[PATCH v1 14/14] iommu/arm-smmu-v3: Add arm_smmu_cache_invalidate_user
Jason Gunthorpe
jgg at nvidia.com
Mon Mar 20 15:14:17 PDT 2023
On Mon, Mar 20, 2023 at 01:46:52PM -0700, Nicolin Chen wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 20, 2023 at 03:07:13PM -0300, Jason Gunthorpe wrote:
> > On Mon, Mar 20, 2023 at 09:35:20AM -0700, Nicolin Chen wrote:
> >
> > > > You need to know what devices the vSID is targetting ang issues
> > > > invalidations only for those devices.
> > >
> > > I agree with that, yet cannot think of a solution to achieve
> > > that out of vSID. QEMU code by means of emulating a physical
> > > SMMU only reads the commands from the queue, without knowing
> > > which device (vSID) actually sent these commands.
> >
> > Huh?
> >
> > CMD_ATC_INV has the SID
> >
> > Other commands have the ASID.
> >
> > You never need to cross an ASID to a SID or vice versa.
> >
> > If the guest is aware of ATS it will issue CMD_ATC_INV with vSIDs, and
> > the hypervisor just needs to convert vSID to pSID.
> >
> > Otherwise vSID doesn't matter because it isn't used in the invalidation
> > API and you are just handling ASIDs that only need the VM_ID scope
> > applied.
>
> Yea, I was thinking of your point (at the top) how we could
> ensure if an invalidation is targeting a correct vSID. So,
> that narrative was only about CMD_ATC_INV...
>
> Actually, we don't forward CMD_ATC_INV in QEMU. In another
> thread, Kevin also remarked whether we need to support that
> in the host or not. And I plan to drop CMD_ATC_INV from the
> list of cache_invalidate_user(), following his comments and
> the QEMU situation. Our uAPI, either forwarding the commands
> or a package of queue info, should be able to cover this in
> the future whenever we think it's required.
Something has to generate CMD_ATC_INV.
How do you plan to generate this from the hypervisor based on ASID
invalidations?
The hypervisor doesn't know what ASIDs are connected to what SIDs to
generate the ATC?
Intel is different, they know what devices the vDID is connected to,
so when they get a vDID invalidation they can elaborate it into a ATC
invalidation. ARM doesn't have that information.
Jason
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list