Re: [PATCH v4 5/7] iommu/dma: Make limit checks self-contained

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On 2024-05-18 7:31 pm, Jerry Snitselaar wrote:
On Fri, May 17, 2024 at 04:03:57PM GMT, Robin Murphy wrote:
On 17/05/2024 3:21 pm, Jon Hunter wrote:

On 15/05/2024 15:59, Robin Murphy wrote:
Hi Jon,

On 2024-05-14 2:27 pm, Jon Hunter wrote:
Hi Robin,

On 19/04/2024 17:54, Robin Murphy wrote:
It's now easy to retrieve the device's DMA limits if we want to check
them against the domain aperture, so do that ourselves instead of
relying on them being passed through the callchain.

Reviewed-by: Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@xxxxxxxxxx>
Tested-by: Hanjun Guo <guohanjun@xxxxxxxxxx>
Signed-off-by: Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx>
---
� drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c | 21 +++++++++------------
� 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c b/drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c
index a3039005b696..f542eabaefa4 100644
--- a/drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c
+++ b/drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c
@@ -660,19 +660,16 @@ static void
iommu_dma_init_options(struct iommu_dma_options *options,
� /**
�� * iommu_dma_init_domain - Initialise a DMA mapping domain
�� * @domain: IOMMU domain previously prepared by
iommu_get_dma_cookie()
- * @base: IOVA at which the mappable address space starts
- * @limit: Last address of the IOVA space
�� * @dev: Device the domain is being initialised for
�� *
- * @base and @limit + 1 should be exact multiples of IOMMU
page granularity to
- * avoid rounding surprises. If necessary, we reserve the
page at address 0
+ * If the geometry and dma_range_map include address 0, we
reserve that page
�� * to ensure it is an invalid IOVA. It is safe to
reinitialise a domain, but
�� * any change which could make prior IOVAs invalid will fail.
�� */
-static int iommu_dma_init_domain(struct iommu_domain
*domain, dma_addr_t base,
-���������������� dma_addr_t limit, struct device *dev)
+static int iommu_dma_init_domain(struct iommu_domain
*domain, struct device *dev)
� {
����� struct iommu_dma_cookie *cookie = domain->iova_cookie;
+��� const struct bus_dma_region *map = dev->dma_range_map;
����� unsigned long order, base_pfn;
����� struct iova_domain *iovad;
����� int ret;
@@ -684,18 +681,18 @@ static int
iommu_dma_init_domain(struct iommu_domain *domain,
dma_addr_t base,
����� /* Use the smallest supported page size for IOVA granularity */
����� order = __ffs(domain->pgsize_bitmap);
-��� base_pfn = max_t(unsigned long, 1, base >> order);
+��� base_pfn = 1;
����� /* Check the domain allows at least some access to the
device... */
-��� if (domain->geometry.force_aperture) {
+��� if (map) {
+������� dma_addr_t base = dma_range_map_min(map);
��������� if (base > domain->geometry.aperture_end ||
-����������� limit < domain->geometry.aperture_start) {
+����������� dma_range_map_max(map) <
domain->geometry.aperture_start) {
������������� pr_warn("specified DMA range outside IOMMU
capability\n");
������������� return -EFAULT;
��������� }
��������� /* ...then finally give it a kicking to make sure it fits */
-������� base_pfn = max_t(unsigned long, base_pfn,
-��������������� domain->geometry.aperture_start >> order);
+������� base_pfn = max(base,
domain->geometry.aperture_start) >> order;
����� }
����� /* start_pfn is always nonzero for an
already-initialised domain */
@@ -1760,7 +1757,7 @@ void iommu_setup_dma_ops(struct device
*dev, u64 dma_base, u64 dma_limit)
������ * underlying IOMMU driver needs to support via the
dma-iommu layer.
������ */
����� if (iommu_is_dma_domain(domain)) {
-������� if (iommu_dma_init_domain(domain, dma_base, dma_limit, dev))
+������� if (iommu_dma_init_domain(domain, dev))
������������� goto out_err;
��������� dev->dma_ops = &iommu_dma_ops;
����� }


I have noticed some random test failures on Tegra186 and
Tegra194 and bisect is pointing to this commit. Reverting this
along with the various dependencies does fix the problem. On
Tegra186 CPU hotplug is failing and on Tegra194 suspend is
failing. Unfortunately, on neither platform do I see any
particular crash but the boards hang somewhere.

That is... thoroughly bemusing :/ Not only is there supposed to be
no real functional change here - we should merely be recalculating
the same information from dev->dma_range_map that the callers were
already doing to generate the base/limit arguments - but the act of
initially setting up a default domain for a device behind an IOMMU
should have no connection whatsoever to suspend and especially not
to CPU hotplug.


Yes it does look odd, but this is what bisect reported ...

git bisect start
# good: [a38297e3fb012ddfa7ce0321a7e5a8daeb1872b6] Linux 6.9
git bisect good a38297e3fb012ddfa7ce0321a7e5a8daeb1872b6
# bad: [6ba6c795dc73c22ce2c86006f17c4aa802db2a60] Add linux-next
specific files for 20240513
git bisect bad 6ba6c795dc73c22ce2c86006f17c4aa802db2a60
# good: [29e7f949865a023a21ecdfbd82d68ac697569f34] Merge branch 'main'
of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net-next.git
git bisect good 29e7f949865a023a21ecdfbd82d68ac697569f34
# skip: [150e6cc14e51f2a07034106a4529cdaafd812c46] Merge branch 'next'
of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/dtor/input.git
git bisect skip 150e6cc14e51f2a07034106a4529cdaafd812c46
# good: [f5d75327d30af49acf2e4b55f35ce2e6c45d1287] drm/amd/display: Fix
invalid Copyright notice
git bisect good f5d75327d30af49acf2e4b55f35ce2e6c45d1287
# skip: [f1ec9a9ffc526df7c9523006c2abbb8ea554cdd8] Merge branch
'for-next' of
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/krzk/linux-dt.git
git bisect skip f1ec9a9ffc526df7c9523006c2abbb8ea554cdd8
# bad: [f091e93306e0429ebb7589b9874590b6a9705e64] dma-mapping: Simplify
arch_setup_dma_ops()
git bisect bad f091e93306e0429ebb7589b9874590b6a9705e64
# good: [91cfd679f9e8b9a7bf2f26adf66eff99dbe2026b] ACPI/IORT: Handle
memory address size limits as limits
git bisect good 91cfd679f9e8b9a7bf2f26adf66eff99dbe2026b
# bad: [ad4750b07d3462ce29a0c9b1e88b2a1f9795290e] iommu/dma: Make limit
checks self-contained
git bisect bad ad4750b07d3462ce29a0c9b1e88b2a1f9795290e
# good: [fece6530bf4b59b01a476a12851e07751e73d69f] dma-mapping: Add
helpers for dma_range_map bounds
git bisect good fece6530bf4b59b01a476a12851e07751e73d69f
# first bad commit: [ad4750b07d3462ce29a0c9b1e88b2a1f9795290e]
iommu/dma: Make limit checks self-contained

There is a couple skips in there and so I will try this again.

If you have any ideas on things we can try let me know.

Since the symptom seems inexplicable, I'd throw the usual memory
debugging stuff like KASAN at it first. I'd also try
"no_console_suspend" to check whether any late output is being
missed in the suspend case (and if it's already broken, then any
additional issues that may be caused by the console itself hopefully
shouldn't matter).

For more base-covering, do you have the "arm64: Properly clean up
iommu-dma remnants" fix in there already as well? That bug has
bisected to patch #6 each time though, so I do still suspect that
what you're seeing is likely something else. It does seem
potentially significant that those Tegra platforms are making fairly
wide use of dma-ranges, but there's no clear idea forming out of
that observation just yet...

I was hoping it was the same issue other people had reported,
but the fix provided did not help. I have also tried today's
-next and I am still seeing the issue.

I should have more time next week to look at this further. Let
me confirm which change is causing this and add more debug.

Thanks. From staring at the code I think I've spotted one subtlety which
may not be quite as intended - can you see if the diff below helps? It
occurs to me that suspend and CPU hotplug may not *cause* the symptom,
but they could certainly stall if one or more relevant CPUs is *already*
stuck in a loop somewhere...

Thanks,
Robin.

----->8-----
diff --git a/drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c b/drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c
index 89a53c2f2cf9..85eb1846c637 100644
--- a/drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c
+++ b/drivers/iommu/dma-iommu.c
@@ -686,6 +686,7 @@ static int iommu_dma_init_domain(struct iommu_domain *domain, struct device *dev
  	/* Check the domain allows at least some access to the device... */
  	if (map) {
  		dma_addr_t base = dma_range_map_min(map);
+		base = max(base, (dma_addr_t)1 << order);
  		if (base > domain->geometry.aperture_end ||
  		    dma_range_map_max(map) < domain->geometry.aperture_start) {
  			pr_warn("specified DMA range outside IOMMU capability\n");

With this in place I no longer see the mapping fail on the nvidia system.

Cheers Jerry, that's reassuring. I'll write up a proper patch shortly - with Monday morning eyes I realise this isn't entirely the right fix for how I messed up here - and hope that my guess was right and it's the source of Jon's issues as well. From experience I know that the effects of the IOVA allocator going wrong can be varied and downright weird...

Thanks,
Robin.




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