Re: [PATCH 1/2] drm/vgem: Do not allocate backing shmemfs file for an import dmabuf object

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On Wed, Jul 8, 2020 at 5:05 PM Christian König <christian.koenig@xxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> Am 08.07.20 um 17:01 schrieb Daniel Vetter:
> > On Wed, Jul 8, 2020 at 4:37 PM Christian König <christian.koenig@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> >> Am 08.07.20 um 11:54 schrieb Daniel Vetter:
> >>> On Wed, Jul 08, 2020 at 11:22:00AM +0200, Christian König wrote:
> >>>> Am 07.07.20 um 20:35 schrieb Chris Wilson:
> >>>>> Quoting lepton (2020-07-07 19:17:51)
> >>>>>> On Tue, Jul 7, 2020 at 10:20 AM Chris Wilson <chris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>>>>>> Quoting lepton (2020-07-07 18:05:21)
> >>>>>>>> On Tue, Jul 7, 2020 at 9:00 AM Chris Wilson <chris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>> If we assign obj->filp, we believe that the create vgem bo is native and
> >>>>>>>>> allow direct operations like mmap() assuming it behaves as backed by a
> >>>>>>>>> shmemfs inode. When imported from a dmabuf, the obj->pages are
> >>>>>>>>> not always meaningful and the shmemfs backing store misleading.
> >>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>> Note, that regular mmap access to a vgem bo is via the dumb buffer API,
> >>>>>>>>> and that rejects attempts to mmap an imported dmabuf,
> >>>>>>>> What do you mean by "regular mmap access" here?  It looks like vgem is
> >>>>>>>> using vgem_gem_dumb_map as .dumb_map_offset callback then it doesn't call
> >>>>>>>> drm_gem_dumb_map_offset
> >>>>>>> As I too found out, and so had to correct my story telling.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> By regular mmap() access I mean mmap on the vgem bo [via the dumb buffer
> >>>>>>> API] as opposed to mmap() via an exported dma-buf fd. I had to look at
> >>>>>>> igt to see how it was being used.
> >>>>>> Now it seems your fix is to disable "regular mmap" on imported dma buf
> >>>>>> for vgem. I am not really a graphic guy, but then the api looks like:
> >>>>>> for a gem handle, user space has to guess to find out the way to mmap
> >>>>>> it. If user space guess wrong, then it will fail to mmap. Is this the
> >>>>>> expected way
> >>>>>> for people to handle gpu buffer?
> >>>>> You either have a dumb buffer handle, or a dma-buf fd. If you have the
> >>>>> handle, you have to use the dumb buffer API, there's no other way to
> >>>>> mmap it. If you have the dma-buf fd, you should mmap it directly. Those
> >>>>> two are clear.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> It's when you import the dma-buf into vgem and create a handle out of
> >>>>> it, that's when the handle is no longer first class and certain uAPI
> >>>>> [the dumb buffer API in particular] fail.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> It's not brilliant, as you say, it requires the user to remember the
> >>>>> difference between the handles, but at the same time it does prevent
> >>>>> them falling into coherency traps by forcing them to use the right
> >>>>> driver to handle the object, and have to consider the additional ioctls
> >>>>> that go along with that access.
> >>>> Yes, Chris is right. Mapping DMA-buf through the mmap() APIs of an importer
> >>>> is illegal.
> >>>>
> >>>> What we could maybe try to do is to redirect this mmap() API call on the
> >>>> importer to the exporter, but I'm pretty sure that the fs layer wouldn't
> >>>> like that without changes.
> >>> We already do that, there's a full helper-ified path from I think shmem
> >>> helpers through prime helpers to forward this all. Including handling
> >>> buffer offsets and all the other lolz back&forth.
> >> Oh, that most likely won't work correctly with unpinned DMA-bufs and
> >> needs to be avoided.
> >>
> >> Each file descriptor is associated with an struct address_space. And
> >> when you mmap() through the importer by redirecting the system call to
> >> the exporter you end up with the wrong struct address_space in your VMA.
> >>
> >> That in turn can go up easily in flames when the exporter tries to
> >> invalidate the CPU mappings for its DMA-buf while moving it.
> >>
> >> Where are we doing this? My last status was that this is forbidden.
> > Hm I thought we're doing all that already, but looking at the code
> > again we're only doing this when opening a new drm fd or dma-buf fd.
> > So the right file->f_mapping is always set at file creation time.
> >
> > And we indeed don't frob this more when going another indirection ...
> > Maybe we screwed up something somewhere :-/
> >
> > Also I thought the mapping is only taken after the vma is instatiated,
> > otherwise the tricks we're playing with dma-buf already wouldn't work:
> > dma-buf has the buffer always at offset 0, whereas gem drm_fd mmap has
> > it somewhere else. We already adjust vma->vm_pgoff, so I'm wondering
> > whether we could adjust vm_file too. Or is that the thing that's
> > forbidden?
>
> Yes, exactly. Modifying vm_pgoff is harmless, tons of code does that.
>
> But changing vma->vm_file, that's something I haven't seen before and
> most likely could blow up badly.

Ok, I read the shmem helpers again, I think those are the only ones
which do the importer mmap -> dma_buf_mmap() forwarding, and hence
break stuff all around here.

They also remove the vma->vm_pgoff offset, which means
unmap_mapping_range wont work anyway. I guess for drivers which use
shmem helpers the hard assumption is that a) can't use p2p dma and b)
pin everything into system memory.

So not a problem. But something to keep in mind. I'll try to do a
kerneldoc patch to note this somewhere. btw on that, did the
timeline/syncobj documentation patch land by now? Just trying to make
sure that doesn't get lost for another few months or so :-/

Cheers, Daniel

>
> Christian.
>
> > -Daniel
> >
> >> Christian.
> >>
> >>> Of course there's still the problem that many drivers don't forward the
> >>> cache coherency calls for begin/end cpu access, so in a bunch of cases
> >>> you'll cache cacheline dirt soup. But that's kinda standard procedure for
> >>> dma-buf :-P
> >>>
> >>> But yeah trying to handle the mmap as an importer, bypassing the export:
> >>> nope. The one exception is if you have some kind of fancy gart with
> >>> cpu-visible pci bar (like at least integrated intel gpus have). But in
> >>> that case the mmap very much looks&acts like device access in every way.
> >>>
> >>> Cheers, Daniel
> >>>
> >>>> Regards,
> >>>> Christian.
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>> -Chris
> >
>


-- 
Daniel Vetter
Software Engineer, Intel Corporation
http://blog.ffwll.ch
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