Re: [RFC RESEND 00/16] Split IOMMU DMA mapping operation to two steps

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 




On 10.06.24 17:12, Zeng, Oak wrote:
Hi Jason, Leon,

I come back to this thread to ask a question. Per the discussion in another thread, I have integrated the new dma-mapping API (the first 6 patches of this series) to DRM subsystem. The new API seems fit pretty good to our purpose, better than scatter-gather dma-mapping. So we want to continue work with you to adopt this new API.

Did you test the new API in RDMA subsystem? Or this RFC series was just some untested codes sending out to get people's design feedback? Do you have refined version for us to try? I ask because we are seeing some issues but not sure whether it is caused by the new API. We are debugging but it would be good to also ask at the same time.

Hi, Zeng

I have tested this patch series. And a patch about NVMe will cause some call trace. But if you revert this patch about NVMe, the whole patches can work well. You can develop your patches based on this patch series.

It seems that "some agreements can not be reached" about NVMe. So NVMe patch can not work well. I do not delve into this NVMe patch.

Zhu Yanjun


Cc Himal/Krishna who are also working/testing the new API.

Thanks,
Oak

-----Original Message-----
From: Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@xxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, May 3, 2024 12:43 PM
To: Zeng, Oak <oak.zeng@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: leon@xxxxxxxxxx; Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxx>; Robin Murphy
<robin.murphy@xxxxxxx>; Marek Szyprowski
<m.szyprowski@xxxxxxxxxxx>; Joerg Roedel <joro@xxxxxxxxxx>; Will
Deacon <will@xxxxxxxxxx>; Chaitanya Kulkarni <chaitanyak@xxxxxxxxxx>;
Brost, Matthew <matthew.brost@xxxxxxxxx>; Hellstrom, Thomas
<thomas.hellstrom@xxxxxxxxx>; Jonathan Corbet <corbet@xxxxxxx>; Jens
Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx>; Keith Busch <kbusch@xxxxxxxxxx>; Sagi
Grimberg <sagi@xxxxxxxxxxx>; Yishai Hadas <yishaih@xxxxxxxxxx>;
Shameer Kolothum <shameerali.kolothum.thodi@xxxxxxxxxx>; Tian, Kevin
<kevin.tian@xxxxxxxxx>; Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@xxxxxxxxxx>;
Jérôme Glisse <jglisse@xxxxxxxxxx>; Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-
foundation.org>; linux-doc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx;
linux-block@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-rdma@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx;
iommu@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-nvme@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx;
kvm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-mm@xxxxxxxxx; Bart Van Assche
<bvanassche@xxxxxxx>; Damien Le Moal
<damien.lemoal@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; Amir Goldstein
<amir73il@xxxxxxxxx>; josef@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx; Martin K. Petersen
<martin.petersen@xxxxxxxxxx>; daniel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; Williams, Dan J
<dan.j.williams@xxxxxxxxx>; jack@xxxxxxxx; Leon Romanovsky
<leonro@xxxxxxxxxx>; Zhu Yanjun <zyjzyj2000@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [RFC RESEND 00/16] Split IOMMU DMA mapping operation to
two steps

On Thu, May 02, 2024 at 11:32:55PM +0000, Zeng, Oak wrote:

Instead of teaching DMA to know these specific datatypes, let's separate
existing DMA mapping routine to two steps and give an option to
advanced
callers (subsystems) perform all calculations internally in advance and
map pages later when it is needed.
I looked into how this scheme can be applied to DRM subsystem and GPU
drivers.
I figured RDMA can apply this scheme because RDMA can calculate the
iova size. Per my limited knowledge of rdma, user can register a
memory region (the reg_user_mr vfunc) and memory region's sized is
used to pre-allocate iova space. And in the RDMA use case, it seems
the user registered region can be very big, e.g., 512MiB or even GiB
In RDMA the iova would be linked to the SVA granual we discussed
previously.

In GPU driver, we have a few use cases where we need dma-mapping. Just
name two:
1) userptr: it is user malloc'ed/mmap'ed memory and registers to gpu
(in Intel's driver it is through a vm_bind api, similar to mmap). A
userptr can be of any random size, depending on user malloc
size. Today we use dma-map-sg for this use case. The down side of
our approach is, during userptr invalidation, even if user only
munmap partially of an userptr, we invalidate the whole userptr from
gpu page table, because there is no way for us to partially
dma-unmap the whole sg list. I think we can try your new API in this
case. The main benefit of the new approach is the partial munmap
case.
Yes, this is one of the main things it will improve.

We will have to pre-allocate iova for each userptr, and we have many
userptrs of random size... So we might be not as efficient as RDMA
case where I assume user register a few big memory regions.
You are already doing this. dma_map_sg() does exactly the same IOVA
allocation under the covers.

2) system allocator: it is malloc'ed/mmap'ed memory be used for GPU
program directly, without any other extra driver API call. We call
this use case system allocator.
For system allocator, driver have no knowledge of which virtual
address range is valid in advance. So when GPU access a
malloc'ed/mmap'ed address, we have a page fault. We then look up a
CPU vma which contains the fault address. I guess we can use the CPU
vma size to allocate the iova space of the same size?
No. You'd follow what we discussed in the other thread.

If you do a full SVA then you'd split your MM space into granuals and
when a fault hits a granual you'd allocate the IOVA for the whole
granual. RDMA ODP is using a 512M granual currently.

If you are doing sub ranges then you'd probably allocate the IOVA for
the well defined sub range (assuming the typical use case isn't huge)

But there will be a true difficulty to apply your scheme to this use
case. It is related to the STICKY flag. As I understand it, the
sticky flag is designed for driver to mark "this page/pfn has been
populated, no need to re-populate again", roughly...Unlike userptr
and RDMA use cases where the backing store of a buffer is always in
system memory, in the system allocator use case, the backing store
can be changing b/t system memory and GPU's device private
memory. Even worse, we have to assume the data migration b/t system
and GPU is dynamic. When data is migrated to GPU, we don't need
dma-map. And when migration happens to a pfn with STICKY flag, we
still need to repopulate this pfn. So you can see, it is not easy to
apply this scheme to this use case. At least I can't see an obvious
way.
You are already doing this today, you are keeping the sg list around
until you unmap it.

Instead of keeping the sg list you'd keep a much smaller datastructure
per-granual. The sticky bit is simply a convient way for ODP to manage
the smaller data structure, you don't have to use it.

But you do need to keep track of what pages in the granual have been
DMA mapped - sg list was doing this before. This could be a simple
bitmap array matching the granual size.

Looking (far) forward we may be able to have a "replace" API that
allows installing a new page unconditionally regardless of what is
already there.

Jason

--
Best Regards,
Yanjun.Zhu





[Index of Archives]     [Kernel Newbies]     [Security]     [Netfilter]     [Bugtraq]     [Linux FS]     [Yosemite Forum]     [MIPS Linux]     [ARM Linux]     [Linux Security]     [Linux RAID]     [Samba]     [Video 4 Linux]     [Device Mapper]     [Linux Resources]

  Powered by Linux