On Tuesday, January 10, 2017 1:44:37 PM CET Robin Murphy
wrote:> On 10/01/17 13:15, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> > On Tuesday, January 10, 2017 12:26:01 PM CET Robin Murphy wrote:
> >> @@ -548,6 +550,14 @@ static int virtio_mmio_probe(struct
platform_device *pdev)
> >> if (vm_dev->version == 1)
> >> writel(PAGE_SIZE, vm_dev->base +
VIRTIO_MMIO_GUEST_PAGE_SIZE);
> >>
> >> + rc = dma_set_mask_and_coherent(&pdev->dev,
DMA_BIT_MASK(64));
> >> + if (rc)
> >> + rc = dma_set_mask_and_coherent(&pdev->dev,
DMA_BIT_MASK(32));
> >
> > You don't seem to do anything different when 64-bit DMA is
unsupported.
> > How do you prevent the use of kernel buffers that are above the first
4G
> > here?
>
> That's the token "give up and rely on SWIOTLB/IOMMU" point,
which as we
> already know won't necessarily work very well (because it's already
the
> situation without this patch), but is still arguably better than
> nothing. As I've just replied elsewhere, I personally hate this idiom,
> but it's the done thing given the current DMA mask API.
Ah, I think I understand now. This is actually unrelated to SWIOTLB, which
should always succeed, but it is used on some architectures (x86, and
sparc in particular) to control whether the iommu is allowed to hand
out IOVA above 32-bit. Sorry for assuming in my earlier mail that all
IOMMUs only do 32-bit VA addressing in the dma-mapping API.
The related case on PowerPC is that DMA_BIT_MASK(64) has a special
meaning of bypassing the IOMMU entirely to optimize for performance.
Again that should not fail, but it will switch the dma_map_ops between
iommu and direct, using the IOMMU only when the device can't address
the entire space.
> >> + else if (vm_dev->version == 1)
> >> + dma_set_coherent_mask(&pdev->dev,
DMA_BIT_MASK(32 + PAGE_SHIFT));
> >
> > Why is this limitation only for the coherent mask?
>
> AIUI, the "32-bit pointers to pages" limitation of legacy virtio
only
> applies to the location of the vring itself, which is allocated via
> dma_alloc_coherent - the descriptors themselves hold full 64-bit
> addresses pointing at the actual data, which is mapped using streaming
> DMA. It relies on the API guarantee that if we've managed to set a
> 64-bit streaming mask, then setting a smaller coherent mask cannot fail
> (DMA-API-HOWTO.txt:257)
>
> This is merely an amalgamation of the logic already in place for
> virtio-pci, I just skimped on duplicating all the rationale (I know
> there's a mail thread somewhere I could probably dig up).
Ok, got it.
Arnd