Hi Martin, we've always had a bit of a problem communicating the block layer queue limits to the DMA layer, which needs to respect them when an IOMMU that could merge segments is used. Unfortunately most drivers don't get this right. Oddly enough we've been mostly getting away with it, although lately dma-debug has been catching a few of those issues. The segment merging fix for devices with PRP-like structures seems to have escalated this a bit. The first patch fixes the actual report from Sebastian, while the rest fix every drivers that appears to have the problem based on a code audit looking for drivers using blk_queue_max_segment_size, blk_queue_segment_boundary or blk_queue_virt_boundary and calling dma_map_sg eventually. For SCSI drivers I've taken the blk_queue_virt_boundary setting to the SCSI core, similar to how we did it for the other two settings a while ago. This also deals with the fact that the DMA layer settings are on a per-device granularity, so the per-device settings in a few SCSI drivers can't actually work in an IOMMU environment. It would be nice to eventually pass these limits as arguments to dma_map_sg, but that is a far too big series for the 5.2 merge window. Changes since v1: - dropped block layer parts merged by Jens - dropped the usb-storage / uas changes, as the virt_boundary usage there will be dropped soon - reworked the mpt3sas / megaraid_sas changes to keep per-device settings