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authorRobin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com>2022-06-09 16:12:10 +0100
committerJoerg Roedel <jroedel@suse.de>2022-06-22 14:57:33 +0200
commit4bf7fda4dce22214c70c49960b1b6438e6260b67 (patch)
tree5a830f4bd44a317c19812ae40f2eae1b104e51a9
parentiommu: Directly use ida_alloc()/free() (diff)
downloadlinux-dev-4bf7fda4dce22214c70c49960b1b6438e6260b67.tar.xz
linux-dev-4bf7fda4dce22214c70c49960b1b6438e6260b67.zip
iommu/dma: Add config for PCI SAC address trick
For devices stuck behind a conventional PCI bus, saving extra cycles at 33MHz is probably fairly significant. However since native PCI Express is now the norm for high-performance devices, the optimisation to always prefer 32-bit addresses for the sake of avoiding DAC is starting to look rather anachronistic. Technically 32-bit addresses do have shorter TLPs on PCIe, but unless the device is saturating its link bandwidth with small transfers it seems unlikely that the difference is appreciable. What definitely is appreciable, however, is that the IOVA allocator doesn't behave all that well once the 32-bit space starts getting full. As DMA working sets get bigger, this optimisation increasingly backfires and adds considerable overhead to the dma_map path for use-cases like high-bandwidth networking. We've increasingly bandaged the allocator in attempts to mitigate this, but it remains fundamentally at odds with other valid requirements to try as hard as possible to satisfy a request within the given limit; what we really need is to just avoid this odd notion of a speculative allocation when it isn't beneficial anyway. Unfortunately that's where things get awkward... Having been present on x86 for 15 years or so now, it turns out there are systems which fail to properly define the upper limit of usable IOVA space for certain devices and this trick was the only thing letting them work OK. I had a similar ulterior motive for a couple of early arm64 systems when originally adding it to iommu-dma, but those really should be fixed with proper firmware bindings by now. Let's be brave and default it to off in the hope that CI systems and developers will find and fix those bugs, but expect that desktop-focused distro configs are likely to want to turn it back on for maximum compatibility. Signed-off-by: Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Reviewed-by: John Garry <john.garry@huawei.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/3f06994f9f370f9d35b2630ab75171ecd2065621.1654782107.git.robin.murphy@arm.com Signed-off-by: Joerg Roedel <jroedel@suse.de>
-rw-r--r--drivers/iommu/Kconfig26
-rw-r--r--drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c2
2 files changed, 27 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/iommu/Kconfig b/drivers/iommu/Kconfig
index c79a0df090c0..5a225b48dd00 100644
--- a/drivers/iommu/Kconfig
+++ b/drivers/iommu/Kconfig
@@ -144,6 +144,32 @@ config IOMMU_DMA
select IRQ_MSI_IOMMU
select NEED_SG_DMA_LENGTH
+config IOMMU_DMA_PCI_SAC
+ bool "Enable 64-bit legacy PCI optimisation by default"
+ depends on IOMMU_DMA
+ help
+ Enable by default an IOMMU optimisation for 64-bit legacy PCI devices,
+ wherein the DMA API layer will always first try to allocate a 32-bit
+ DMA address suitable for a single address cycle, before falling back
+ to allocating from the device's full usable address range. If your
+ system has 64-bit legacy PCI devices in 32-bit slots where using dual
+ address cycles reduces DMA throughput significantly, this may be
+ beneficial to overall performance.
+
+ If you have a modern PCI Express based system, this feature mostly just
+ represents extra overhead in the allocation path for no practical
+ benefit, and it should usually be preferable to say "n" here.
+
+ However, beware that this feature has also historically papered over
+ bugs where the IOMMU address width and/or device DMA mask is not set
+ correctly. If device DMA problems and IOMMU faults start occurring
+ after disabling this option, it is almost certainly indicative of a
+ latent driver or firmware/BIOS bug, which would previously have only
+ manifested with several gigabytes worth of concurrent DMA mappings.
+
+ If this option is not set, the feature can still be re-enabled at
+ boot time with the "iommu.forcedac=0" command-line argument.
+
# Shared Virtual Addressing
config IOMMU_SVA
bool
diff --git a/drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c b/drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c
index f90251572a5d..9f9d9ba7f376 100644
--- a/drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c
+++ b/drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c
@@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ struct iommu_dma_cookie {
};
static DEFINE_STATIC_KEY_FALSE(iommu_deferred_attach_enabled);
-bool iommu_dma_forcedac __read_mostly;
+bool iommu_dma_forcedac __read_mostly = !IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_IOMMU_DMA_PCI_SAC);
static int __init iommu_dma_forcedac_setup(char *str)
{