On Thu, 2018-03-01 at 18:09 +0000, Stephen Bates wrote: > > > So Oliver (CC) was having issues getting any of that to work for us. > > > > > > The problem is that acccording to him (I didn't double check the latest > > > patches) you effectively hotplug the PCIe memory into the system when > > > creating struct pages. > > > > > > This cannot possibly work for us. First we cannot map PCIe memory as > > > cachable. (Note that doing so is a bad idea if you are behind a PLX > > > switch anyway since you'd ahve to manage cache coherency in SW). > > > > > > Note: I think the above means it won't work behind a switch on x86 > > either, will it ? > > > Ben > > We have done extensive testing of this series and its predecessors > using PCIe switches from both Broadcom (PLX) and Microsemi. We have > also done testing on x86_64, ARM64 and ppc64el based ARCH with > varying degrees of success. The series as it currently stands only > works on x86_64 but modified (hacky) versions have been made to work > on ARM64. The x86_64 testing has been done on a range of (Intel) > CPUs, servers, PCI EPs (including RDMA NICs from at least three > vendors, NVMe SSDs from at least four vendors and P2P devices from > four vendors) and PCI switches. > > I do find it slightly offensive that you would question the series > even working. I hope you are not suggesting we would submit this > framework multiple times without having done testing on it.... No need to get personal on that. I did specify that this was based on some incomplete understanding of what's going on with that new hack used to create struct pages. As it is, it cannot work on ppc64 however, in part because according to Oliver, we end up mapping things cachable, and in part, because of the address range issues. The latter issue might be fundamental to the approach and unfixable unless we have ways to use hooks for virt_to_page/page_address on these things. Ben. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-rdma" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html