[PATCH v1 1/2] dma: return 0 from dma_opt_mapping_size() when no real hint exists

Christoph Hellwig hch at lst.de
Tue Mar 17 07:19:35 PDT 2026


On Tue, Mar 17, 2026 at 09:43:46AM +0000, Robin Murphy wrote:
> On 2026-03-16 8:39 pm, Ionut Nechita (Wind River) wrote:
>> From: Ionut Nechita <ionut.nechita at windriver.com>
>>
>> dma_opt_mapping_size() currently initializes its local size to SIZE_MAX
>> and, when neither an IOMMU nor a DMA ops opt_mapping_size callback is
>> present, returns min(dma_max_mapping_size(dev), SIZE_MAX).  That value
>> is a large but finite number that has nothing to do with an optimal
>> transfer size — it is simply the maximum the DMA layer can map.
>
> No, the current code is correct. dma_opt_mapping_size() represents the 
> largest size that can be mapped without incurring any significant 
> performance penalty (compared to smaller sizes). If the implementation has 
> no such restriction, then the largest "efficient" size is quite obviously 
> just the largest size in total.

Yes.

>> Callers such as scsi_transport_sas treat the return value as a genuine
>> optimization hint and propagate it into Scsi_Host.opt_sectors, which in
>> turn becomes the block device's optimal_io_size.  On SAS controllers
>> like mpt3sas running with IOMMU in passthrough mode the bogus value
>> (max_sectors << 9 = 16776704, rounded to 16773120) reaches mkfs.xfs,
>> which computes swidth=4095 and sunit=2.  Because 4095 is not a multiple
>> of 2, XFS rejects the geometry with "SB stripe unit sanity check
>> failed", making it impossible to create filesystems during system
>> bootstrap.
>
> And that is obviously a bug. There has never been any guarantee offered 
> about the values returned by either dma_max_mapping_size() or 
> dma_opt_mapping_size() - they could be very large, very small, and 
> certainly do not have to be powers of 2. Say an implementation has some 
> internal data size optimisation that makes U32_MAX its largest "efficient" 
> size, it's free to return that, and then you'll still have the same bug 
> regardless of this bodge.

Yes, the SCSI/SAS code needs to properly round the value.

But we might also need to split the values up a bit, as tools just
assign too much value to the I/O opt value.  I.e. the file system
geometry really should not be affected by the IOMMU details.
>
> Fix the actual bug, don't break common code in an attempt to paper over it 
> that doesn't even achieve that very well.
>
> Thanks,
> Robin.
>
>> Fix this by returning 0 when no backend provides an optimal mapping size
>> hint.  A return value of 0 unambiguously means "no preference" and lets
>> callers that use min() or min_not_zero() do the right thing without
>> special-casing.
>>
>> The only other in-tree caller (nvme-pci) is adjusted in the next patch.
>>
>> Fixes: a229cc14f339 ("dma-mapping: add dma_opt_mapping_size()")
>> Cc: stable at vger.kernel.org
>> Signed-off-by: Ionut Nechita <ionut.nechita at windriver.com>
>> ---
>>   kernel/dma/mapping.c | 13 ++++++++-----
>>   1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)
>>
>> diff --git a/kernel/dma/mapping.c b/kernel/dma/mapping.c
>> index 78d8b4039c3e6..fffa6a3f191a3 100644
>> --- a/kernel/dma/mapping.c
>> +++ b/kernel/dma/mapping.c
>> @@ -984,14 +984,17 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(dma_max_mapping_size);
>>   size_t dma_opt_mapping_size(struct device *dev)
>>   {
>>   	const struct dma_map_ops *ops = get_dma_ops(dev);
>> -	size_t size = SIZE_MAX;
>>     	if (use_dma_iommu(dev))
>> -		size = iommu_dma_opt_mapping_size();
>> -	else if (ops && ops->opt_mapping_size)
>> -		size = ops->opt_mapping_size();
>> +		return iommu_dma_opt_mapping_size();
>> +	if (ops && ops->opt_mapping_size)
>> +		return ops->opt_mapping_size();
>>   -	return min(dma_max_mapping_size(dev), size);
>> +	/*
>> +	 * No backend provided an optimal size hint. Return 0 so that
>> +	 * callers can distinguish "no hint" from a real value.
>> +	 */
>> +	return 0;
>>   }
>>   EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(dma_opt_mapping_size);
>>   
---end quoted text---



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