Re: [RFC] Make use of non-dynamic dmabuf in RDMA
From: Dave Airlie
Date: Tue Aug 24 2021 - 15:16:10 EST
On Wed, 25 Aug 2021 at 03:36, John Hubbard <jhubbard@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On 8/24/21 10:32 AM, Jason Gunthorpe wrote:
> ...
> >>> And yes at least for the amdgpu driver we migrate the memory to host
> >>> memory as soon as it is pinned and I would expect that other GPU drivers
> >>> do something similar.
> >>
> >> Well...for many topologies, migrating to host memory will result in a
> >> dramatically slower p2p setup. For that reason, some GPU drivers may
> >> want to allow pinning of video memory in some situations.
> >>
> >> Ideally, you've got modern ODP devices and you don't even need to pin.
> >> But if not, and you still hope to do high performance p2p between a GPU
> >> and a non-ODP Infiniband device, then you would need to leave the pinned
> >> memory in vidmem.
> >>
> >> So I think we don't want to rule out that behavior, right? Or is the
> >> thinking more like, "you're lucky that this old non-ODP setup works at
> >> all, and we'll make it work by routing through host/cpu memory, but it
> >> will be slow"?
> >
> > I think it depends on the user, if the user creates memory which is
> > permanently located on the GPU then it should be pinnable in this way
> > without force migration. But if the memory is inherently migratable
> > then it just cannot be pinned in the GPU at all as we can't
> > indefinately block migration from happening eg if the CPU touches it
> > later or something.
> >
>
> OK. I just want to avoid creating any API-level assumptions that dma_buf_pin()
> necessarily implies or requires migrating to host memory.
I'm not sure we should be allowing dma_buf_pin at all on
non-migratable memory, what's to stop someone just pinning all the
VRAM and making the GPU unuseable?
I understand not considering more than a single user in these
situations is enterprise thinking, but I do worry about pinning is
always fine type of thinking when things are shared or multi-user.
My impression from this is we've designed hardware that didn't
consider the problem, and now to let us use that hardware in horrible
ways we should just allow it to pin all the things.
Dave.