Re: [RFC PATCH] iommu/iova: Support limiting IOVA alignment

From: Robin Murphy
Date: Thu Feb 20 2020 - 12:35:42 EST


On 19/02/2020 11:22 pm, Liam Mark wrote:
On Wed, 19 Feb 2020, Will Deacon wrote:

On Mon, Feb 17, 2020 at 04:46:14PM +0000, Robin Murphy wrote:
On 14/02/2020 8:30 pm, Liam Mark wrote:

When the IOVA framework applies IOVA alignment it aligns all
IOVAs to the smallest PAGE_SIZE order which is greater than or
equal to the requested IOVA size.

We support use cases that requires large buffers (> 64 MB in
size) to be allocated and mapped in their stage 1 page tables.
However, with this alignment scheme we find ourselves running
out of IOVA space for 32 bit devices, so we are proposing this
config, along the similar vein as CONFIG_CMA_ALIGNMENT for CMA
allocations.

As per [1], I'd really like to better understand the allocation patterns
that lead to such a sparsely-occupied address space to begin with, given
that the rbtree allocator is supposed to try to maintain locality as far as
possible, and the rcaches should further improve on that. Are you also
frequently cycling intermediate-sized buffers which are smaller than 64MB
but still too big to be cached? Are there a lot of non-power-of-two
allocations?

Right, information on the allocation pattern would help with this change
and also the choice of IOVA allocation algorithm. Without it, we're just
shooting in the dark.


Thanks for the responses.

I am looking into how much of our allocation pattern details I can share.

My general understanding is that this issue occurs on a 32bit devices
which have additional restrictions on the IOVA range they can use within those
32bits.

An example is a use case which involves allocating a lot of buffers ~80MB
is size, the current algorithm will require an alignment of 128MB for
those buffers. My understanding is that it simply can't accommodate the number of 80MB
buffers that are required because the of amount of IOVA space which can't
be used because of the 128MB alignment requirement.

OK, that's a case I can understand :)

Add CONFIG_IOMMU_LIMIT_IOVA_ALIGNMENT to limit the alignment of
IOVAs to some desired PAGE_SIZE order, specified by
CONFIG_IOMMU_IOVA_ALIGNMENT. This helps reduce the impact of
fragmentation caused by the current IOVA alignment scheme, and
gives better IOVA space utilization.

Even if the general change did prove reasonable, this IOVA allocator is not
owned by the DMA API, so entirely removing the option of strict
size-alignment feels a bit uncomfortable. Personally I'd replace the bool
argument with an actual alignment value to at least hand the authority out
to individual callers.

Furthermore, even in DMA API terms, is anyone really ever going to bother
tuning that config? Since iommu-dma is supposed to be a transparent layer,
arguably it shouldn't behave unnecessarily differently from CMA, so simply
piggy-backing off CONFIG_CMA_ALIGNMENT would seem logical.

Agreed, reusing CONFIG_CMA_ALIGNMENT makes a lot of sense here as callers
relying on natural alignment of DMA buffer allocations already have to
deal with that limitation. We could fix it as an optional parameter at
init time (init_iova_domain()), and have the DMA IOMMU implementation
pass it in there.


My concern with using CONFIG_CMA_ALIGNMENT alignment is that for us this
would either involve further fragmenting our CMA regions (moving our CMA
max alignment from 1MB to max 2MB) or losing so of our 2MB IOVA block
mappings (changing our IOVA max alignment form 2MB to 1MB).

At least for us CMA allocations are often not DMA mapped into stage 1 page
tables so moving the CMA max alignment to 2MB in our case would, I think,
only provide the disadvantage of having to increase the size our CMA
regions to accommodate this large alignment (which isnʼt optimal for
memory utilization since CMA regions can't satisfy unmovable page
allocations).

As an alternative would it be possible for the dma-iommu layer to use the
size of the allocation and the domain pgsize_bitmap field to pick a max
IOVA alignment, which it can pass in for that IOVA allocation, which will
maximize block mappings but not waste IOVA space?

Given that we already have DMA_ATTR_ALOC_SINGLE_PAGES for video drivers and suchlike that know enough to know they want "large buffer" allocation behaviour, would it suffice to have a similar attribute that says "I'm not too fussed about alignment"? That way there's no visible change for anyone who doesn't opt in and might be relying on the existing behaviour, intentionally or otherwise.

Then if necessary, the implementation can consider both flags together to decide whether to try to round down to the next block size or just shove it in anywhere.

Robin.