* Paul Brook (paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) wrote: > > > The right approach IMHO is to convert devices to use bus-specific > > > functions to access memory. The bus specific functions should have > > > a device argument as the first parameter. > > > > As for ATS, the internal api to handle the device's dma reqeust needs > > a notion of a translated vs. an untranslated request. IOW, if qemu ever > > had a device with ATS support, the device would use its local cache to > > translate the dma address and then submit a translated request to the > > pci bus (effectively doing a raw cpu physical memory* in that case). > > Really? Can you provide an documentation to support this claim? > My impression is that there is no difference between translated and > untranslated devices, and the translation is explicitly disabled by software. ATS allows an I/O device to request a translation from the IOMMU. The device can then cache that translation and use the translated address in a PCIe memory transaction. PCIe uses a couple of previously reserved bits in the transaction layer packet header to describe the address type for memory transactions. The default (00) maps to legacy PCIe and describes the memory address as untranslated. This is the normal mode, and could then incur a translation if an IOMMU is present and programmed w/ page tables, etc. as is passes through the host bridge. Another type is simply a transaction requesting a translation. This is new, and allows a device to request (and cache) a translation from the IOMMU for subsequent use. The third type is a memory transaction tagged as already translated. This is the type of transaction an ATS capable I/O device will generate when it was able to translate the memory address from its own cache. Of course, there's also an invalidation request that the IOMMU can send to ATS capable I/O devices to invalidate the cached translation. thanks, -chris -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kvm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html