Re: [RFC PATCH 0/2] iommu: Avoid unnecessary PRI queue flushes
From: Jacob Pan
Date: Mon Oct 19 2020 - 14:31:02 EST
Hi Jean-Philippe,
On Mon, 19 Oct 2020 16:08:24 +0200, Jean-Philippe Brucker
<jean-philippe@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Sat, Oct 17, 2020 at 04:25:25AM -0700, Raj, Ashok wrote:
> > > For devices that *don't* use a stop marker, the PCIe spec says
> > > (10.4.1.2):
> > >
> > > To stop [using a PASID] without using a Stop Marker Message, the
> > > function shall:
> > > 1. Stop queueing new Page Request Messages for this PASID.
> >
> > The device driver would need to tell stop sending any new PR's.
> >
> > > 2. Finish transmitting any multi-page Page Request Messages for this
> > > PASID (i.e. send the Page Request Message with the L bit Set).
> > > 3. Wait for PRG Response Messages associated any outstanding Page
> > > Request Messages for the PASID.
> > >
> > > So they have to flush their PR themselves. And since the device driver
> > > completes this sequence before calling unbind(), then there shouldn't
> > > be any oustanding PR for the PASID, and unbind() doesn't need to
> > > flush, right?
> >
> > I can see how the device can complete #2,3 above. But the device driver
> > isn't the one managing page-responses right. So in order for the device
> > to know the above sequence is complete, it would need to get some
> > assist from IOMMU driver?
>
> No the device driver just waits for the device to indicate that it has
> completed the sequence. That's what the magic stop-PASID mechanism
> described by PCIe does. In 6.20.1 "Managing PASID TLP Prefix Usage" it
> says:
>
> "A Function must have a mechanism to request that it gracefully stop using
> a specific PASID. This mechanism is device specific but must satisfy the
> following rules:
> [...]
> * When the stop request mechanism indicates completion, the Function has:
> [...]
> * Complied with additional rules described in Address Translation
> Services (Chapter 10 [10.4.1.2 quoted above]) if Address Translations
> or Page Requests were issued on the behalf of this PASID."
>
> So after the device driver initiates this mechanism in the device, the
> device must be able to indicate completion of the mechanism, which
> includes completing all in-flight Page Requests. At that point the device
> driver can call unbind() knowing there is no pending PR for this PASID.
>
In step #3, I think it is possible that device driver received page response
as part of the auto page response, so it may not guarantee all the in-flight
PRQs are completed inside IOMMU. Therefore, drain is _always_ needed to be
sure?
> Thanks,
> Jean
>
> >
> > How does the driver know that everything host received has been
> > responded back to device?
> >
> > >
> > > > I'm not sure about other IOMMU's how they behave, When there is no
> > > > space in the PRQ, IOMMU auto-responds to the device. This puts the
> > > > device in a while (1) loop. The fake successful response will let
> > > > the device do a ATS lookup, and that would fail forcing the device
> > > > to do another PRQ.
> > >
> > > But in the sequence above, step 1 should ensure that the device will
> > > not send another PR for any successful response coming back at step
> > > 3.
> >
> > True, but there could be some page-request in flight on its way to the
> > IOMMU. By draining and getting that round trip back to IOMMU we
> > gaurantee things in flight are flushed to PRQ after that Drain
> > completes.
> > >
> > > So I agree with the below if we suspect there could be pending PR, but
> > > given that pending PR are a stop marker thing and we don't know any
> > > device using stop markers, I wondered why I bothered implementing
> > > PRIq flush at all for SMMUv3, hence this RFC.
> > >
> >
> > Cheers,
> > Ashok
Thanks,
Jacob