[PATCH 01/12] pci-p2p: Support peer to peer memory

Logan Gunthorpe logang at deltatee.com
Thu Jan 4 15:06:11 PST 2018


Thanks for the speedy review!

On 04/01/18 02:40 PM, Bjorn Helgaas wrote:
> Run "git log --oneline drivers/pci" and follow the convention.  I
> think it would make sense to add a new tag like "PCI/P2P", although
> "P2P" has historically also been used in the "PCI-to-PCI bridge"
> context, so maybe there's something less ambiguous.  "P2PDMA"?

Ok, I'll fix this for v2. I'm fine with renaming things to p2pdma

> When you add new files, I guess we're looking for the new SPDX
> copyright stuff?

Will do.

> It's more than "non-trivial" or "with good performance" (from Kconfig
> help), isn't it?  AFAIK, there's no standard way at all to discover
> whether P2P DMA is supported between root ports or RCs.

Yup, that's correct. This would have to be done with a white list.

> 
> s/bars/BARs/ (and similarly below, except in C code)
> Similarly, s/dma/DMA/ and s/pci/PCI/ below.
> And probably also s/p2p/peer-to-peer DMA/ in messages.

Will do.

> Maybe clarify this domain bit.  Using "domain" suggests the common PCI
> segment/domain usage, but I think you really mean something like the
> part of the hierarchy where peer-to-peer DMA is guaranteed by the PCI
> spec to work, i.e., anything below a single PCI bridge.

Ok, I like the wording you proposed.


> 
> Seems like there should be
> 
>    if (!(pci_resource_flags(pdev, bar) & IORESOURCE_MEM))
>      return -EINVAL;
> 
> or similar here?

That sounds like a good idea. Will add.

> 
>> +	if (WARN_ON(offset >= pci_resource_len(pdev, bar)))
>> +		return -EINVAL;
> 
> Are these WARN_ONs for debugging purposes, or do you think we need
> them in production?  Granted, hitting it would probably be a kernel
> driver bug, but still, not sure if the PCI core needs to coddle the
> driver author that much.

Sure, I'll drop all the WARN_ONs.

> I'm guessing Christoph's dev_pagemap revamp repo must change
> pgmap->res from a pointer to a structure, but I don't see the actual
> link in your cover letter.

Sorry, the patch set is here:

https://www.mail-archive.com/linux-nvdimm@lists.01.org/msg07323.html

git://git.infradead.org/users/hch/misc.git hch/pgmap-cleanups.3

> I think you should set pgmap->res.flags here, too.

Sure, I don't think it's used and not set by the NVDIMM code; but I 
agree that it'd be a good idea to set it anyway.

>> +	dev_info(&pdev->dev, "added %zdB of p2p memory\n", size);
> 
> Can we add %pR and print pgmap->res itself, too?

Yup.

> You have a bit of a mix of PCI ("pci device", "bridge") and PCIe
> ("switch", "switch port") terminology.  I haven't read the rest of the
> patches yet, so I don't know if you intend to restrict this to
> PCIe-only, e.g., so you can use ACS, or if you want to make it
> available on conventional PCI as well.
> 
> If the latter, I would use the generic PCI terminology, i.e., "bridge"
> instead of "switch".

Ok, I'll change it to use the generic term bridge. There's no 
restriction in the code to limit it to PCIe only, though I don't expect 
anybody will ever be using this with legacy PCI.

>> + * pci_virt_to_bus - return the pci bus address for a given virtual
>> + *	address obtained with pci_alloc_p2pmem
>> + * @pdev:	the device the memory was allocated from
>> + * @addr:	address of the memory that was allocated
>> + */
>> +pci_bus_addr_t pci_p2pmem_virt_to_bus(struct pci_dev *pdev, void *addr)
>> +{
>> +	if (!addr)
>> +		return 0;
>> +	if (!pdev->p2p)
>> +		return 0;
>> +
>> +	return gen_pool_virt_to_phys(pdev->p2p->pool, (unsigned long)addr);
> 
> This doesn't seem right.  A physical address is not the same as a PCI
> bus address.  I expected something like pci_bus_address() or
> pcibios_resource_to_bus() here.  Am I missing something?  If so, a
> clarifying comment would be helpful.

What you're missing is that when we called gen_pool_add_virt we used the 
PCI bus address as the physical address and not the CPU physical address 
(which we don't care about). I'll add a comment explaining this.

> I've been noticing that we're accumulating PCI-related files in
> include/linux: pci.h, pci-aspm.h pci-ats.h, pci-dma.h, pcieport_if.h,
> etc.  I'm not sure there's value in all those and am thinking maybe
> they should just be folded into pci.h.  What do you think?

We started with that. Once we reached a certain amount of code, 
Christoph suggested we put it in its own header.

Logan



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