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Re: [lwip-users] NXP LPC 17xx lwip port: use of pbuf for rx
From: |
Sergio R. Caprile |
Subject: |
Re: [lwip-users] NXP LPC 17xx lwip port: use of pbuf for rx |
Date: |
Fri, 29 Mar 2019 11:53:34 -0300 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.6.0 |
The recommendations are to use separate pools for rx and tx so they can
not starve each other. Since PBUF_RAM is used for tx, then rx is
expected to use PBUF_POOL. I bet you can also use separate pools but I
don't know how.
Last time I checked, PBUF_RAM allocates a single block of memory. That
is probably the reason why these guys use them for DMA descriptors.
PBUF_POOL, on the other hand, *might* (not necessarily *will* but it
will surely bite you if you don't prepare for it) allocate several
buffers in a chain to satisfy your request. That is, your pbuf will be a
chain of pbufs.
While you can memcpy len bytes to a PBUF_RAM pbuf p where p->tot_len >=
len; you certainly can not do it to a PBUF_POOL and must loop through
all pbufs q=q->next writing up to q->len bytes to each one. Hope I'm
clear...
So, you'd better check what your driver is doing.
Keeping the rx side to PBUF_RAM can cause tx and rx to compete for
buffers (unless...)
Moving the rx side to PBUF_POOL if the driver was not properly written
for that, can cause memory corruption when the pool gets fragmented and
returned pbufs are chained ones.