[RFCv2 PATCH 01/36] iommu: Keep track of processes and PASIDs
Jean-Philippe Brucker
jphilippe.brucker at gmail.com
Thu Nov 9 04:13:13 PST 2017
Hi Bharat,
On 11/08/2017 05:50 PM, Bharat Kumar Gogada wrote:
> Hi Jean,
>
> +static struct iommu_process *
> +iommu_process_alloc(struct iommu_domain *domain, struct task_struct
> +*task) {
> + int err;
> + int pasid;
> + struct iommu_process *process;
> +
> + if (WARN_ON(!domain->ops->process_alloc ||
> !domain->ops->process_free))
> + return ERR_PTR(-ENODEV);
> +
> + process = domain->ops->process_alloc(task);
> + if (IS_ERR(process))
> + return process;
> + if (!process)
> + return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
> +
> + process->pid = get_task_pid(task, PIDTYPE_PID);
> + process->release = domain->ops->process_free;
> + INIT_LIST_HEAD(&process->domains);
> + kref_init(&process->kref);
> +
> + if (!process->pid) {
> + err = -EINVAL;
> + goto err_free_process;
> + }
> +
> + idr_preload(GFP_KERNEL);
> + spin_lock(&iommu_process_lock);
> + pasid = idr_alloc_cyclic(&iommu_process_idr, process,
> domain->min_pasid,
> + domain->max_pasid + 1, GFP_ATOMIC);
> If EP supports only one pasid; domain->min_pasid=1 and domain->max_pasid=0.
> When idr_alloc_cyclic is called it invokes idr_get_free_cmn function
> where we have following condition. (Based on kernel 4.14-rc6)
> if (!radix_tree_tagged(root, IDR_FREE))
> start = max(start, maxindex + 1);
> if (start > max)
> return ERR_PTR(-ENOSPC);
> Here max is being assigned zero by the time this function is invoked,
> this value is based on domain->max_pasid.
> This condition fails and ENOSPC is returned.
>
> In this case even though hardware supports PASID, BIND flow fails.
It should fail, since we're reserving PASID 0 for non-PASID transactions
with S1DSS=0b10. In addition, the SMMUv3 specification does not allow
using PASID with a single entry. See the description of S1CDMax in 5.2
Stream Table Entry:
"when this field is 0, the substreams of the STE are disabled and one CD
is available. (The minimum useful number of substreams is 2.) Any
transaction with a SubstreamID will be terminated with an abort and a
C_BAD_SUBSTREAMID event recorded."
> Any reason why pasid allocation moved to idr allocations rather than
> bitmap allocations as in v1 patches ?
Yes, idr provides a convenient way to quickly retrieve the context
associated with a PASID, when handling a fault. v1 had the allocation in a
bitmap and storing in a rb-tree. By using an idr we combine both and rely
on a well-tested infrastructure.
Note that in the future we might need to go back to handcrafting the PASID
allocation, but it will probably still be based on idr.
Thanks,
Jean
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list