Re: [PATCH v4 2/7] iommu/core: split mapping to page sizes as supportedby the hardware

From: Stepan Moskovchenko
Date: Fri Nov 11 2011 - 21:04:37 EST


On 11/11/2011 5:24 AM, Joerg Roedel wrote:
On Thu, Nov 10, 2011 at 01:12:00PM -0800, Stepan Moskovchenko wrote:
I have been experimenting with an iommu_map_range call, which maps a
given scatterlist of discontiguous physical pages into a contiguous
virtual region at a given IOVA. This has some performance advantages
over just calling iommu_map iteratively. First, it reduces the
amount of table walking / calculation needed for mapping each page,
given how you know that all the pages will be mapped into a single
virtually-contiguous region (so in most cases, the first-level table
calculation can be reused). Second, it allows one to defer the TLB
(and sometimes cache) maintenance operations until the entire
scatterlist has been mapped, rather than doing a TLB invalidate
after mapping each page, as would have been the case if iommu_map
were just being called from within a loop. Granted, just using
iommu_map many times may be acceptable on the slow path, but I have
seen significant performance gains when using this approach on the
fast path.
Yes, from a performance point-of-view that makes sense, as an addition
to the existing iommu_map interface. Are the pages in the list allowed
to have different page-sizes?


Joerg


Hello

Yes, the scatterlist is allowed to have different page sizes. But, they are required to have a length that is a multiple of 4K. If a page in the list is bigger than 4K, the code will iteratively map it with 4K pages. I suppose based on how my implementation is written, it would not be too difficult to add checks for the proper length and VA/PA alignments, and insert a 64K / 1M / 16M mapping if the alignment is lucky and the SG item is big enough.

In my particular test case, even though the pages in the list might be of different sizes, they are not guaranteed to be aligned properly and I would most likely have to fall back on mapping them as multiple consecutive 4K pages, anyway. But even despite this, having map_range to consolidate a lot of the common operations into one call sill gives me a nice speed boost.

I hadn't sent the patches out because this was all for my testing, but would you be interested in me adding a map_range to the API? The iommu_map_range call could even do a check if the ops supports a .map_range, and fall back on calling iommu_map repeatedly if the driver doesn't support this operation natively. In my code, the function takes a domain, iova, scatterlist, length, and prot.

Steve
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