From: Thierry Reding <treding@xxxxxxxxxx> The Tegra DRM driver currently uses the IOMMU API explicitly. This means that it has fine-grained control over when exactly the translation through the IOMMU is enabled. This currently happens after the driver probes, so the driver is in a DMA quiesced state when the IOMMU translation is enabled. During the transition of the Tegra DRM driver to use the DMA API instead of the IOMMU API explicitly, it was observed that on certain platforms the display controllers were still actively fetching from memory. When a DMA IOMMU domain is created as part of the DMA/IOMMU API setup during boot, the IOMMU translation for the display controllers can be enabled a significant amount of time before the driver has had a chance to reset the hardware into a sane state. This causes the SMMU to detect faults on the addresses that the display controller is trying to fetch. To avoid this, and as a byproduct paving the way for seamless transition of display from the bootloader to the kernel, add support for reserved regions in the Tegra SMMU driver. This is implemented using the standard reserved memory device tree bindings, which let us describe regions of memory which the kernel is forbidden from using for regular allocations. The Tegra SMMU driver will parse the nodes associated with each device via the "memory-region" property and return reserved regions that the IOMMU core will then create direct mappings for prior to attaching the IOMMU domains to the devices. This ensures that a 1:1 mapping is in place when IOMMU translation starts and prevents the SMMU from detecting any faults. Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <treding@xxxxxxxxxx> --- drivers/iommu/tegra-smmu.c | 76 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 76 insertions(+) diff --git a/drivers/iommu/tegra-smmu.c b/drivers/iommu/tegra-smmu.c index 0a281833f611..6bf7654371c5 100644 --- a/drivers/iommu/tegra-smmu.c +++ b/drivers/iommu/tegra-smmu.c @@ -10,6 +10,7 @@ #include <linux/kernel.h> #include <linux/of.h> #include <linux/of_device.h> +#include <linux/of_iommu.h> #include <linux/pci.h> #include <linux/platform_device.h> #include <linux/slab.h> @@ -539,6 +540,38 @@ static void tegra_smmu_set_pde(struct tegra_smmu_as *as, unsigned long iova, struct tegra_smmu *smmu = as->smmu; u32 *pd = page_address(as->pd); unsigned long offset = pd_index * sizeof(*pd); + bool unmap = false; + + /* + * XXX Move this outside of this function. Perhaps add a struct + * iommu_domain parameter to ->{get,put}_resv_regions() so that + * the mapping can be done there. + * + * The problem here is that as->smmu is only known once we attach + * the domain to a device (because then we look up the right SMMU + * instance via the dev->archdata.iommu pointer). When the direct + * mappings are created for reserved regions, the domain has not + * been attached to a device yet, so we don't know. We currently + * fix that up in ->apply_resv_regions() because that is the first + * time where we have access to a struct device that will be used + * with the IOMMU domain. However, that's asymmetric and doesn't + * take care of the page directory mapping either, so we need to + * come up with something better. + */ + if (as->pd_dma == 0) { + as->pd_dma = dma_map_page(smmu->dev, as->pd, 0, SMMU_SIZE_PD, + DMA_TO_DEVICE); + if (dma_mapping_error(smmu->dev, as->pd_dma)) + return; + + if (!smmu_dma_addr_valid(smmu, as->pd_dma)) { + dma_unmap_page(smmu->dev, as->pd_dma, SMMU_SIZE_PD, + DMA_TO_DEVICE); + return; + } + + unmap = true; + } /* Set the page directory entry first */ pd[pd_index] = value; @@ -551,6 +584,12 @@ static void tegra_smmu_set_pde(struct tegra_smmu_as *as, unsigned long iova, smmu_flush_ptc(smmu, as->pd_dma, offset); smmu_flush_tlb_section(smmu, as->id, iova); smmu_flush(smmu); + + if (unmap) { + dma_unmap_page(smmu->dev, as->pd_dma, SMMU_SIZE_PD, + DMA_TO_DEVICE); + as->pd_dma = 0; + } } static u32 *tegra_smmu_pte_offset(struct page *pt_page, unsigned long iova) @@ -945,6 +984,40 @@ static struct iommu_group *tegra_smmu_device_group(struct device *dev) return group->group; } +static void tegra_smmu_apply_resv_region(struct device *dev, + struct iommu_domain *domain, + struct iommu_resv_region *region) +{ + struct tegra_smmu *smmu = dev_iommu_priv_get(dev); + struct tegra_smmu_as *as = to_smmu_as(domain); + + /* + * ->attach_dev() may not have been called yet at this point, so the + * address space may not have been associated with an SMMU instance. + * Set up the association here to make sure subsequent code can rely + * on the SMMU instance being known. + * + * Also make sure that the SMMU instance doesn't conflict if an SMMU + * has been associated with the address space already. This can happen + * if a domain is shared between multiple devices. + * + * Note that this is purely theoretic because there are no known SoCs + * with multiple instances of this SMMU. + * + * XXX Deal with this elsewhere. One possibility would be to pass the + * struct iommu_domain that we're operating on to ->get_resv_regions() + * and ->put_resv_regions() so that the connection between it and the + * struct device (in order to find the SMMU instance) can already be + * established at that time. This would be nicely symmetric because a + * ->put_resv_regions() could undo that again so that ->attach_dev() + * could start from a clean slate. + */ + if (as->smmu && as->smmu != smmu) + WARN(1, "conflicting SMMU instances\n"); + + as->smmu = smmu; +} + static int tegra_smmu_of_xlate(struct device *dev, struct of_phandle_args *args) { @@ -978,6 +1051,9 @@ static const struct iommu_ops tegra_smmu_ops = { .map = tegra_smmu_map, .unmap = tegra_smmu_unmap, .iova_to_phys = tegra_smmu_iova_to_phys, + .get_resv_regions = of_iommu_get_resv_regions, + .put_resv_regions = generic_iommu_put_resv_regions, + .apply_resv_region = tegra_smmu_apply_resv_region, .of_xlate = tegra_smmu_of_xlate, .pgsize_bitmap = SZ_4K, }; -- 2.30.2