Re: [PATCH v2 3/8] iommu/dma: Disable get_sgtable for granule > PAGE_SIZE

From: Sven Peter
Date: Fri Sep 03 2021 - 12:52:22 EST




On Fri, Sep 3, 2021, at 17:45, Robin Murphy wrote:
> On 2021-09-03 16:16, Sven Peter wrote:
> >
> >
> > On Thu, Sep 2, 2021, at 21:42, Robin Murphy wrote:
> >> On 2021-09-02 19:19, Sven Peter wrote:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> On Wed, Sep 1, 2021, at 23:10, Alyssa Rosenzweig wrote:
> >>>>> My biggest issue is that I do not understand how this function is supposed
> >>>>> to be used correctly. It would work fine as-is if it only ever gets passed buffers
> >>>>> allocated by the coherent API but there's not way to check or guarantee that.
> >>>>> There may also be callers making assumptions that no longer hold when
> >>>>> iovad->granule > PAGE_SIZE.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Regarding your case: I'm not convinced the function is meant to be used there.
> >>>>> If I understand it correctly, your code first allocates memory with dma_alloc_coherent
> >>>>> (which possibly creates a sgt internally and then maps it with iommu_map_sg),
> >>>>> then coerces that back into a sgt with dma_get_sgtable, and then maps that sgt to
> >>>>> another iommu domain with dma_map_sg while assuming that the result will be contiguous
> >>>>> in IOVA space. It'll work out because dma_alloc_coherent is the very thing
> >>>>> meant to allocate pages that can be mapped into kernel and device VA space
> >>>>> as a single contiguous block and because both of your IOMMUs are different
> >>>>> instances of the same HW block. Anything allocated by dma_alloc_coherent for the
> >>>>> first IOMMU will have the right shape that will allow it to be mapped as
> >>>>> a single contiguous block for the second IOMMU.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> What could be done in your case is to instead use the IOMMU API,
> >>>>> allocate the pages yourself (while ensuring the sgt your create is made up
> >>>>> of blocks with size and physaddr aligned to max(domain_a->granule, domain_b->granule))
> >>>>> and then just use iommu_map_sg for both domains which actually comes with the
> >>>>> guarantee that the result will be a single contiguous block in IOVA space and
> >>>>> doesn't required the sgt roundtrip.
> >>>>
> >>>> In principle I agree. I am getting the sense this function can't be used
> >>>> correctly in general, and yet is the function that's meant to be used.
> >>>> If my interpretation of prior LKML discussion holds, the problems are
> >>>> far deeper than my code or indeed page size problems...
> >>>
> >>> Right, which makes reasoning about this function and its behavior if the
> >>> IOMMU pages size is unexpected very hard for me. I'm not opposed to just
> >>> keeping this function as-is when there's a mismatch between PAGE_SIZE and
> >>> the IOMMU page size (and it will probably work that way) but I'd like to
> >>> be sure that won't introduce unexpected behavior.
> >>>
> >>>>
> >>>> If the right way to handle this is with the IOMMU and IOVA APIs, I really wish
> >>>> that dance were wrapped up in a safe helper function instead of open
> >>>> coding it in every driver that does cross device sharing.
> >>>>
> >>>> We might even call that helper... hmm... dma_map_sg.... *ducks*
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>> There might be another way to do this correctly. I'm likely just a little
> >>> bit biased because I've spent the past weeks wrapping my head around the
> >>> IOMMU and DMA APIs and when all you have is a hammer everything looks like
> >>> a nail.
> >>>
> >>> But dma_map_sg operates at the DMA API level and at that point the dma-ops
> >>> for two different devices could be vastly different.
> >>> In the worst case one of them could be behind an IOMMU that can easily map
> >>> non-contiguous pages while the other one is directly connected to the bus and
> >>> can't even access >4G pages without swiotlb support.
> >>> It's really only possible to guarantee that it will map N buffers to <= N
> >>> DMA-addressable buffers (possibly by using an IOMMU or swiotlb internally) at
> >>> that point.
> >>>
> >>> On the IOMMU API level you have much more information available about the actual
> >>> hardware and can prepare the buffers in a way that makes both devices happy.
> >>> That's why iommu_map_sgtable combined with iovad->granule aligned sgt entries
> >>> can actually guarantee to map the entire list to a single contiguous IOVA block.
> >>
> >> Essentially there are two reasonable options, and doing pretend dma-buf
> >> export/import between two devices effectively owned by the same driver
> >> is neither of them. Handily, DRM happens to be exactly where all the
> >> precedent is, too; unsurprisingly this is not a new concern.
> >>
> >> One is to go full IOMMU API, like rockchip or tegra, attaching the
> >> relevant devices to your own unmanaged domain(s) and mapping pages
> >> exactly where you choose. You still make dma_map/dma_unmap calls for the
> >> sake of cache maintenance and other housekeeping on the underlying
> >> memory, but you ignore the provided DMA addresses in favour of your own
> >> IOVAs when it comes to programming the devices.
> >>
> >> The lazier option if you can rely on all relevant devices having equal
> >> DMA and IOMMU capabilities is to follow exynos, and herd the devices
> >> into a common default domain. Instead of allocating you own domain, you
> >> grab the current domain for one device (which will be its default
> >> domain) and manually attach the other devices to that. Then you forget
> >> all about IOMMUs but make sure to do all your regular DMA API calls
> >> using that first device, and the DMA addresses which come back should be
> >> magically valid for the other devices too. It was a bit of a cheeky hack
> >> TBH, but I'd still much prefer more of that over any usage of
> >> get_sgtable outside of actual dma-buf...
> >>
> >> Note that where multiple IOMMU instances are involved, the latter
> >> approach does depend on the IOMMU driver being able to support sharing a
> >> single domain across them; I think that might sort-of-work for DART
> >> already, but may need a little more attention.
> >
> > It'll work for two streams inside the same DART but needs some
> > attention for streams from two separate DARTs.
> >
> > Then there's also this amazing "feature" that the display controller DART
> > pagetable pointer register is read-only so that we have to reuse the memory
> > Apple configured for first level table. That needs some changes anyway
> > but might make adding multiple devices from different groups more complex.
>
> OK, I was thinking the dual-DART accommodation is already at least some
> of the way there, but I guess it's still tied to a single device's cfg.

Pretty much. I think "needing a little more attention" describes it pretty
well :)


> One upside to generalising further might be that the dual-DART case
> stops being particularly special :)
>
> Not being able to physically share pagetables shouldn't be too big a
> deal, just a bit more work to sync iommu_map/iommu_unmap calls across
> all the relevant instances for the given domain.

True, it's just a bit more bookkeeping in the end.



Sven