Re: [PATCH v4] dma-debug: New interfaces to debug dma mappingerrors
From: Andrew Morton
Date: Fri Oct 05 2012 - 18:51:24 EST
On Thu, 04 Oct 2012 19:23:13 -0600
Shuah Khan <shuah.khan@xxxxxx> wrote:
> A recent dma mapping error analysis effort showed that a large percentage
> of dma_map_single() and dma_map_page() returns are not checked for mapping
> errors.
>
> Reference:
> http://linuxdriverproject.org/mediawiki/index.php/DMA_Mapping_Error_Analysis
>
> Adding support for tracking dma mapping and unmapping errors to help assess
> the following:
>
> When do dma mapping errors get detected?
> How often do these errors occur?
> Why don't we see failures related to missing dma mapping error checks?
> Are they silent failures?
>
> Patch v4: Addresses extra tab review comments from Patch v3.
> Patch v3: Addresses review and design comments from Patch v2.
> Patch v2: Addressed design issues from Patch v1.
>
> Enhance dma-debug infrastructure to track dma mapping, and unmapping errors.
>
> map_errors: (system wide counter)
> Total number of dma mapping errors returned by the dma mapping interfaces,
> in response to mapping requests from all devices in the system.
> map_errors_not_checked: (system wide counter)
> Total number of dma mapping errors devices failed to check before using
> the returned address.
> unmap_errors: (system wide counter)
> Total number of times devices tried to unmap or free an invalid dma
> address.
> map_err_type: (new field added to dma_debug_entry structure)
> New field to maintain dma mapping error check status. This error type
> is applicable to the dma map page and dma map single entries tracked by
> dma-debug api. This status indicates whether or not a good mapping is
> checked by the device before its use. dma_map_single() and dma_map_page()
> could fail to create a mapping in some cases, and drivers are expected to
> call dma_mapping_error() to check for errors. Please note that this is not
> counter.
>
> Enhancements to dma-debug api are made to add new debugfs interfaces to
> report total dma errors, dma errors that are not checked, and unmap errors
> for the entire system. Please note that these are system wide counters for
> all devices in the system.
>
> The following new dma-debug interface is added:
>
> debug_dma_mapping_error(struct device *dev, dma_addr_t dma_addr)
> Sets dma map error checked status for the dma map entry if one is
> found. Decrements the system wide dma_map_errors_not_checked counter
> that is incremented by debug_dma_map_page() when it checks for
> mapping error before adding it to the dma debug entry table.
>
> New dma-debug internal interface:
> check_mapping_error(struct device *dev, dma_addr_t dma_addr)
> Calling dma_mapping_error() from dma-debug api will result in dma mapping
> check when it shouldn't. This internal routine checks dma mapping error
> without any debug checks.
>
> The following existing dma-debug api are changed to support this feature:
> debug_dma_map_page()
> Increments dma_map_errors and dma_map_errors_not_checked errors totals
> for the system, dma-debug api keeps track of, when dma_addr is invalid.
> This routine now calls internal check_mapping_error() interface to
> avoid doing dma mapping debug checks from dma-debug internal mapping
> error checks.
> check_unmap()
> This is an existing internal routines that checks for various mapping
> errors. Changed to increment system wide dma_unmap_errors, when a
> device requests an invalid address to be unmapped. This routine now
> calls internal check_mapping_error() interface to avoid doing dma
> mapping debug checks from dma-debug internal mapping error checks.
>
> Changed arch/x86/include/asm/dma-mapping.h to call debug_dma_mapping_error()
> to validate these new interfaces on x86_64. Other architectures will be
> changed in a subsequent patch.
>
> Tested: Intel iommu and swiotlb (iommu=soft) on x86-64 with
> CONFIG_DMA_API_DEBUG enabled and disabled.
Still seems overly complicated to me, but whatev.
I think the way to handle this is pretty simple: set a flag in the dma
entry when someone runs dma_mapping_error() and, if that flag wasn't
set at unmap time, emit a loud warning.
>From my reading of the code, this patch indeed does that, along with a
bunch of other (unnecessary?) stuff. But boy, the changelog conceals
this information well!
> Documentation/DMA-API.txt | 13 +++++
> arch/x86/include/asm/dma-mapping.h | 1 +
> include/linux/dma-debug.h | 7 +++
> lib/dma-debug.c | 110 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
Please, go through Documentation/DMA-API-HOWTO.txt with a toothcomb and
ensure that all this is appropriately covered and that the examples are
completed for error checking.
>
> ...
>
> +static inline int check_mapping_error(struct device *dev, dma_addr_t dma_addr)
> +{
> + const struct dma_map_ops *ops = get_dma_ops(dev);
> + if (ops->mapping_error)
> + return ops->mapping_error(dev, dma_addr);
> +
> + return (dma_addr == DMA_ERROR_CODE);
> +}
I'm not a fan of functions called check_foo() because I never know
whether their return value means "foo is true" or "foo is false". It
doesn't help that the return value here is undocumented. Names such as
has_mapping_error() or mapping_has_error() will remove this question,
thereby making the call sites more readable.
> static void check_unmap(struct dma_debug_entry *ref)
> {
> struct dma_debug_entry *entry;
> struct hash_bucket *bucket;
> unsigned long flags;
>
> - if (dma_mapping_error(ref->dev, ref->dev_addr)) {
> + if (unlikely(check_mapping_error(ref->dev, ref->dev_addr))) {
> + unmap_errors += 1;
> err_printk(ref->dev, NULL, "DMA-API: device driver tries "
> "to free an invalid DMA memory address\n");
> return;
> @@ -915,6 +975,15 @@ static void check_unmap(struct dma_debug_entry *ref)
> dir2name[ref->direction]);
> }
>
> + if (entry->map_err_type == MAP_ERR_NOT_CHECKED) {
> + err_printk(ref->dev, entry,
> + "DMA-API: device driver failed to check map error"
> + "[device address=0x%016llx] [size=%llu bytes] "
> + "[mapped as %s]",
> + ref->dev_addr, ref->size,
> + type2name[entry->type]);
> + }
It's important that this warning be associated with a backtrace so we
can identify the offending call site in the usual fashion.
err_printk() does include a backtrace under some circumstances, but
those circumstances hurt my brain.
Is it guaranteed that we'll have that backtrace? If not, I'd suggest
making it so.
> hash_bucket_del(entry);
> dma_entry_free(entry);
>
>
> ...
>
> +void debug_dma_mapping_error(struct device *dev, dma_addr_t dma_addr)
> +{
> + struct dma_debug_entry ref;
> + struct dma_debug_entry *entry;
> + struct hash_bucket *bucket;
> + unsigned long flags;
> +
> + if (unlikely(global_disable))
> + return;
> +
> + ref.dev = dev;
> + ref.dev_addr = dma_addr;
> + bucket = get_hash_bucket(&ref, &flags);
> + entry = bucket_find_exact(bucket, &ref);
> +
> + if (!entry) {
> + /* very likley dma-api didn't call debug_dma_map_page() or
> + debug_dma_map_page() detected mapping error */
> + if (map_errors_not_checked)
> + map_errors_not_checked -= 1;
> + goto out;
> + }
> +
> + entry->map_err_type = MAP_ERR_CHECKED;
> +out:
> + put_hash_bucket(bucket, &flags);
> +}
> +EXPORT_SYMBOL(debug_dma_mapping_error);
Well, it's a global, exported-to-modules symbol. Some formal
documentation is appropriate for such things.
>
> ...
>
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