On 2020/12/24 下午3:37, Yongji Xie wrote:
On Thu, Dec 24, 2020 at 10:41 AM Jason Wang <jasowang@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 2020/12/23 下午8:14, Yongji Xie wrote:
On Wed, Dec 23, 2020 at 5:05 PM Jason Wang <jasowang@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 2020/12/22 下午10:52, Xie Yongji wrote:
To support vhost-vdpa bus driver, we need a way to share the
vhost-vdpa backend process's memory with the userspace VDUSE process.
This patch tries to make use of the vhost iotlb message to achieve
that. We will get the shm file from the iotlb message and pass it
to the userspace VDUSE process.
Signed-off-by: Xie Yongji <xieyongji@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
Documentation/driver-api/vduse.rst | 15 +++-
drivers/vdpa/vdpa_user/vduse_dev.c | 147 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
include/uapi/linux/vduse.h | 11 +++
3 files changed, 171 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/vduse.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/vduse.rst
index 623f7b040ccf..48e4b1ba353f 100644
--- a/Documentation/driver-api/vduse.rst
+++ b/Documentation/driver-api/vduse.rst
@@ -46,13 +46,26 @@ The following types of messages are provided by the VDUSE framework now:
- VDUSE_GET_CONFIG: Read from device specific configuration space
+- VDUSE_UPDATE_IOTLB: Update the memory mapping in device IOTLB
+
+- VDUSE_INVALIDATE_IOTLB: Invalidate the memory mapping in device IOTLB
+
Please see include/linux/vdpa.h for details.
-In the data path, VDUSE framework implements a MMU-based on-chip IOMMU
+The data path of userspace vDPA device is implemented in different ways
+depending on the vdpa bus to which it is attached.
+
+In virtio-vdpa case, VDUSE framework implements a MMU-based on-chip IOMMU
driver which supports mapping the kernel dma buffer to a userspace iova
region dynamically. The userspace iova region can be created by passing
the userspace vDPA device fd to mmap(2).
+In vhost-vdpa case, the dma buffer is reside in a userspace memory region
+which will be shared to the VDUSE userspace processs via the file
+descriptor in VDUSE_UPDATE_IOTLB message. And the corresponding address
+mapping (IOVA of dma buffer <-> VA of the memory region) is also included
+in this message.
+
Besides, the eventfd mechanism is used to trigger interrupt callbacks and
receive virtqueue kicks in userspace. The following ioctls on the userspace
vDPA device fd are provided to support that:
diff --git a/drivers/vdpa/vdpa_user/vduse_dev.c b/drivers/vdpa/vdpa_user/vduse_dev.c
index b974333ed4e9..d24aaacb6008 100644
--- a/drivers/vdpa/vdpa_user/vduse_dev.c
+++ b/drivers/vdpa/vdpa_user/vduse_dev.c
@@ -34,6 +34,7 @@
struct vduse_dev_msg {
struct vduse_dev_request req;
+ struct file *iotlb_file;
struct vduse_dev_response resp;
struct list_head list;
wait_queue_head_t waitq;
@@ -325,12 +326,80 @@ static int vduse_dev_set_vq_state(struct vduse_dev *dev,
return ret;
}
+static int vduse_dev_update_iotlb(struct vduse_dev *dev, struct file *file,
+ u64 offset, u64 iova, u64 size, u8 perm)
+{
+ struct vduse_dev_msg *msg;
+ int ret;
+
+ if (!size)
+ return -EINVAL;
+
+ msg = vduse_dev_new_msg(dev, VDUSE_UPDATE_IOTLB);
+ msg->req.size = sizeof(struct vduse_iotlb);
+ msg->req.iotlb.offset = offset;
+ msg->req.iotlb.iova = iova;
+ msg->req.iotlb.size = size;
+ msg->req.iotlb.perm = perm;
+ msg->req.iotlb.fd = -1;
+ msg->iotlb_file = get_file(file);
+
+ ret = vduse_dev_msg_sync(dev, msg);
My feeling is that we should provide consistent API for the userspace
device to use.
E.g we'd better carry the IOTLB message for both virtio/vhost drivers.
It looks to me for virtio drivers we can still use UPDAT_IOTLB message
by using VDUSE file as msg->iotlb_file here.
It's OK for me. One problem is when to transfer the UPDATE_IOTLB
message in virtio cases.
Instead of generating IOTLB messages for userspace.
How about record the mappings (which is a common case for device have
on-chip IOMMU e.g mlx5e and vdpa simlator), then we can introduce ioctl
for userspace to query?
If so, the IOTLB UPDATE is actually triggered by ioctl, but
IOTLB_INVALIDATE is triggered by the message. Is it a little odd?
Good point.
Some questions here:
1) Userspace think the IOTLB was flushed after IOTLB_INVALIDATE syscall
is returned. But this patch doesn't have this guarantee. Can this lead
some issues?
2) I think after VDUSE userspace receives IOTLB_INVALIDATE, it needs to
issue a munmap(). What if it doesn't do that?
Or
how about trigger it when userspace call mmap() on the device fd?
One possible issue is that the IOTLB_UPDATE/INVALIDATE might come after
mmap():
1) When vIOMMU is enabled
2) Guest memory topology has been changed (memory hotplug).
Thanks
Thanks,
Yongji
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