Re: IOMMU and DMA mode of pata_jmicron
From: Steffen Moser
Date: Mon Jan 03 2011 - 15:16:13 EST
Hi Joerg,
On 01/03/2011 12:29 PM, Roedel, Joerg wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 28, 2010 at 08:00:12PM -0500, Jeff Garzik wrote:
>> (CC'd linux-ide, Joerg)
>>
>> On 12/28/2010 06:43 PM, Steffen Moser wrote:
>> > I've encountered a problem with my AMD 890FX based system
>> > and linux-2.6.35.10 (x86_64 platform).
>> >
>> > After activating the option "IOMMU" in the mainboard's BIOS
>> > setup, the onboard P-ATA controller "JMicron Technology Corp.
>> > JMB361 AHCI/IDE (rev 02)" puts itself back in the PIO mode.
>> > When loading the module, the kernel reports:
>> >
>> > pata_jmicron 0000:06:00.1: BMDMA: failed to set dma mask, \
>> > falling back to PIO
>> [...]
>> > As soon as I deactivate IOMMU in BIOS setup, the P-ATA channel
>> > runs in the DMA mode again. The S-ATA controllers don't seem
>> > to be affected.
>> >
>> > My question is: Is this a known behavior? Are there any
>> > things I have to consider when activating IOMMU (which seems
>> > to be AMD-Vi) on an 890FX based system? Is it a problem of
>> > the chipset and/or the controller or is it related to a
>> > problem in the libata area?
>> >
>> > Some information about the affected system:
>> >
>> > - Mainboard: ASUS M4A89TD Pro/USB3
>> > - BIOS version: 1101 (most recent version)
>> > - Chipset: AMD 890FX
>> > - Processor: AMD Phenom 1090T
>> > - Memory: 4 x 4 GB (Kingston KVR1333D3E9S/4G)
>> > - Distribution: openSUSE 11.3
>> > - Kernel: 2.6.35.10 (from "kernel.org"), x86_64
>> >
>>
>> This condition occurs when the PCI API cannot set the PCI device's DMA
>> mask to the 32-bit value
>> #define ATA_DMA_MASK 0xffffffffULL
>>
>> That is an unusual failure for such a modern system, which certainly can
>> handle 32-bit masks like that, one would think.
>
> Luckily I have exactly the same motherboard under my desk. It shows the
> same issue. The problem is that the PCI device of the PATA controler
> (4:00.1 in my case) is not described in the IVRS ACPI table. So the
> IOMMU driver does not feel responsible for it and the dma_supported()
> call on this device will fail. This also makes pci_set_dma_mask() fail
> on this device. So it comes down to a BIOS bug.
That sounds quite comprehensible for me.
> I look into it to find a workaround.
Thank you.
Beside a possible work-around, do you think, it makes sense to
report the problem to ASUS as the straight way should be to have
a correct IVRS table for the board?
Kind regards,
Steffen
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