On 26/05/18 01:35, Jacob Pan wrote: >>>> Not exactly, it's the IOMMU driver that makes sure all LPIG in its >>>> queues are submitted by the above flush call. In more details the >>>> flow is: >>>> >>>> * Either device driver calls unbind()/sva_device_shutdown(), or the >>>> process exits. >>>> * If the device driver called, then it already told the device to >>>> stop using the PASID. Otherwise we use the mm_exit() callback to >>>> tell the device driver to stop using the PASID. > Sorry I still need more clarification. For the PASID termination > initiated by vfio unbind, I don't see device driver given a chance to > stop PASID. Seems just call __iommu_sva_unbind_device() which already > assume device stopped issuing DMA with the PASID. > So it is the vfio unbind caller responsible for doing driver callback > to stop DMA on a given PASID? Yes, but I don't know how to implement this. Since PCI doesn't formalize the PASID stop mechanism and the device doesn't have a kernel driver, VFIO would need help from the userspace driver for stopping PASID (notify the userspace driver when an other process exits). >>>> * In either case, when receiving a stop request from the driver, >>>> the device sends the LPIGs to the IOMMU queue. >>>> * Then, the flush call above ensures that the IOMMU reports the >>>> LPIG with iommu_report_device_fault. >>>> * While submitting all LPIGs for this PASID to the work queue, >>>> ipof_queue_fault also picked up all partial faults, so the partial >>>> list is clean. >>>> >>>> Maybe I should improve this comment? >>>> >>> thanks for explaining. LPIG submission is done by device >>> asynchronously w.r.t. driver stopping/decommission PASID. >> >> Hmm, it should really be synchronous, otherwise there is no way to >> know when the PASID can be decommissioned. We need a guarantee such >> as the one in 6.20.1 of the PCIe spec, "Managing PASID TLP Prefix >> Usage": >> >> "When the stop request mechanism indicates completion, the Function >> has: >> * Completed all Non-Posted Requests associated with this PASID. >> * Flushed to the host all Posted Requests addressing host memory in >> all TCs that were used by the PASID." >> >> That's in combination with "The function shall [...] finish >> transmitting any multi-page Page Request Messages for this PASID >> (i.e. send the Page Request Message with the L bit Set)." from the >> ATS spec. >> > I am not contesting on the device side, what I meant was from the > host IOMMU driver perspective, LPIG is received via IOMMU host queue, > therefore asynchronous. Not sure about ARM, but on VT-d LPIG submission > could meet queue full condition. So per VT-d spec, iommu will generate a > successful auto response to the device. At this point, assume we > already stopped the given PASID on the device, there might not be > another LPIG sent for the device. Therefore, you could have a partial > list. I think we can just drop the requests in the partial list for > that PASID until the PASID gets re-allocated. Indeed, I'll add this in next version. For a complete solution to the queue-full condition (which seems to behave the same way on ARM) I was thinking the IOMMU driver should also have a method for removing all partial faults when detecting a queue overflow. Since it doesn't know which PRGs did receive an auto-response, all it can do is remove all partial faults, for all devices using this queue. But freeing the stuck partial faults in flush() and remove_device() should be good enough Thanks, Jean -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html