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Date:      Fri, 12 Feb 2016 19:58:06 -0800
From:      Russell Haley <russ.haley@gmail.com>
To:        Ilya Bakulin <ilya@bakulin.de>, "Lundberg, Johannes" <johannes@brilliantservice.co.jp>
Cc:        Adrian Chadd <adrian.chadd@gmail.com>, freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org, Alexander Motin <mav@freebsd.org>, freebsd-arm@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: MMC/SDIO stack under CAM
Message-ID:  <20160213035806.4403283.12124.2928@gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <DD0089CC-19BF-4179-9A05-6B920B1DF7F9@bakulin.de>
References:  <20140216111153.GA74858@olymp.kibab.com> <5C2CF572-360D-4CA0-81C7-18A5C455AED5@bsdimp.com> <20140224142642.GA32538@olymp.kibab.com> <CAJ-VmomNzCMc1T=0jAnyd_uGXbvgeTzZTtmhUPSvZ0DKUEjtKg@mail.gmail.com> <53120EE8.1080600@bakulin.de> <CAJ-VmonPkdVVq7nC3FdopcgzmSTsj3gTO=Cghx-62XS5K25YQg@mail.gmail.com> <5688F015.4090002@bakulin.de> <CAASDrVkHKzt4LKnLEFbwZ0gWRpwEOcpjaCFaOTg%2Bs2DACebopA@mail.gmail.com> <DD0089CC-19BF-4179-9A05-6B920B1DF7F9@bakulin.de>

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Hi Ilya, so does that mean I can take a linux driver for an SDIO wifi card =
and build it using a reference to your library and everything should "just =
work"?

Thanks,
Russ

Sent=C2=A0from=C2=A0my=C2=A0BlackBerry=C2=A010=C2=A0smartphone=C2=A0on=C2=
=A0the=C2=A0Koodo=C2=A0network.
=C2=A0 Original Message =C2=A0
From: Ilya Bakulin
Sent: Thursday, February 11, 2016 10:43 AM
To: Lundberg, Johannes
Cc: Adrian Chadd; freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org; Alexander Motin; freebsd-arm=
@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: MMC/SDIO stack under CAM

Hi Johannes,

My work doesn't include writing drivers for SDHCI controllers. But if the c=
ontroller on your new boards is supported by FreeBSD, then you can really t=
est the new stack! Especially if the controller driver for your board is ba=
sed on dev/sdhci, adapting it to work with the new stack is trivial. For ex=
ample, iMX6 SDHCI needed only a couple of lines: https://github.com/kibab/f=
reebsd/commit/df6d8d534740aa3633979da0a9d0ca00b60db0e9

Please let me know when you get the new boards and we will figure out what =
we need.

On February 11, 2016 3:17:22 AM GMT+01:00, "Lundberg, Johannes" <johannes@b=
rilliantservice.co.jp> wrote:
>Hi Ilya
>
>This is great!
>
>I've got a Tronsmart ARA X5 and just purchased a few UP
><http://up-shop.org/up-boards/2-up-board-2gb-16-gb-emmc-memory.html>;
>boards
>and it would be really nice if I could utilize the onboard eMMC. These
>are
>all Intel Cherrytrail platforms.
>
>Please let me know if there's anything (testing?) I can do to speed up
>the
>process.
>
>
>
>--
>Name: Johannes Lundberg
>Position: Mirama project leader
>Phone: +1-408-636-2161
>Skype: brilliantjohannes
>Online: LinkedIn <http://jp.linkedin.com/in/lundbergjohannes>;
>Facebook
><https://www.facebook.com/miramaone>; Reddit
><https://www.reddit.com/user/yohanesu75/>; Twitter
><https://twitter.com/Yohanesu75Tweet>; GitHub
><https://github.com/yohanesu75>;
>GitLab <https://gitlab.com/u/johannes_lundberg>;
>Company: Mirama <http://mira.ma>; Brilliantservice US
><http://www.brilliantserviceusa.com>; Brilliantservice JP
><http://www.brilliantservice.co.jp>;
>
>On Sun, Jan 3, 2016 at 1:55 AM, Ilya Bakulin <ilya@bakulin.de> wrote:
>
>> So, more than one year has passed, and I'd like to resurrect this
>work
>> and move forward.
>>
>> I have uploaded a new diff and created a completely new revision to
>> track the development: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4761
>>
>> What it is able to do now:
>>
>> * Read/write on SD/SDHC/MMC cards!
>> * Detect SDIO cards and create devices that correspond to SDIO
>functions
>>
>> This all works only on BeagleBone currently, because some changes
>need
>> to be done in each SDHCI-compliant driver to make it interact with
>CAM.
>> I have purchased a Wandboard Quad that has an integrated SDIO WiFi
>chip,
>> so I hope to tweak its SDHCI driver as well.
>>
>> I haven't profiled the stack because:
>> * Now we have only SD/MMC cards that are slow anyway;
>> * I don't know how to do it in FreeBSD :-)
>>
>> Please review this diff and tell what you think!
>>
>> On 01/03/14 18:05, Adrian Chadd wrote:
>> > On 1 March 2014 08:46, Ilya Bakulin <ilya@bakulin.de> wrote:
>> >> Hi Adrian,
>> >>
>> >> On 24.02.14, 16:59, Adrian Chadd wrote:
>> >>> hi,
>> >>>
>> >>> Let me just reiterate some .. well, experience doing this stuff
>at QCA.
>> >>>
>> >>> You really, absolutely don't want too much overhead in the
>MMC/SDIO
>> >>> path between whatever is issuing things and the network driver.
>> >>>
>> >>> There was significant performance work done at QCA on a local
>MMC/SDIO
>> >>> driver and bus to get extremely low latency and CPU utilisation
>when
>> >>> pushing around small transactions. The current CAM locking model
>is
>> >>> not geared towards getting to high transaction rates.
>> >> So here you mean some work done on Linux MMC/SDIO stack by QCA
>> >> which made it far better than current Linux MMC stack in terms of
>> >> high SDIO I/O rates?
>> > Yup. The stock MMC stack/driver in Linux wasn't "fast" enough at
>small
>> > transactions to sustain the wifi speeds customers required.
>> >
>> >>> You may think this is a very architecturally pretty solution and
>it
>> >>> indeed may be. But if it doesn't perform as well as the existing
>local
>> >>> hacks that vendors have done, no company deploying this hardware
>is
>> >>> going to want to use it. They'll end up realising there's this
>massive
>> >>> CAM storage layer in between and either have to sit down to rip
>it up
>> >>> and replace it with something lightweight, or they'll say "screw
>it"
>> >>> and go back to the vendor supplied hacked up Linux solution.
>> >> I think that if the "architecturally pretty solution" behaves
>worse than
>> >> some ugly hacks, then it may be not so pretty or the architecture
>is
>> >> just broken
>> >> by design.
>> >>
>> >>> So I highly recommend you profile things - and profile things
>with
>> >>> lots of small transactions. If the CAM overhead is more than a
>tiny,
>> >>> tiny fraction of CPU at 25,000 pps, your solution won't scale.
>:-)
>> >> I don't really know what to compare with. For MMC/SD cards it is
>pretty
>> >> obvious, but then these cards will be likely the bottleneck, not
>the
>> stack.
>> >> And the only goal would be to not make the stack slower than it is
>now.
>> >> But, as ATA devices are much faster than MMC/SD, I don't think
>this will
>> >> be a problem.
>> >>
>> >> For SDIO things are different. But we don't have any drivers
>(yet),
>> except
>> >> mv_sdiowl that I'm writing, to test on. So I have to bring the
>SDIO
>> >> stack on CAM,
>> >> than bring mv_sdiowl to the state when it can actually transmit
>the
>> >> data, and then
>> >> compare performance with the vendor-supplied Linux driver.
>> >> We'll see then if there is a room for improvement...
>> > That sounds like a plan.
>> >
>> > Just note that although storage looks like it's doing much more
>> > throughput, the IO size also matters. As I said above, it's not
>> > uncommon to have > 1000 receive frames a second on 802.11n; and
>that
>> > can peak much higher than that. That's not the kind of IO rate you
>see
>> > on SD cards. :-)
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > -a
>> > _______________________________________________
>> > freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing list
>> > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers
>> > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "
>> freebsd-hackers-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"
>> >
>>
>>
>> --
>> Regards,
>> Ilya Bakulin
>>
>>
>>
>
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