[PATCH 1/2] dma-mapping: truncate dma masks to what dma_addr_t can hold

From: Christoph Hellwig
Date: Tue May 21 2019 - 08:50:15 EST


The dma masks in struct device are always 64-bits wide. But for builds
using a 32-bit dma_addr_t we need to ensure we don't store an
unsupportable value. Before Linux 5.0 this was handled at least by
the ARM dma mapping code by never allowing to set a larger dma_mask,
but these days we allow the driver to just set the largest supported
value and never fall back to a smaller one. Ensure this always works
by truncating the value.

Fixes: 9eb9e96e97b3 ("Documentation/DMA-API-HOWTO: update dma_mask sections")
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxx>
---
kernel/dma/mapping.c | 12 ++++++++++++
1 file changed, 12 insertions(+)

diff --git a/kernel/dma/mapping.c b/kernel/dma/mapping.c
index f7afdadb6770..1f628e7ac709 100644
--- a/kernel/dma/mapping.c
+++ b/kernel/dma/mapping.c
@@ -317,6 +317,12 @@ void arch_dma_set_mask(struct device *dev, u64 mask);

int dma_set_mask(struct device *dev, u64 mask)
{
+ /*
+ * Truncate the mask to the actually supported dma_addr_t width to
+ * avoid generating unsupportable addresses.
+ */
+ mask = (dma_addr_t)mask;
+
if (!dev->dma_mask || !dma_supported(dev, mask))
return -EIO;

@@ -330,6 +336,12 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_set_mask);
#ifndef CONFIG_ARCH_HAS_DMA_SET_COHERENT_MASK
int dma_set_coherent_mask(struct device *dev, u64 mask)
{
+ /*
+ * Truncate the mask to the actually supported dma_addr_t width to
+ * avoid generating unsupportable addresses.
+ */
+ mask = (dma_addr_t)mask;
+
if (!dma_supported(dev, mask))
return -EIO;

--
2.20.1