From: Kenneth Lee <liguozhu@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Uacce (Unified/User-space-access-intended Accelerator Framework) is a kernel module targets to provide Shared Virtual Addressing (SVA) between the accelerator and process. This patch add document to explain how it works. Signed-off-by: Kenneth Lee <liguozhu@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Zaibo Xu <xuzaibo@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Zhou Wang <wangzhou1@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Zhangfei Gao <zhangfei.gao@xxxxxxxxxx> --- Documentation/misc-devices/uacce.rst | 297 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 297 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/misc-devices/uacce.rst diff --git a/Documentation/misc-devices/uacce.rst b/Documentation/misc-devices/uacce.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..05c1e09 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/misc-devices/uacce.rst @@ -0,0 +1,297 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +Introduction of Uacce +========================= + +Uacce (Unified/User-space-access-intended Accelerator Framework) targets to +provide Shared Virtual Addressing (SVA) between accelerators and processes. +So accelerator can access any data structure of the main cpu. +This differs from the data sharing between cpu and io device, which share +data content rather than address. +Because of the unified address, hardware and user space of process can +share the same virtual address in the communication. +Uacce takes the hardware accelerator as a heterogeneous processor, while +IOMMU share the same CPU page tables and as a result the same translation +from va to pa. + + __________________________ __________________________ + | | | | + | User application (CPU) | | Hardware Accelerator | + |__________________________| |__________________________| + + | | + | va | va + V V + __________ __________ + | | | | + | MMU | | IOMMU | + |__________| |__________| + | | + | | + V pa V pa + _______________________________________ + | | + | Memory | + |_______________________________________| + + + +Architecture +------------ + +Uacce is the kernel module, taking charge of iommu and address sharing. +The user drivers and libraries are called WarpDrive. + +A virtual concept, queue, is used for the communication. It provides a +FIFO-like interface. And it maintains a unified address space between the +application and all involved hardware. + + ___________________ ________________ + | | user API | | + | WarpDrive library | ------------> | user driver | + |___________________| |________________| + | | + | | + | queue fd | + | | + | | + v | + ___________________ _________ | + | | | | | mmap memory + | Other framework | | uacce | | r/w interface + | crypto/nic/others | |_________| | + |___________________| | + | | | + | register | register | + | | | + | | | + | _________________ __________ | + | | | | | | + ------------- | Device Driver | | IOMMU | | + |_________________| |__________| | + | | + | V + | ___________________ + | | | + -------------------------- | Device(Hardware) | + |___________________| + + +How does it work +================ + +Uacce uses mmap and IOMMU to play the trick. + +Uacce create a chrdev for every device registered to it. New queue is +created when user application open the chrdev. The file descriptor is used +as the user handle of the queue. +The accelerator device present itself as an Uacce object, which exports as +chrdev to the user space. The user application communicates with the +hardware by ioctl (as control path) or share memory (as data path). + +The control path to the hardware is via file operation, while data path is +via mmap space of the queue fd. + +The queue file address space: + +enum uacce_qfrt { + UACCE_QFRT_MMIO = 0, /* device mmio region */ + UACCE_QFRT_DKO = 1, /* device kernel-only region */ + UACCE_QFRT_DUS = 2, /* device user share region */ + UACCE_QFRT_SS = 3, /* static shared memory (for non-sva devices) */ + UACCE_QFRT_MAX = 16, +}; + +All regions are optional and differ from device type to type. The +communication protocol is wrapped by the user driver. + +The device mmio region is mapped to the hardware mmio space. It is generally +used for doorbell or other notification to the hardware. It is not fast enough +as data channel. + +The device kernel-only region is necessary only if the device IOMMU has no +PASID support or it cannot send kernel-only address request. In this case, if +kernel need to share memory with the device, kernel has to share iova address +space with the user process via mmap, to prevent iova conflict. + +The device user share region is used for share data buffer between user process +and device. It can be merged into other regions. But a separated region can help +on device state management. For example, the device can be started when this +region is mapped. + +The static share virtual memory region is used for share data buffer with the +device and can be shared among queues / devices. +Its size is set according to the application requirement. + + +The user API +------------ + +We adopt a polling style interface in the user space: :: + + int wd_request_queue(struct wd_queue *q); + void wd_release_queue(struct wd_queue *q); + int wd_send(struct wd_queue *q, void *req); + int wd_recv(struct wd_queue *q, void **req); + int wd_recv_sync(struct wd_queue *q, void **req); + void wd_flush(struct wd_queue *q); + +wd_recv_sync() is a wrapper to its non-sync version. It will trap into +kernel and wait until the queue become available. + +If the queue do not support SVA/SVM. The following helper functions +can be used to create Static Virtual Share Memory: :: + + void *wd_reserve_memory(struct wd_queue *q, size_t size); + int wd_share_reserved_memory(struct wd_queue *q, + struct wd_queue *target_q); + +The user API is not mandatory. It is simply a suggestion and hint what the +kernel interface is supposed to be. + + +The user driver +--------------- + +The queue file mmap space will need a user driver to wrap the communication +protocol. Uacce provides some attributes in sysfs for the user driver to +match the right accelerator accordingly. +More details in Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-driver-uacce. + + +The Uacce register API +----------------------- +The register API is defined in uacce.h. + +struct uacce_interface { + char name[32]; + unsigned int flags; + struct uacce_ops *ops; +}; + +According to the IOMMU capability, uacce_interface flags can be: + +UACCE_DEV_SVA (0x1) + Support shared virtual address + +UACCE_DEV_SHARE_DOMAIN (0) + This is used for device which does not support pasid. + +struct uacce_device *uacce_register(struct device *parent, + struct uacce_interface *interface); +void uacce_unregister(struct uacce_device *uacce); + +uacce_register results can be: +a. If uacce module is not compiled, ERR_PTR(-ENODEV) +b. Succeed with the desired flags +c. Succeed with the negotiated flags, for example + uacce_interface.flags = UACCE_DEV_SVA but uacce->flags = ~UACCE_DEV_SVA +So user driver need check return value as well as the negotiated uacce->flags. + + +The Memory Sharing Model +------------------------ +The perfect form of a Uacce device is to support SVM/SVA. We built this upon +Jean Philippe Brucker's SVA patches. [1] + +If the hardware support UACCE_DEV_SVA, the user process's page table is +shared to the opened queue. So the device can access any address in the +process address space. +And it can raise a page fault if the physical page is not available yet. +It can also access the address in the kernel space, which is referred by +another page table particular to the kernel. Most of IOMMU implementation can +handle this by a tag on the address request of the device. For example, ARM +SMMU uses SSV bit to indicate that the address request is for kernel or user +space. +Queue file regions can be used: +UACCE_QFRT_MMIO: device mmio region (map to user) +UACCE_QFRT_DUS: device user share (map to dev and user) + +If the device does not support UACCE_DEV_SVA, Uacce allow only one process at +the same time. DMA API cannot be used as well, since Uacce will create an +unmanaged iommu_domain for the device. +Queue file regions can be used: +UACCE_QFRT_MMIO: device mmio region (map to user) +UACCE_QFRT_DKO: device kernel-only (map to dev, no user) +UACCE_QFRT_DUS: device user share (map to dev and user) +UACCE_QFRT_SS: static shared memory (map to devs and user) + + +The Fork Scenario +================= +For a process with allocated queues and shared memory, what happen if it forks +a child? + +The fd of the queue will be duplicated on folk, so the child can send request +to the same queue as its parent. But the requests which is sent from processes +except for the one who opens the queue will be blocked. + +It is recommended to add O_CLOEXEC to the queue file. + +The queue mmap space has a VM_DONTCOPY in its VMA. So the child will lose all +those VMAs. + +This is a reason why Uacce does not adopt the mode used in VFIO and +InfiniBand. Both solutions can set any user pointer for hardware sharing. +But they cannot support fork when the dma is in process. Or the +"Copy-On-Write" procedure will make the parent process lost its physical +pages. + + +Difference to the VFIO and IB framework +--------------------------------------- +The essential function of Uacce is to let the device access the user +address directly. There are many device drivers doing the same in the kernel. +And both VFIO and IB can provide similar functions in framework level. + +But Uacce has a different goal: "share address space". It is +not taken the request to the accelerator as an enclosure data structure. It +takes the accelerator as another thread of the same process. So the +accelerator can refer to any address used by the process. + +Both VFIO and IB are taken this as "memory sharing", not "address sharing". +They care more on sharing the block of memory. But if there is an address +stored in the block and referring to another memory region. The address may +not be valid. + +By adding more constraints to the VFIO and IB framework, in some sense, we may +achieve a similar goal. But we gave it up finally. Both VFIO and IB have extra +assumption which is unnecessary to Uacce. They may hurt each other if we +try to merge them together. + +VFIO manages resource of a hardware as a "virtual device". If a device need to +serve a separated application. It must isolate the resource as a separate +virtual device. And the life cycle of the application and virtual device are +unnecessary unrelated. And most concepts, such as bus, driver, probe and +so on, to make it as a "device" is unnecessary either. And the logic added to +VFIO to make address sharing do no help on "creating a virtual device". + +IB creates a "verbs" standard for sharing memory region to another remote +entity. Most of these verbs are to make memory region between entities to be +synchronized. This is not what accelerator need. Accelerator is in the same +memory system with the CPU. It refers to the same memory system among CPU and +devices. So the local memory terms/verbs are good enough for it. Extra "verbs" +are not necessary. And its queue (like queue pair in IB) is the communication +channel direct to the accelerator hardware. There is nothing about memory +itself. + +Further, both VFIO and IB use the "pin" (get_user_page) way to lock local +memory in place. This is flexible. But it can cause other problems. For +example, if the user process fork a child process. The COW procedure may make +the parent process lost its pages which are sharing with the device. These may +be fixed in the future. But is not going to be easy. (There is a discussion +about this on Linux Plumbers Conference 2018 [2]) + +So we choose to build the solution directly on top of IOMMU interface. IOMMU +is the essential way for device and process to share their page mapping from +the hardware perspective. It will be safe to create a software solution on +this assumption. Uacce manages the IOMMU interface for the accelerator +device, so the device driver can export some of the resources to the user +space. Uacce than can make sure the device and the process have the same +address space. + + +References +========== +.. [1] http://jpbrucker.net/sva/ +.. [2] https://lwn.net/Articles/774411/ -- 2.7.4