iommu_hwpt_pgfaults represent fault messages that the userspace can retrieve. Multiple iommu_hwpt_pgfaults might be put in an iopf group, with the IOMMU_PGFAULT_FLAGS_LAST_PAGE flag set only for the last iommu_hwpt_pgfault. An iommu_hwpt_page_response is a response message that the userspace should send to the kernel after finishing handling a group of fault messages. The @dev_id, @pasid, and @grpid fields in the message identify an outstanding iopf group for a device. The @cookie field, which matches the cookie field of the last fault in the group, will be used by the kernel to look up the pending message. Signed-off-by: Lu Baolu <baolu.lu@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Kevin Tian <kevin.tian@xxxxxxxxx> --- include/uapi/linux/iommufd.h | 83 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 83 insertions(+) diff --git a/include/uapi/linux/iommufd.h b/include/uapi/linux/iommufd.h index 1dfeaa2e649e..4d89ed97b533 100644 --- a/include/uapi/linux/iommufd.h +++ b/include/uapi/linux/iommufd.h @@ -692,4 +692,87 @@ struct iommu_hwpt_invalidate { __u32 __reserved; }; #define IOMMU_HWPT_INVALIDATE _IO(IOMMUFD_TYPE, IOMMUFD_CMD_HWPT_INVALIDATE) + +/** + * enum iommu_hwpt_pgfault_flags - flags for struct iommu_hwpt_pgfault + * @IOMMU_PGFAULT_FLAGS_PASID_VALID: The pasid field of the fault data is + * valid. + * @IOMMU_PGFAULT_FLAGS_LAST_PAGE: It's the last fault of a fault group. + */ +enum iommu_hwpt_pgfault_flags { + IOMMU_PGFAULT_FLAGS_PASID_VALID = (1 << 0), + IOMMU_PGFAULT_FLAGS_LAST_PAGE = (1 << 1), +}; + +/** + * enum iommu_hwpt_pgfault_perm - perm bits for struct iommu_hwpt_pgfault + * @IOMMU_PGFAULT_PERM_READ: request for read permission + * @IOMMU_PGFAULT_PERM_WRITE: request for write permission + * @IOMMU_PGFAULT_PERM_EXEC: (PCIE 10.4.1) request with a PASID that has the + * Execute Requested bit set in PASID TLP Prefix. + * @IOMMU_PGFAULT_PERM_PRIV: (PCIE 10.4.1) request with a PASID that has the + * Privileged Mode Requested bit set in PASID TLP + * Prefix. + */ +enum iommu_hwpt_pgfault_perm { + IOMMU_PGFAULT_PERM_READ = (1 << 0), + IOMMU_PGFAULT_PERM_WRITE = (1 << 1), + IOMMU_PGFAULT_PERM_EXEC = (1 << 2), + IOMMU_PGFAULT_PERM_PRIV = (1 << 3), +}; + +/** + * struct iommu_hwpt_pgfault - iommu page fault data + * @flags: Combination of enum iommu_hwpt_pgfault_flags + * @dev_id: id of the originated device + * @pasid: Process Address Space ID + * @grpid: Page Request Group Index + * @perm: Combination of enum iommu_hwpt_pgfault_perm + * @addr: Fault address + * @length: a hint of how much data the requestor is expecting to fetch. For + * example, if the PRI initiator knows it is going to do a 10MB + * transfer, it could fill in 10MB and the OS could pre-fault in + * 10MB of IOVA. It's default to 0 if there's no such hint. + * @cookie: kernel-managed cookie identifying a group of fault messages. The + * cookie number encoded in the last page fault of the group should + * be echoed back in the response message. + */ +struct iommu_hwpt_pgfault { + __u32 flags; + __u32 dev_id; + __u32 pasid; + __u32 grpid; + __u32 perm; + __u64 addr; + __u32 length; + __u32 cookie; +}; + +/** + * enum iommufd_page_response_code - Return status of fault handlers + * @IOMMUFD_PAGE_RESP_SUCCESS: Fault has been handled and the page tables + * populated, retry the access. This is the + * "Success" defined in PCI 10.4.2.1. + * @IOMMUFD_PAGE_RESP_INVALID: Could not handle this fault, don't retry the + * access. This is the "Invalid Request" in PCI + * 10.4.2.1. + * @IOMMUFD_PAGE_RESP_FAILURE: General error. Drop all subsequent faults from + * this device if possible. This is the "Response + * Failure" in PCI 10.4.2.1. + */ +enum iommufd_page_response_code { + IOMMUFD_PAGE_RESP_SUCCESS = 0, + IOMMUFD_PAGE_RESP_INVALID, + IOMMUFD_PAGE_RESP_FAILURE, +}; + +/** + * struct iommu_hwpt_page_response - IOMMU page fault response + * @cookie: The kernel-managed cookie reported in the fault message. + * @code: One of response code in enum iommufd_page_response_code. + */ +struct iommu_hwpt_page_response { + __u32 cookie; + __u32 code; +}; #endif -- 2.34.1