Re: [PATCH 0/4] ACPI: DMA ranges management

From: Nate Watterson
Date: Wed Jul 26 2017 - 10:46:14 EST


Hi Lorenzo,

On 7/20/2017 10:45 AM, Lorenzo Pieralisi wrote:
As reported in:

http://lkml.kernel.org/r/CAL85gmA_SSCwM80TKdkZqEe+S1beWzDEvdki1kpkmUTDRmSP7g@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx

the bus connecting devices to an IOMMU bus can be smaller in size than
the IOMMU input address bits which results in devices DMA HW bugs in
particular related to IOVA allocation (ie chopping of higher address
bits owing to system bus HW capabilities mismatch with the IOMMU).

Fortunately this problem can be solved through an already present but never
used ACPI 6.2 firmware bindings (ie _DMA object) allowing to define the DMA
window for a specific bus in ACPI and therefore all upstream devices
connected to it.

This small patch series enables _DMA parsing in ACPI core code and
use it in ACPI IORT code in order to detect DMA ranges for devices and
update their data structures to make them work with their related DMA
addressing restrictions.

I tested the patches and unfortunately it seems like the DMA addressing
restrictions are not really enforced for devices that attempt to set
their own dma_mask based on controller capabilities. For instance,
consider the following from the ahci_platform driver:

if (hpriv->cap & HOST_CAP_64) {
rc = dma_coerce_mask_and_coherent(dev, DMA_BIT_MASK(64));
[...]
}

Prior to the check, I can see that the device dma_mask respects the
limits enumerated in the _DMA object, however it is then clobbered by
the call to dma_coerce_mask_and_coherent(). Interestingly, if
HOST_CAP_64 was not set and the _DMA object for the device (or its
parent) indicated support for > 32-bit addrs, the host controller
could end up getting programmed with addresses beyond what it actually
supports. That is more a bug with the ahci_platform driver assuming a
default 32-bit dma_mask, but I would not be surprised to find other
drivers that rely on the same assumption.

To ensure that dma_set_mask() and friends actually respect _DMA, would
you consider introducing a dma_supported() callback to check the input
dma_mask against the FW defined limits? This would end up aggressively
clipping the dma_mask to 32-bits for devices like the above if the _DMA
limit was less than 64-bits, but that is probably preferable to the
controller accessing unintended addresses.

Also, how would you feel about adding support for the IORT named_node
memory_address_limit field?

-Nate

Cc: Will Deacon <will.deacon@xxxxxxx>
Cc: Hanjun Guo <hanjun.guo@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Feng Kan <fkan@xxxxxxx>
Cc: Jon Masters <jcm@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Robert Moore <robert.moore@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx>
Cc: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rjw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>

Lorenzo Pieralisi (4):
ACPI: Allow _DMA method in walk resources
ACPI: Make acpi_dev_get_resources() method agnostic
ACPI: Introduce DMA ranges parsing
ACPI: Make acpi_dma_configure() DMA regions aware

drivers/acpi/acpica/rsxface.c | 7 ++--
drivers/acpi/arm64/iort.c | 27 +++++++++++-
drivers/acpi/resource.c | 83 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---------
drivers/acpi/scan.c | 95 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----
include/acpi/acnames.h | 1 +
include/acpi/acpi_bus.h | 2 +
include/linux/acpi.h | 8 ++++
include/linux/acpi_iort.h | 5 ++-
8 files changed, 194 insertions(+), 34 deletions(-)


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