On Fri, Nov 06, 2020 at 12:44:59PM -0700, Logan Gunthorpe wrote: > > > On 2020-11-06 12:30 p.m., Jason Gunthorpe wrote: > >> I certainly can't make decisions for code that isn't currently > >> upstream. > > > > The rdma drivers are all upstream, what are you thinking about? > > Really? I feel like you should know what I mean here... > > I mean upstream code that actually uses the APIs that I'd have to > introduce. I can't say here's an API feature that no code uses but the > already upstream rdma driver might use eventually. It's fairly easy to > send patches that make the necessary changes when someone adds a use of > those changes inside the rdma code. Sure, but that doesn't mean you have to actively design things to be unusable beyond this narrow case. The RDMA drivers are all there, all upstream, if this work is accepted then the changes to insert P2P pages into their existing mmap flows is a reasonable usecase to consider at this point when building core code APIs. You shouldn't add dead code, but at least have a design in mind for what it needs to look like and some allowance. > >> Ultimately, if you aren't using the genpool you will have to implement > >> your own mmap operation that somehow allocates the pages and your own > >> page_free hook. > > > > Sure, the mlx5 driver already has a specialized alloctor for it's BAR > > pages. > > So it *might* make sense to carve out a common helper to setup a VMA for > P2PDMA to do the vm_flags check and set VM_MIXEDMAP... but besides that, > there's no code that would be common to the two cases. I think the whole insertion of P2PDMA pages into a VMA should be similar to io_remap_pfn() so all the VM flags, pgprot_decrypted and other subtle details are all in one place. (also it needs a pgprot_decrypted before doing vmf_insert, I just learned that this month) > >> I also don't expect this to be going upstream in the near term so don't > >> get too excited about using it. > > > > I don't know, it is actually not that horrible, the GUP and IOMMU > > related changes are simpler than I expected > > I think the deal breaker is the SGL hack and the fact that there are > important IOMMU implementations that won't have support. Yes, that is pretty hacky, maybe someone will have a better idea Jason