Am 09.12.20 um 17:46 schrieb Thomas Hellström (Intel):
On 12/9/20 5:37 PM, Jason Gunthorpe wrote:
On Wed, Dec 09, 2020 at 05:36:16PM +0100, Thomas Hellström (Intel)
wrote:
Jason, Christian
In most implementations of the callback mentioned in the subject
there's a
fence wait.
What exactly is it needed for?
Invalidate must stop DMA before returning, so presumably drivers using
a dma fence are relying on a dma fence mechanism to stop DMA.
Yes, so far I follow, but what's the reason drivers need to stop DMA?
Well in general an invalidation means that the specified part of the
page tables are updated, either with new addresses or new access flags.
In both cases you need to stop the DMA because you could otherwise work
with stale data, e.g. read/write with the wrong addresses or write to a
read only region etc...
Is it for invlidation before breaking COW after fork or something
related?
This is just one of many use cases which could invalidate a range. But
there are many more, both from the kernel as well as userspace.
Just imaging that userspace first mmaps() some anonymous memory r/w,
starts a DMA to it and while the DMA is ongoing does a readonly mmap()
of libc to the same location.
Since most hardware doesn't have recoverable page faults guess what
would happen if we don't wait for the DMA to finish? That would be a
security hole you can push an elephant through :)
Cheers,
Christian.
Thanks,
Thomas
Jason
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