[PATCH v6 4/5] iommu/mediatek: Add mt8173 IOMMU driver
Robin Murphy
robin.murphy at arm.com
Wed Dec 16 04:48:13 PST 2015
On 16/12/15 05:59, Yong Wu wrote:
> On Tue, 2015-12-15 at 12:37 +0000, Robin Murphy wrote:
>> On 15/12/15 03:28, Yong Wu wrote:
>>> On Mon, 2015-12-14 at 15:16 +0100, Joerg Roedel wrote:
>>>> On Tue, Dec 08, 2015 at 05:49:12PM +0800, Yong Wu wrote:
>>>>> +static int mtk_iommu_attach_device(struct iommu_domain *domain,
>>>>> + struct device *dev)
>>>>> +{
>>>>> + struct mtk_iommu_domain *dom = to_mtk_domain(domain);
>>>>> + struct mtk_iommu_client_priv *priv = dev->archdata.iommu;
>>>>> + struct mtk_iommu_data *data;
>>>>> + int ret;
>>>>> +
>>>>> + if (!priv)
>>>>> + return -ENODEV;
>>>>> +
>>>>> + data = dev_get_drvdata(priv->m4udev);
>>>>> + if (!data) {
>>>>> + /*
>>>>> + * The DMA core will run earlier than this probe, and it will
>>>>> + * create a default iommu domain for each a iommu device.
>>>>> + * But here there is only one domain called the m4u domain
>>>>> + * which all the multimedia HW share.
>>>>> + * The default domain isn't needed here.
>>>>> + */
>>>>
>>>> The iommu core creates one domain per iommu-group. In your case this
>>>> means one default domain per iommu in the system.
>>>
>>> Yes. The iommu core will create one domain per iommu-group.
>>> see the next "if" here.
>>>
>>> But the domain here is created by the current DMA64. It's from this
>>> function do_iommu_attach which will be called too early and will help
>>> create a default domain for each a iommu device.(my codebase is
>>> v4.4-rc1).
>>
>> I still don't really understand the problem here. The M4U device is
>> created early in mtk_iommu_init_fn, so it should be probed and ready to
>> go long before anything else. Indeed, for your mtk_iommu_device_group()
>> callback to work then everything must already be happening in the right
>> order - add_device will only call iommu_group_get_for_dev() if of_xlate
>> has populated dev->archdata.iommu, and of_xlate will only do that if the
>> M4U was up and running before the client device started probing.
>> Furthermore, if mtk_iommu_device_group() *does* work, then the IOMMU
>> core will go ahead and allocate the default domain there and then, which
>> the arch code should find and use later.
>
> Thanks. This is very helpful.
>
> I understand your confuse right now and your expectant flow.
>
> Our IOMMU probe was PROBE_DEFER by our SMI device, so currently it probe
> was delayed, then have to add the workaround code.
Aha, I hadn't twigged that there was a dependency on another device that
could delay the M4U probe, thanks for the clarification. That'll be a
good case to bear in mind when I eventually get back to the IOMMU probe
deferral stuff.
> Following your comment above, I test as below. Then the flows seems meet
> the "best case" that the iommu core will help create default DMA domain.
>
> @@ -664,19 +636,41 @@ static int mtk_iommu_probe(struct platform_device
> *pdev)
> for (i = 0; i < larb_nr; i++) {
> struct device_node *larbnode;
> struct platform_device *plarbdev;
>
> larbnode = of_parse_phandle(dev->of_node, "mediatek,larbs", i);
> if (!larbnode)
> return -EINVAL;
>
> plarbdev = of_find_device_by_node(larbnode);
> of_node_put(larbnode);
> - if (!plarbdev)
> - return -EPROBE_DEFER;
> + if (!plarbdev) {
> + plarbdev = of_platform_device_create(larbnode,
> NULL, platform_bus_type.dev_root);
> + if (IS_ERR(pdev))
> + return -EPROBE_DEFER;
> + }
> }
>
> I only add of_platform_device_create for the SMI local arbiter devices
> here.
>
> This is a big improvement for us. If this is ok, I will send a quick
> next version for this.
In my opinion it's reasonable - we need the whole "IOMMU" to be ready,
so if we already have to short-cut the creation of the M4U part it only
seems fair to do the same for the SMI part. That said, would it work to
just unconditionally poke the larbs in mtk_iommu_init_fn() before you
poke the M4U itself? It would be nice to keep all that stuff together in
the same place.
>> The potential issue I *do* see, looking more closely, is that
>> iommu_group_get_for_dev() is setting group->domain but not calling the
>> attach_dev callback, which looks wrong...
>
> This is the backtrace,
>
> (151216_09:58:05.207)Call trace:
> (151216_09:58:05.207)[<ffffffc000400668>] mtk_iommu_attach_device
> +0xb8/0x178
> (151216_09:58:05.207)[<ffffffc0003fc55c>] iommu_group_add_device
> +0x1d8/0x31c
> (151216_09:58:05.207)[<ffffffc0003fc988>] iommu_group_get_for_dev
> +0x88/0x108
> (151216_09:58:05.207)[<ffffffc0003ffcfc>] mtk_iommu_add_device+0x14/0x34
> (151216_09:58:05.207)[<ffffffc0003fb280>] add_iommu_group+0x20/0x44
> (151216_09:58:05.207)[<ffffffc000406cec>] bus_for_each_dev+0x58/0x98
> (151216_09:58:05.207)[<ffffffc0003fbe8c>] bus_set_iommu+0x9c/0xf8
Urgh, now I recall that this isn't even the first time I've been
confused by the attach being hidden elsewhere. Oh well, problem averted!
> If I change like above, I will delete the workaround code..
>
>>
>>>
>>> //=====the next "if"===========
>>> } else if (!data->m4u_dom) {
>>> /*
>>> * While a device is added into a iommu group, the iommu core
>>> * will create a default domain for each a iommu group.
>>> * This default domain is reserved as the m4u domain and is
>>> * initiated here.
>>> */
>>> data->m4u_dom = dom;
>>> if (domain->type == IOMMU_DOMAIN_DMA) {
>>> ret = iommu_dma_init_domain(domain, 0,
>>> DMA_BIT_MASK(32));
>>> if (ret)
>>> goto err_uninit_dom;
>>> }
>>>
>>> ret = mtk_iommu_domain_finalise(data);
>>> if (ret)
>>> goto err_uninit_dom;
>>> }
>>> //======================
>>>
>>>>
>>>>> + iommu_domain_free(domain);
>>>>
>>>> This function is not supposed to free the domain passed to it.
>>>
>>> As above this domain is created in the do_iommu_attach which will help
>>> create a default domain for each a iommu device.
>>> We don't need this default domain!
>>>
>>> If we don't free it here, there will be a memory leak.
>>>
>>> From Robin's comment, He will improve the sequence of the
>>> __iommu_setup_dma_ops in the future.
>>
>> That already happened. The final version of the arm64 code which was
>> merged makes sure that the IOMMU driver always sees the callbacks in the
>> desired of_xlate -> add_device -> attach_dev order. The whole point of
>> the comment below is that the driver itself *doesn't* have to care about
>> the awkward way in which that is currently achieved.
>>
>>> /*
>>> * TODO: Right now __iommu_setup_dma_ops() gets called too early to do
>>> * everything it needs to - the device is only partially created and the
>>> * IOMMU driver hasn't seen it yet, so it can't have a group. Thus we
>>> * need this delayed attachment dance. Once IOMMU probe ordering is
>>> sorted
>>> * to move the arch_setup_dma_ops() call later, all the notifier bits
>>> below
>>> * become unnecessary, and will go away.
>>> */
>>>
>>> /*
>>> * Best case: The device is either part of a group which was
>>> * already attached to a domain in a previous call, or it's
>>> * been put in a default DMA domain by the IOMMU core.
>>> */
>>
>> That was before Joerg made the device_group changes which enabled proper
>> default domains for platform devices - with those, we should be now be
>> hitting the "best case" behaviour every time. In fact I think the "fake
>> default domain" workaround shouldn't be needed at all any more, so I
>> will add removing it to my giant list of things to do.
>>
>>> But there is no this patch currently, so I add iommu_domain_free
>>> here.
>>>
>>> "free the domain" here looks really not good. Then I delete the
>>> iommu_domain_free here(allow this memory leak right now), is it ok?
>>> (It will also works after Robin's change in the future.)
>>>
>>>>
>>>>> +static int mtk_iommu_add_device(struct device *dev)
>>>>> +{
>>>>> + struct iommu_group *group;
>>>>> +
>>>>> + if (!dev->archdata.iommu) /* Not a iommu client device */
>>>>> + return -ENODEV;
>>>>> +
>>>>> + group = iommu_group_get_for_dev(dev);
>>>>> + if (IS_ERR(group))
>>>>> + return PTR_ERR(group);
>>>>> +
>>>>> + iommu_group_put(group);
>>>>> + return 0;
>>>>> +}
>>>>
>>>> [...]
>>>>
>>>>> +static struct iommu_group *mtk_iommu_device_group(struct device *dev)
>>>>> +{
>>>>> + struct mtk_iommu_data *data;
>>>>> + struct mtk_iommu_client_priv *priv;
>>>>> +
>>>>> + priv = dev->archdata.iommu;
>>>>> + if (!priv)
>>>>> + return ERR_PTR(-ENODEV);
>>>>> +
>>>>> + /* All the client devices are in the same m4u iommu-group */
>>>>> + data = dev_get_drvdata(priv->m4udev);
>>>>> + if (!data->m4u_group) {
>>>>> + data->m4u_group = iommu_group_alloc();
>>>>> + if (IS_ERR(data->m4u_group))
>>>>> + dev_err(dev, "Failed to allocate M4U IOMMU group\n");
>>>>> + }
>>>>> + return data->m4u_group;
>>>>> +}
>>
>> As long as this works as expected, then AFAICS you shouldn't have to
>> have *any* special-case behaviour or tracking of domains at all.
>
> We only need one iommu-group, one iommu domain here.
>
> What's the special-case behavior, how can we track of domains.
> Could you help give me a example?
The beauty of it is that you don't need to. If you guarantee all of an
IOMMU's client devices are in the same group, you know you've only got
one thing which can be attached to that IOMMU's domains. Therefore, you
can freely allow as many domains as you like to *exist*, because there
can never be more than one *active* at any given time - the core code
enforces that the group is detached from one domain before being
attached to another, and the driver's attach and detach calls just
become responsible for switching the given domain's page table in and
out of the actual hardware. I think it's pretty neat.
Robin.
More information about the Linux-mediatek
mailing list