[PATCH rc v6 3/4] iommu/arm-smmu-v3: Mark STE EATS safe when computing the update sequence

Pranjal Shrivastava praan at google.com
Wed Jan 14 08:59:02 PST 2026


On Wed, Jan 14, 2026 at 12:15:57PM -0400, Jason Gunthorpe wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 14, 2026 at 03:58:03PM +0000, Pranjal Shrivastava wrote:
> > > +
> > > +	/*
> > > +	 * When a STE comes to change EATS the sequencing code in the attach
> > > +	 * logic already will have the PCI cap for ATS disabled. Thus at this
> > > +	 * moment we can expect that the device will not generate ATS queries
> > > +	 * and so we don't care about the sequencing of EATS. The purpose of
> > > +	 * EATS is to protect the system from hostile untrusted devices that
> > > +	 * issue ATS when the PCI config space is disabled. However, if EATS
> > > +	 * is being changed then we already must be trusting the device since
> > > +	 * the EATS security block is being disabled.
> > > +	 *
> > > +	 *  Note: Since we moved the EATS update to the first phase, changing
> > > +	 *  S2S and EATS might transiently set S2S=1 and EATS=1, resulting in
> > > +	 *  a bad STE. See "5.2 Stream Table Entry". In such a case, we can't
> > > +	 *  do a hitless update.
> > > +	 */
> > > +	if (!((cur[2] | target[2]) & cpu_to_le64(STRTAB_STE_2_S2S)))
> > > +		safe_bits[1] |= cpu_to_le64(STRTAB_STE_1_EATS);
> > 
> > I understand what we're trying to do here but isn't this implicitly
> > saying it is safe to transition hitlessly to any non-zero EATS value,
> > including S1CHK or RSVD. S1CHK might have other config dependencies?
> 
> Will pointed this issue with S1CHK, Nicolin has a suggestion to fix it here:
> 
> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-iommu/aWarF90zBqxD0Gef@Asurada-Nvidia/
> 
> It would block RSVD too.
> 

Ohh okay, sounds good then, my client dropped it somehow. I'll defer
this to Will.

> Thanks,
> Jason

Thanks,
Praan



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