> From: Liu, Yi L <yi.l.liu@xxxxxxxxx> > Sent: Friday, December 1, 2023 3:05 PM > > On 2023/12/1 13:19, Tian, Kevin wrote: > >> From: Nicolin Chen <nicolinc@xxxxxxxxxx> > >> Sent: Friday, December 1, 2023 12:50 PM > >> > >> On Fri, Dec 01, 2023 at 11:51:26AM +0800, Yi Liu wrote: > >>> On 2023/11/29 08:57, Jason Gunthorpe wrote: > >>>> On Tue, Nov 28, 2023 at 04:51:21PM -0800, Nicolin Chen wrote: > >>>>>>> I also thought about making this out_driver_error_code per HW. > >>>>>>> Yet, an error can be either per array or per entry/quest. The > >>>>>>> array-related error should be reported in the array structure > >>>>>>> that is a core uAPI, v.s. the per-HW entry structure. Though > >>>>>>> we could still report an array error in the entry structure > >>>>>>> at the first entry (or indexed by "array->entry_num")? > >>>>>>> > >>>>>> > >>>>>> why would there be an array error? array is just a software > >>>>>> entity containing actual HW invalidation cmds. If there is > >>>>>> any error with the array itself it should be reported via > >>>>>> ioctl errno. > >>>>> > >>>>> User array reading is a software operation, but kernel array > >>>>> reading is a hardware operation that can raise an error when > >>>>> the memory location to the array is incorrect or so. > >>>> > >>>> Well, we shouldn't get into a situation like that.. By the time the HW > >>>> got the address it should be valid. > >>>> > >>>>> With that being said, I think errno (-EIO) could do the job, > >>>>> as you suggested too. > >>>> > >>>> Do we have any idea what HW failures can be generated by the > >> commands > >>>> this will execture? IIRC I don't remember seeing any smmu specific > >>>> codes related to invalid invalidation? Everything is a valid input? > >>>> > >>>> Can vt-d fail single commands? What about AMD? > >>> > >>> Intel VT-d side, after each invalidation request, there is a wait > >>> descriptor which either provide an interrupt or an address for the > >>> hw to notify software the request before the wait descriptor has been > >>> completed. While, if there is error happened on the invalidation request, > >>> a flag (IQE, ICE, ITE) would be set in the Fault Status Register, and some > >>> detailed information would be recorded in the Invalidation Queue Error > >>> Record Register. So an invalidation request may be failed with some > error > >>> reported. If no error, will return completion via the wait descriptor. Is > >>> this what you mean by "fail a single command"? > >> > >> I see the current VT-d series marking those as "REVISIT". How > >> will it report an error to the user space from those register? > >> > >> Are they global status registers so that it might be difficult > >> to direct the error to the nested domain for an event fd? > >> > > > > They are global registers but invalidation queue is also the global > > resource. intel-iommu driver polls the status register after queueing > > new invalidation descriptors. The submission is serialized. > > > > If the error is related to a descriptor itself (e.g. format issue) then > > the head register points to the problematic descriptor so software > > can direct it to the related domain. > > > > If the error is related to device tlb invalidation (e.g. timeout) there > > is no way to associate the error with a specific descriptor by current > > spec. But intel-iommu driver batches descriptors per domain so > > we can still direct the error to the nested domain. > > > > But I don't see the need of doing it via eventfd. > > > > The poll semantics in intel-iommu driver is essentially a sync model. > > vt-d spec does allow software to optionally enable notification upon > > those errors but it's not used so far. > > > > With that I still prefer to having driver-specific error code defined > > in the entry. If ARM is an event-driven model then we can define > > that field at least in vtd specific data structure. > > > > btw given vtd doesn't use native format in uAPI it doesn't make > > sense to forward descriptor formatting errors back to userspace. > > Those, if happen, are driver's own problem. intel-iommu driver > > should verify the uAPI structure and return -EINVAL or proper > > errno to userspace purely in software. > > > > With that Yi please just define error codes for device tlb related > > errors for vtd. > > hmmm, this sounds like customized error code. is it? So far, VT-d yes. there is no need to replicate hardware registers/bits if most of them are irrelevant to userspace. > spec has two errors (ICE and ITE). ITE is valuable to let userspace > know. For ICE, looks like no much value. Intel iommu driver should > be responsible to submit a valid device-tlb invalidation to device. it's an invalid completion message from the device which could be caused by various reasons (not exactly due to the invalidation request by iommu driver). so it still makes sense to forward. > is it? > > -- > Regards, > Yi Liu