Re: Memory providers multiplexing (Was: [PATCH net-next v4 4/5] page_pool: remove PP_FLAG_PAGE_FRAG flag)

From: Christian König
Date: Wed Jul 12 2023 - 03:56:13 EST


Am 12.07.23 um 05:42 schrieb Mina Almasry:
On Tue, Jul 11, 2023 at 2:39 PM David Ahern <dsahern@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 7/11/23 2:39 PM, Jakub Kicinski wrote:
On Tue, 11 Jul 2023 10:06:28 -0700 Mina Almasry wrote:
Any reason not to allow an alternative representation for skb frags than
struct page?
I don't think there's a hard technical reason. We can make it work.
I also think we can switch the representation for skb frags to
something else. However - please do correct me if I'm wrong - I don't
think that is sufficient for device memory TCP. My understanding is
that we also need to modify any NIC drivers that want to use device
memory TCP to understand a new memory type, and the page pool as well
if that's involved. I think in particular modifying the memory type in
all the NIC drivers that want to do device memory TCP is difficult. Do
you think this is feasible?
That's why I was thinking about adding an abstraction between
the page pool and the driver. Instead of feeding driver pages
a new abstraction could feed the driver just an identifier and a PA.
skb frag is currently a bio_vec. Overloading the 'struct page' address
in that struct with another address is easy to do. Requiring a certain
alignment on the address gives you a few low bits to use a flags / magic
/ etc.

Overloading len and offset is not really possible - way too much code is
affected (e.g., iov walking and MSS / TSO segmenting).

ie., you could overload page address with a pointer to an object in your
new abstraction layer and the struct has the other meta data.

typedef struct skb_frag {
union {
struct bio_vec bvec;
struct new_abstraction abs;
};
} skb_frag_t;

where

struct new_abstraction {
void *addr,
unsigned int len;
unsigned int offset;
};

I have been playing with a similar and it co-exists with the existing
code quite well with the constraint on location of len and offset.

Whether we want to support fragmentation in that model or not would
have to be decided.

We can take pages from the page pool and feed them to drivers via
such an API, but drivers need to stop expecting pages.
yes, drivers would have to be updated to understand the new format. A
downside, but again relatively easy to manage.

I'm glad to see that you're open to this approach. As far as I
understand, getting device memory in a struct page form would still be
preferred, no? And the approach you point to would be a backup plan I
presume?

Well yes and no, if you need struct pages depends on what you want to do.

struct pages are an approach to manage memory regions, but P2PDMA is essentially about pumping data between devices.

If your data is for example organized in files on a filesystem then having struct pages is a must have because you need to be able to manage references, address spaces and so one.

If a pages was acquired with alloc_pages() in a driver then you have struct pages, but you can't necessary use them the way you want to use them because the first few dwords have different meaning depending on the use case.

And then you have the use case where you have for example micro controllers using P2PDMA to talk with each other. In this case your DMA address might not be memory at all, but rather MMIO. E.g. doorbells on graphics hw is such a case as well as cameras and encoders which communicate directly with each other.

Since the good folks on this thread have pointed me to p2pdma to
address my use case, I've been doing some homework to see if it can
apply. AFACT so far, it applies, and Willem actually had a prototype
of it working a while back. The rough approach Willem and I are
thinking of would be something like:

1. The device memory driver would be the p2pdma provider. It would
expose a user API which allocates a device memory region, calls
pci_p2pdma_add_resource() and pci_p2pmem_publish() on it, and returns
a reference to it to the userspace.

2. The NIC driver would be the p2pdma client and orchestrator. It
would expose a user API which binds an rxq to a pci device. Prior to
the bind the user API would check that the pci device has published
p2p memory (pci_has_p2pmem()), and check the the p2p mem is accessible
to the driver (pci_p2pdma_distance() I think), etc.

3. The NIC would allocate pages from the p2pdma provider for incoming
packets, and create devmem skbs, and deliver the devmem skbs to the
user using the support in my RFC. AFACT all that code need not be
changed.

AFAICT, all the concerns brought up in this thread are sidestepped by
using p2pdma. I need not allocate struct pages in the core dma-buf
code anymore (or anywhere), and I need not allocate pgmaps. I would
just re-use the p2pdma support.

Anyone see any glaring issues with this approach? I plan on trying to
implement a PoC and sending an RFC v2.

Well we already have DMA-buf as user API for this use case, which is perfectly supported by RDMA if I'm not completely mistaken.

So what problem do you try to solve here actually?

Regards,
Christian.


The only pending concern is integration with the page pool, but we
already have some ideas on how to solve that.

That's for data buffers only, obviously. We can keep using pages
and raw page pool for headers.
yes.