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Message-ID: <20081014221018.GA1498@x200.localdomain>
Date: Wed, 15 Oct 2008 02:10:19 +0400
From: Alexey Dobriyan <adobriyan@...il.com>
To: Kaz Kylheku <kkylheku@...il.com>
Cc: linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: GPL question: using large contiguous memory in proprietary
driver.
On Tue, Oct 14, 2008 at 02:56:40PM -0700, Kaz Kylheku wrote:
> I have the following question. Suppose that some proprietary driver
> (otherwise completely clean, based only on non-GPL symbols)
You have strange notion of "clean".
> requires a large buffer of physically contiguous memory.
>
> A GPL-ed driver could get this memory by having some boot-time
> code compiled into the kernel which calls bootmem_alloc during
> kernel initialization. This function would stash the address of the
> memory into some global variable which is exported for the
> module to use.
>
> How do you solve this problem in a proprietary driver?
:-)
> It seems
> like the above solution taints the kernel, because the kernel
> provides a symbol which exists only for the sake of supporting
> a proprietary driver.
>
> Would it be okay to have a mechanism like this:
> Suppose that on the kernel command line, you could
> request a boot-time memory allocation and give it a name.
> For instance, the parameter:
>
> boot_alloc=foo,8192K
>
> would create an 8192 kilobyte allocation, and associate it
> with the string "foo". A non-GPL function would be provided to
> find the address of this memory, using the string "foo"
> as the key. The proprietary driver would document the
> requirement that it needs a memory region of at least
> 8192K, under the name "foo".
>
> Help! :)
Since the code to reserve memory and code to find by name won't be
accepted, the question is rather pointless.
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