Re: [PATCH v9 03/10] iommu: Separate IOMMU_DEV_FEAT_IOPF from IOMMU_DEV_FEAT_SVA

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Hi Jean,

On 1/19/21 6:16 PM, Jean-Philippe Brucker wrote:
On Mon, Jan 18, 2021 at 06:54:28AM +0000, Tian, Kevin wrote:
From: Lu Baolu <baolu.lu@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, January 16, 2021 11:54 AM

Hi Jean,

On 2021/1/15 0:41, Jean-Philippe Brucker wrote:
I guess detailing what's needed for nested IOPF can help the discussion,
although I haven't seen any concrete plan about implementing it, and it
still seems a couple of years away. There are two important steps with
nested IOPF:

(1) Figuring out whether a fault comes from L1 or L2. A SMMU stall event
      comes with this information, but a PRI page request doesn't. The
IOMMU
      driver has to first translate the IOVA to a GPA, injecting the fault
      into the guest if this translation fails by using the usual
      iommu_report_device_fault().

The IOMMU driver can walk the page tables to find out the level information.
If the walk terminates at the 1st level, inject to the guest. Otherwise fix the
mm fault at 2nd level. It's not efficient compared to hardware-provided info,
but it's doable and actual overhead needs to be measured (optimization exists
e.g. having fault client to hint no 2nd level fault expected when registering fault
handler in pinned case).


(2) Translating the faulting GPA to a HVA that can be fed to
      handle_mm_fault(). That requires help from KVM, so another interface -
      either KVM registering GPA->HVA translation tables or IOMMU driver
      querying each translation. Either way it should be reusable by device
      drivers that implement IOPF themselves.

Or just leave to the fault client (say VFIO here) to figure it out. VFIO has the
information about GPA->HPA and can then call handle_mm_fault to fix the
received fault. The IOMMU driver just exports an interface for the device drivers
which implement IOPF themselves to report a fault which is then handled by
the IOMMU core by reusing the same faulting path.


(1) could be enabled with iommu_dev_enable_feature(). (2) requires a
more
complex interface. (2) alone might also be desirable - demand-paging for
level 2 only, no SVA for level 1.

Yes, this is what we want to point out. A general FEAT_IOPF implies more than
what this patch intended to address.


Anyway, back to this patch. What I'm trying to convey is "can the IOMMU
receive incoming I/O page faults for this device and, when SVA is enabled,
feed them to the mm subsystem?  Enable that or return an error." I'm stuck
on the name. IOPF alone is too vague. Not IOPF_L1 as Kevin noted, since L1
is also used in virtualization. IOPF_BIND and IOPF_SVA could also mean (2)
above. IOMMU_DEV_FEAT_IOPF_FLAT?

That leaves space for the nested extensions. (1) above could be
IOMMU_FEAT_IOPF_NESTED, and (2) requires some new interfacing with
KVM (or
just an external fault handler) and could be used with either IOPF_FLAT or
IOPF_NESTED. We can figure out the details later. What do you think?

I agree that we can define IOPF_ for current usage and leave space for
future extensions.

IOPF_FLAT represents IOPF on first-level translation, currently first
level translation could be used in below cases.

1) FL w/ internal Page Table: Kernel IOVA;
2) FL w/ external Page Table: VFIO passthrough;
3) FL w/ shared CPU page table: SVA

We don't need to support IOPF for case 1). Let's put it aside.

IOPF handling of 2) and 3) are different. Do we need to define different
names to distinguish these two cases?


Defining feature names according to various use cases does not sound a
clean way. In an ideal way we should have just a general FEAT_IOPF since
the hardware (at least VT-d) does support fault in either 1st-level, 2nd-
level or nested configurations. We are entering this trouble just because
there is difficulty for the software evolving to enable full hardware cap
in one batch. My last proposal was sort of keeping FEAT_IOPF as a general
capability for whether delivering fault through the IOMMU or the ad-hoc
device, and then having a separate interface for whether IOPF reporting
is available under a specific configuration. The former is about the path
between the IOMMU and the device, while the latter is about the interface
between the IOMMU driver and its faulting client.

The reporting capability can be checked when the fault client is registering
its fault handler, and at this time the IOMMU driver knows how the related
mapping is configured (1st, 2nd, or nested) and whether fault reporting is
supported in such configuration. We may introduce IOPF_REPORT_FLAT and
IOPF_REPORT_NESTED respectively. while IOPF_REPORT_FLAT detection is
straightforward (2 and 3 can be differentiated internally based on configured
level), IOPF_REPORT_NESTED needs additional info to indicate which level is
concerned since the vendor driver may not support fault reporting in both
levels or the fault client may be interested in only one level (e.g. with 2nd
level pinned).

I agree with this plan (provided I understood it correctly this time):
have IOMMU_DEV_FEAT_IOPF describing the IOPF interface between device and
IOMMU. Enabling it on its own doesn't do anything visible to the driver,
it just probes for capabilities and enables PRI if necessary. For host
SVA, since there is no additional communication between IOMMU and device
driver, enabling IOMMU_DEV_FEAT_SVA in addition to IOPF is sufficient.
Then when implementing nested we'll extend iommu_register_fault_handler()
with flags and parameters. That will also enable advanced dispatching (1).

Will it be necessary to enable FEAT_IOPF when doing VFIO passthrough
(injecting to the guest or handling it with external page tables)?
I think that would be better. Currently a device driver registering a
fault handler doesn't know if it will get recoverable page faults or only
unrecoverable ones.

So I don't think this patch needs any change. Baolu, are you ok with
keeping this and patch 4?

It sounds good to me. Keep FEAT_IOPF as the IOMMU capability of
generating I/O page fault and differentiate different I/O page faults by
extending the fault handler register interface.


Thanks,
Jean


Best regards,
baolu



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