Re: [PATCH 4/6] arm64/io: Provide a WC friendly __iowriteXX_copy()

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On Fri, 2024-02-23 at 09:07 +0000, David Laight wrote:
> From: Jason Gunthorpe
> > Sent: 22 February 2024 22:36
> > To: David Laight <David.Laight@xxxxxxxxxx>
> > 
> > On Thu, Feb 22, 2024 at 10:05:04PM +0000, David Laight wrote:
> > > From: Jason Gunthorpe
> > > > Sent: 21 February 2024 01:17
> > > > 
> > > > The kernel provides driver support for using write combining IO memory
> > > > through the __iowriteXX_copy() API which is commonly used as an optional
> > > > optimization to generate 16/32/64 byte MemWr TLPs in a PCIe environment.
> > > > 
> > > ...
> > > > Implement __iowrite32/64_copy() specifically for ARM64 and use inline
> > > > assembly to build consecutive blocks of STR instructions. Provide direct
> > > > support for 64/32/16 large TLP generation in this manner. Optimize for
> > > > common constant lengths so that the compiler can directly inline the store
> > > > blocks.
> > > ...
> > > > +/*
> > > > + * This generates a memcpy that works on a from/to address which is aligned to
> > > > + * bits. Count is in terms of the number of bits sized quantities to copy. It
> > > > + * optimizes to use the STR groupings when possible so that it is WC friendly.
> > > > + */
> > > > +#define memcpy_toio_aligned(to, from, count, bits)                        \
> > > > +	({                                                                \
> > > > +		volatile u##bits __iomem *_to = to;                       \
> > > > +		const u##bits *_from = from;                              \
> > > > +		size_t _count = count;                                    \
> > > > +		const u##bits *_end_from = _from + ALIGN_DOWN(_count, 8); \
> > > > +                                                                          \
> > > > +		for (; _from < _end_from; _from += 8, _to += 8)           \
> > > > +			__const_memcpy_toio_aligned##bits(_to, _from, 8); \
> > > > +		if ((_count % 8) >= 4) {
> > > 
> > > If (_count & 4) {
> > 
> > That would be obfuscating, IMHO. The compiler doesn't need such things
> > to generate optimal code.
> 
> Try it: https://godbolt.org/z/EvvGrTxv3 
> And it isn't that obfuscated - no more so than your version.
> 
> > > > +			__const_memcpy_toio_aligned##bits(_to, _from, 1); \
> > > > +	})
> > > 
> > > But that looks bit a bit large to be inlined.
> > 
> > You trimmed alot, this #define is in a C file and it is a template to
> > generate the 32 and 64 bit out of line functions. Things are done like
> > this because the 32/64 version are exactly the same logic except just
> > with different types and sizes.
> 
> I missed that in a quick read at 11pm :-(
> 
> Although I doubt that generating long TLP from byte writes is
> really necessary.

I might have gotten confused but I think these are not byte writes.
Remember that the count is in terms of the number of bits sized
quantities to copy so "count == 1" is 4/8 bytes here.

> IIRC you were merging at most 4 writes.
> So better to do a single 32bit write instead.
> (Unless you have misaligned source data - unlikely.)
> 
> While write-combining to generate long TLP is probably mostly
> safe for PCIe targets, there are some that will only handle
> TLP for single 32bit data items.
> Which might be why the code is explicitly requesting 4 byte copies.
> So it may be entirely wrong to write-combine anything except
> the generic memcpy_toio().
> 
> 	David

On anything other than s390x this should only do write-combine if the
memory mapping allows it, no? Meaning a driver that can't handle larger
TLPs really shouldn't use ioremap_wc() then.

On s390x one could argue that our version of __iowriteXX_copy() is
strictly speaking not correct in that zpci_memcpy_toio() doesn't really
use XX bit writes which is why for us memcpy_toio() was actually a
better fit indeed. On the other hand doing 32 bit PCI stores (an s390x
thing) can't combine multiple stores into a single TLP which these
functions are used for and which has much more use cases than forcing a
copy loop with 32/64 bit sized writes which would also be a lot slower
on s390x than an aligned zpci_memcpy_toio().





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