[PATCH 1/2] arm64: dma_mapping: allow PCI host driver to limit DMA mask

Nikita Yushchenko nikita.yoush at cogentembedded.com
Tue Jan 3 11:01:46 PST 2017


>> It is possible that PCI device supports 64-bit DMA addressing, and thus
>> it's driver sets device's dma_mask to DMA_BIT_MASK(64), however PCI host
>> bridge has limitations on inbound transactions addressing. Example of
>> such setup is NVME SSD device connected to RCAR PCIe controller.
>>
>> Previously there was attempt to handle this via bus notifier: after
>> driver is attached to PCI device, bridge driver gets notifier callback,
>> and resets dma_mask from there. However, this is racy: PCI device driver
>> could already allocate buffers and/or start i/o in probe routine.
>> In NVME case, i/o is started in workqueue context, and this race gives
>> "sometimes works, sometimes not" effect.
>>
>> Proper solution should make driver's dma_set_mask() call to fail if host
>> bridge can't support mask being set.
>>
>> This patch makes __swiotlb_dma_supported() to check mask being set for
>> PCI device against dma_mask of struct device corresponding to PCI host
>> bridge (one with name "pciXXXX:YY"), if that dma_mask is set.
>>
>> This is the least destructive approach: currently dma_mask of that device
>> object is not used anyhow, thus all existing setups will work as before,
>> and modification is required only in actually affected components -
>> driver of particular PCI host bridge, and dma_map_ops of particular
>> platform.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Nikita Yushchenko <nikita.yoush at cogentembedded.com>
>> ---
>>  arch/arm64/mm/dma-mapping.c | 11 +++++++++++
>>  1 file changed, 11 insertions(+)
>>
>> diff --git a/arch/arm64/mm/dma-mapping.c b/arch/arm64/mm/dma-mapping.c
>> index 290a84f..49645277 100644
>> --- a/arch/arm64/mm/dma-mapping.c
>> +++ b/arch/arm64/mm/dma-mapping.c
>> @@ -28,6 +28,7 @@
>>  #include <linux/dma-contiguous.h>
>>  #include <linux/vmalloc.h>
>>  #include <linux/swiotlb.h>
>> +#include <linux/pci.h>
>>  
>>  #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
>>  
>> @@ -347,6 +348,16 @@ static int __swiotlb_get_sgtable(struct device *dev, struct sg_table *sgt,
>>  
>>  static int __swiotlb_dma_supported(struct device *hwdev, u64 mask)
>>  {
>> +#ifdef CONFIG_PCI
>> +	if (dev_is_pci(hwdev)) {
>> +		struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(hwdev);
>> +		struct pci_host_bridge *br = pci_find_host_bridge(pdev->bus);
>> +
>> +		if (br->dev.dma_mask && (*br->dev.dma_mask) &&
>> +				(mask & (*br->dev.dma_mask)) != mask)
>> +			return 0;
>> +	}
>> +#endif
> 
> Hmm, but this makes it look like the problem is both arm64 and swiotlb
> specific, when in reality it's not. Perhaps another hack you could try
> would be to register a PCI bus notifier in the host bridge looking for
> BUS_NOTIFY_BIND_DRIVER, then you could proxy the DMA ops for each child
> device before the driver has probed, but adding a dma_set_mask callback
> to limit the mask to what you need?

This is what Renesas BSP tries to do and it does not work.

BUS_NOTIFY_BIND_DRIVER arrives after driver's probe routine exits, but
i/o can be started before that.



More information about the linux-arm-kernel mailing list