@ -134,4 +134,47 @@ void __iomem *pci_iomap_wc(struct pci_dev *dev, int bar, unsigned long maxlen) return pci_iomap_wc_range(dev, bar, 0, maxlen); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(pci_iomap_wc); + +/* + * pci_iounmap() somewhat illogically comes from lib/iomap.c for the + * CONFIG_GENERIC_IOMAP case, because that's the code that knows about + * the different IOMAP ranges. + * + * But if the architecture does not use the generic iomap code, and if + * it has _not_ defined it's own private pci_iounmap function, we define + * it here. + * + * NOTE! This default implementation assumes that if the architecture + * support ioport mapping (HAS_IOPORT_MAP), the ioport mapping will + * be fixed to the range [ PCI_IOBASE, PCI_IOBASE+IO_SPACE_LIMIT [, + * and does not need unmapping with 'ioport_unmap()'. + * + * If you have different rules for your architecture, you need to + * implement your own pci_iounmap() that knows the rules for where + * and how IO vs MEM get mapped. + * + * This code is odd, and the ARCH_HAS/ARCH_WANTS #define logic comes + * from legacy <asm-generic/io.h> header file behavior. In particular, + * it would seem to make sense to do the iounmap(p) for the non-IO-space + * case here regardless, but that's not what the old header file code + * did. Probably incorrectly, but this is meant to be bug-for-bug + * compatible. + */ +#if defined(ARCH_WANTS_GENERIC_PCI_IOUNMAP) + +void pci_iounmap(struct pci_dev *dev, void __iomem *p) +{ +#ifdef ARCH_HAS_GENERIC_IOPORT_MAP + uintptr_t start = (uintptr_t) PCI_IOBASE; + uintptr_t addr = (uintptr_t) p; + + if (addr >= start && addr < start + IO_SPACE_LIMIT) + return; + iounmap(p); +#endif +} +EXPORT_SYMBOL(pci_iounmap); + +#endif /* ARCH_WANTS_GENERIC_PCI_IOUNMAP */ + #endif /* CONFIG_PCI */ |