On 09/01/17 14:54, Will Deacon wrote: > On Mon, Jan 09, 2017 at 11:24:04AM +0000, Robin Murphy wrote: >> On 06/01/17 21:51, Andy Lutomirski wrote: >>> On Fri, Jan 6, 2017 at 10:32 AM, Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> On 06/01/17 17:48, Jean-Philippe Brucker wrote: >>>>> It used to work with 4.9, but since 9491ae4 ("mm: don't cap request size >>>>> based on read-ahead setting") unlocked read-ahead, we quickly run into >>>>> the limit of swiotlb and panic: >>>>> >>>>> [ 5.382359] virtio-mmio 1c130000.virtio_block: swiotlb buffer is full >>>>> (sz: 491520 bytes) >>>>> [ 5.382452] virtio-mmio 1c130000.virtio_block: DMA: Out of SW-IOMMU >>>>> space for 491520 bytes >>>>> [ 5.382531] Kernel panic - not syncing: DMA: Random memory could be >>>>> DMA written >>>>> ... >>>>> [ 5.383148] [<ffff0000083ad754>] swiotlb_map_page+0x194/0x1a0 >>>>> [ 5.383226] [<ffff000008096bb8>] __swiotlb_map_page+0x20/0x88 >>>>> [ 5.383320] [<ffff0000084bf738>] vring_map_one_sg.isra.1+0x70/0x88 >>>>> [ 5.383417] [<ffff0000084c04fc>] virtqueue_add_sgs+0x2ec/0x4e8 >>>>> [ 5.383505] [<ffff00000856d99c>] __virtblk_add_req+0x9c/0x1a8 >>>>> ... >>>>> [ 5.384449] [<ffff0000081829c4>] ondemand_readahead+0xfc/0x2b8 >>>>> >>>>> Commit 9491ae4 caps the read-ahead request to a limit set by the backing >>>>> device. For virtio-blk, it is infinite (as set by the call to >>>>> blk_queue_max_hw_sectors in virtblk_probe). >>>>> >>>>> I'm not sure how to fix this. Setting an arbitrary sector limit in the >>>>> virtio-blk driver seems unfair to other users. Maybe we should check if >>>>> the device is behind a hardware IOMMU before using the DMA API? >>>> >>>> Hmm, this looks more like the virtio_block device simply has the wrong >>>> DMA mask to begin with. For virtio-pci we set the streaming DMA mask to >>>> 64 bits - should a platform device not be similarly capable? >>> >>> If it's not, then turning off DMA API will cause random corruption. >>> ISTM one way or another the bug is in either the DMA ops or in the >>> driver initialization. >> >> OK, having looked a little deeper, I reckon virtio_mmio_probe() is >> indeed missing a dma_set_mask() call compared to its PCI friends. The >> only question then is where does virtio-mmio stand with respect to >> legacy/modern/44-bit/64-bit etc.? > > Legacy virtio-mmio has a variable page granule (GuestPageSize), so the > 44-bit limitation shouldn't apply. The legacy spec doesn't actually > initialise GuestPageSize in the example initialisation sequence, but > Linux does. Non-legacy uses absolute, 64-bit addresses regardless of > transport, so yes, it might be as simple as adding: > > dma_set_mask_and_coherent(&pdev->dev, DMA_BIT_MASK(64)); > > to virtio_mmio_probe. Jean-Philippe -- does that fix things for you? Yes, setting the DMA mask to 64 bits seems to fix my issue. Thank, Jean-Philippe _______________________________________________ Virtualization mailing list Virtualization@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/virtualization