On Mon, Dec 11, 2023 at 01:27:49PM -0800, Nicolin Chen wrote: > On Fri, Dec 08, 2023 at 09:47:26PM -0400, Jason Gunthorpe wrote: > > What is in a Nested domain: > > ARM: A CD table pointer > > Nesting domains are created for every unique CD table top pointer. > > I think we basically implemented in a way of syncing STE, i,e, > vSTE.Config must be "S1 Translate" besides a CD table pointer, > and a nested domain is freed when vSTE.Config=BYPASS even if a > CD table pointer is present, right? Yes, but you can also de-duplicate the nested domains based on the CD table pointer. It is not as critical for ARM as others, but may still be worth doing. > > To make this work the iommu needs to be programmed with: > > AMD: A vDomain-ID -> pDomain-ID table > > A vRID -> pRID table > > This is all bound to some "virtual function" > > ARM: A vRID -> pRID table > > The vCMDQ is bound to a VM_ID, so to the Nesting Parent > > VCMDQ also has something called "virtual interface" that holds > a VMID and a list of CMDQ queues, which might be a bit similar > to AMD's "virtual function". Yeah, there must be some kind of logical grouping of HW objects to build that kind of stuff. > > The vRID->pRID table should be some mostly common > > IOMMUFD_DEV_ASSIGN_VIRTUAL_ID. AMD will need to pass in the virtual > > function ID and ARM will need to pass in the Nesting Parent ID. > > It sounds like our previous IOMMUFD_SET/UNSET_IDEV_DATA. I'm > wondering if we need to make it exclusive to the ID assigning? > Maybe set_idev_data could be reused for other potential cases? No, it should be an API only for the ID > If we do implement an IOMMUFD_DEV_ASSIGN_VIRTUAL_ID, do we need > an IOMMUFD_DEV_RESIGN_VIRTUAL_ID? (or better word than resign). I don't think so.. The vRID is basically fixed, if it needs to be changed then the device can be destroyed (or assign can just change it) > Could the structure just look like this? > struct iommu_dev_assign_virtual_id { > __u32 size; > __u32 dev_id; > __u32 id_type; > __u32 id; > }; It needs to take in the viommu_id also, and I'd make the id 64 bits just for good luck. > > In many ways the nesting parent/virtual function are very similar > > things. Perhaps ARM should also create a virtual function object which > > is just welded to the nesting parent for API consistency. > > A virtual function that holds an S2 domain/iopt + a VMID? If > this is for VCMDQ, the VMCDQ extension driver has that kinda > object holding an S2 domain: I implemented as the extension > function at the end of arm_smmu_finalise_s2() previously. Not so much hold a S2, but that the VMID would be forced to be shared amung them somehow. > > IOMMUFD_DEV_INVALIDATE should be introduced with the same design as > > HWPT invalidate. This would be used for AMD/ARM's ATC invalidation > > (and just force the stream ID, userspace must direct the vRID to the > > correct dev_id). > > SMMU's CD invalidations could fall into this category too. Yes, I forgot to look closely at the CD/GCR3 table invalidations :( I actually can't tell how AMD invalidates any GCR3 cache, maybe INVALIDATE_DEVTAB_ENTRY? > > Then in yet another series we can tackle the entire "virtual function" > > vRID/pRID translation stuff when the mmapable queue thing is > > introduced. > > VCMDQ is also a mmapable queue. I feel that there could be > more common stuff between "virtual function" and "virtual > interface", I'll need to take a look at AMD's stuff though. I'm not thinking of two things right now at least.. > I previously drafted something to test it out with iommufd. > Basically it needs the pairing of vRID/pRID in attach_dev() > and another ioctl to mmap/config user queue(s): > +struct iommu_hwpt_cache_config_tegra241_vcmdq { > + __u32 vcmdq_id; // queue id > + __u32 vcmdq_log2size; // queue size > + __aligned_u64 vcmdq_base; // queue guest PA > +}; vRID/pRID pairing should come from IOMMUFD_DEV_ASSIGN_VIRTUAL_ID. When a HWPT is allocated it would be connected to the viommu_id and then it would all be bundled together in the HW somehow >From there you can ask the viommu_id to setup a queue. Jason