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author | Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com> | 2015-08-10 23:07:06 -0400 |
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committer | Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com> | 2015-08-10 23:07:06 -0400 |
commit | 92b19ff50e8f242392d78b2aacc5b5b672f1796b (patch) | |
tree | 463927d91228174419ba1fe327f3cec6b9a2615a /arch/sparc | |
parent | 2584cf83578c26db144730ef498f4070f82ee3ea (diff) | |
download | blackbird-op-linux-92b19ff50e8f242392d78b2aacc5b5b672f1796b.tar.gz blackbird-op-linux-92b19ff50e8f242392d78b2aacc5b5b672f1796b.zip |
cleanup IORESOURCE_CACHEABLE vs ioremap()
Quoting Arnd:
I was thinking the opposite approach and basically removing all uses
of IORESOURCE_CACHEABLE from the kernel. There are only a handful of
them.and we can probably replace them all with hardcoded
ioremap_cached() calls in the cases they are actually useful.
All existing usages of IORESOURCE_CACHEABLE call ioremap() instead of
ioremap_nocache() if the resource is cacheable, however ioremap() is
uncached by default. Clearly none of the existing usages care about the
cacheability. Particularly devm_ioremap_resource() never worked as
advertised since it always fell back to plain ioremap().
Clean this up as the new direction we want is to convert
ioremap_<type>() usages to memremap(..., flags).
Suggested-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'arch/sparc')
-rw-r--r-- | arch/sparc/kernel/pci.c | 3 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/arch/sparc/kernel/pci.c b/arch/sparc/kernel/pci.c index c928bc64b4ba..04da147e0712 100644 --- a/arch/sparc/kernel/pci.c +++ b/arch/sparc/kernel/pci.c @@ -231,8 +231,7 @@ static void pci_parse_of_addrs(struct platform_device *op, res = &dev->resource[(i - PCI_BASE_ADDRESS_0) >> 2]; } else if (i == dev->rom_base_reg) { res = &dev->resource[PCI_ROM_RESOURCE]; - flags |= IORESOURCE_READONLY | IORESOURCE_CACHEABLE - | IORESOURCE_SIZEALIGN; + flags |= IORESOURCE_READONLY | IORESOURCE_SIZEALIGN; } else { printk(KERN_ERR "PCI: bad cfg reg num 0x%x\n", i); continue; |