On Wed, Nov 18, 2020 at 12:20:11AM +0000, Michael Kelley wrote: > From: Dexuan Cui <decui@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2020 4:03 PM > > > > x86 Hyper-V used to essentially always overwrite the effective cache type > > of guest memory accesses to WB. This was problematic in cases where there > > is a physical device assigned to the VM, since that often requires that > > the VM should have control over cache types. Thus, on newer Hyper-V since > > 2018, Hyper-V always honors the VM's cache type, but unexpectedly Linux VM > > users start to complain that Linux VM's VRAM becomes very slow, and it > > turns out that Linux VM should not map the VRAM uncacheable by ioremap(). > > Fix this slowness issue by using ioremap_cache(). > > > > On ARM64, ioremap_cache() is also required as the host also maps the VRAM > > cacheable, otherwise VM Connect can't display properly with ioremap() or > > ioremap_wc(). > > > > With this change, the VRAM on new Hyper-V is as fast as regular RAM, so > > it's no longer necessary to use the hacks we added to mitigate the > > slowness, i.e. we no longer need to allocate physical memory and use > > it to back up the VRAM in Generation-1 VM, and we also no longer need to > > allocate physical memory to back up the framebuffer in a Generation-2 VM > > and copy the framebuffer to the real VRAM. A further big change will > > address these for v5.11. > > > > Fixes: 68a2d20b79b1 ("drivers/video: add Hyper-V Synthetic Video Frame Buffer Driver") > > Tested-by: Boqun Feng <boqun.feng@xxxxxxxxx> > > Signed-off-by: Dexuan Cui <decui@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Reviewed-by: Michael Kelley <mikelley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Applied to hyperv-fixes. Thanks. _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel