Re: [PATCH] vfio: Fix endianness handling for emulated BARs

From: Alexey Kardashevskiy
Date: Wed Jun 18 2014 - 20:51:18 EST


On 06/19/2014 04:35 AM, Alex Williamson wrote:
> On Wed, 2014-06-18 at 21:36 +1000, Alexey Kardashevskiy wrote:
>> VFIO exposes BARs to user space as a byte stream so userspace can
>> read it using pread()/pwrite(). Since this is a byte stream, VFIO should
>> not do byte swapping and simply return values as it gets them from
>> PCI device.
>>
>> Instead, the existing code assumes that byte stream in read/write is
>> little-endian and it fixes endianness for values which it passes to
>> ioreadXX/iowriteXX helpers. This works for little-endian as PCI is
>> little endian and le32_to_cpu/... are stubs.
>
> vfio read32:
>
> val = cpu_to_le32(ioread32(io + off));
>
> Where the typical x86 case, ioread32 is:
>
> #define ioread32(addr) readl(addr)
>
> and readl is:
>
> __le32_to_cpu(__raw_readl(addr));
>
> So we do canceling byte swaps, which are both nops on x86, and end up
> returning device endian, which we assume is little endian.
>
> vfio write32 is similar:
>
> iowrite32(le32_to_cpu(val), io + off);
>
> The implicit cpu_to_le32 of iowrite32() and our explicit swap cancel
> out, so input data is device endian, which is assumed little.
>
>> This also works for big endian but rather by an accident: it reads 4 bytes
>> from the stream (@val is big endian), converts to CPU format (which should
>> be big endian) as it was little endian (@val becomes actually little
>> endian) and calls iowrite32() which does not do swapping on big endian
>> system.
>
> Really?
>
> In arch/powerpc/kernel/iomap.c iowrite32() is just a wrapper around
> writel(), which seems to use the generic implementation, which does
> include a cpu_to_le32.


Ouch, wrong comment. iowrite32() does swapping. My bad.


>
> I also see other big endian archs like parisc doing cpu_to_le32 on
> iowrite32, so I don't think this statement is true. I imagine it's
> probably working for you because the swap cancel.
>
>> This removes byte swapping and makes use ioread32be/iowrite32be
>> (and 16bit versions) on big-endian systems. The "be" helpers take
>> native endian values and do swapping at the moment of writing to a PCI
>> register using one of "store byte-reversed" instructions.
>
> So now you want iowrite32() on little endian and iowrite32be() on big
> endian, the former does a cpu_to_le32 (which is a nop on little endian)
> and the latter does a cpu_to_be32 (which is a nop on big endian)...
> should we just be using __raw_writel() on both?


We can do that too. The beauty of iowrite32be on ppc64 is that it does not
swap and write separately, it is implemented via the "Store Word
Byte-Reverse Indexed X-form" single instruction.

And some archs (do not know which ones) may add memory barriers in their
implementations of ioread/iowrite. __raw_writel is too raw :)

> There doesn't actually
> seem to be any change in behavior here, it just eliminates back-to-back
> byte swaps, which are a nop on x86, but not power, right?

Exactly. No dependency for QEMU.


>
>> Suggested-by: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>> Signed-off-by: Alexey Kardashevskiy <aik@xxxxxxxxx>
>> ---
>> drivers/vfio/pci/vfio_pci_rdwr.c | 20 ++++++++++++++++----
>> 1 file changed, 16 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
>>
>> diff --git a/drivers/vfio/pci/vfio_pci_rdwr.c b/drivers/vfio/pci/vfio_pci_rdwr.c
>> index 210db24..f363b5a 100644
>> --- a/drivers/vfio/pci/vfio_pci_rdwr.c
>> +++ b/drivers/vfio/pci/vfio_pci_rdwr.c
>> @@ -21,6 +21,18 @@
>>
>> #include "vfio_pci_private.h"
>>
>> +#ifdef __BIG_ENDIAN__
>> +#define ioread16_native ioread16be
>> +#define ioread32_native ioread32be
>> +#define iowrite16_native iowrite16be
>> +#define iowrite32_native iowrite32be
>> +#else
>> +#define ioread16_native ioread16
>> +#define ioread32_native ioread32
>> +#define iowrite16_native iowrite16
>> +#define iowrite32_native iowrite32
>> +#endif
>> +
>> /*
>> * Read or write from an __iomem region (MMIO or I/O port) with an excluded
>> * range which is inaccessible. The excluded range drops writes and fills
>> @@ -50,9 +62,9 @@ static ssize_t do_io_rw(void __iomem *io, char __user *buf,
>> if (copy_from_user(&val, buf, 4))
>> return -EFAULT;
>>
>> - iowrite32(le32_to_cpu(val), io + off);
>> + iowrite32_native(val, io + off);
>> } else {
>> - val = cpu_to_le32(ioread32(io + off));
>> + val = ioread32_native(io + off);
>>
>> if (copy_to_user(buf, &val, 4))
>> return -EFAULT;
>> @@ -66,9 +78,9 @@ static ssize_t do_io_rw(void __iomem *io, char __user *buf,
>> if (copy_from_user(&val, buf, 2))
>> return -EFAULT;
>>
>> - iowrite16(le16_to_cpu(val), io + off);
>> + iowrite16_native(val, io + off);
>> } else {
>> - val = cpu_to_le16(ioread16(io + off));
>> + val = ioread16_native(io + off);
>>
>> if (copy_to_user(buf, &val, 2))
>> return -EFAULT;
>
>
>


--
Alexey
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/