Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx> writes: > On 2022-03-25 16:25, Toke Høiland-Jørgensen wrote: >> Maxime Bizon <mbizon@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >>> On Thu, 2022-03-24 at 12:26 -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> It's actually very natural in that situation to flush the caches from >>>> the CPU side again. And so dma_sync_single_for_device() is a fairly >>>> reasonable thing to do in that situation. >>>> >>> >>> In the non-cache-coherent scenario, and assuming dma_map() did an >>> initial cache invalidation, you can write this: >>> >>> rx_buffer_complete_1(buf) >>> { >>> invalidate_cache(buf, size) >>> if (!is_ready(buf)) >>> return; >>> <proceed with receive> >>> } >>> >>> or >>> >>> rx_buffer_complete_2(buf) >>> { >>> if (!is_ready(buf)) { >>> invalidate_cache(buf, size) >>> return; >>> } >>> <proceed with receive> >>> } >>> >>> The latter is preferred for performance because dma_map() did the >>> initial invalidate. >>> >>> Of course you could write: >>> >>> rx_buffer_complete_3(buf) >>> { >>> invalidate_cache(buf, size) >>> if >>> (!is_ready(buf)) { >>> invalidate_cache(buf, size) >>> return; >>> } >>> >>> <proceed with receive> >>> } >>> >>> >>> but it's a waste of CPU cycles >>> >>> So I'd be very cautious assuming sync_for_cpu() and sync_for_device() >>> are both doing invalidation in existing implementation of arch DMA ops, >>> implementers may have taken some liberty around DMA-API to avoid >>> unnecessary cache operation (not to blame them). >> >> I sense an implicit "and the driver can't (or shouldn't) influence >> this" here, right? > > Right, drivers don't get a choice of how a given DMA API implementation > works. > >>> For example looking at arch/arm/mm/dma-mapping.c, for DMA_FROM_DEVICE >>> >>> sync_single_for_device() >>> => __dma_page_cpu_to_dev() >>> => dma_cache_maint_page(op=dmac_map_area) >>> => cpu_cache.dma_map_area() >>> >>> sync_single_for_cpu() >>> => __dma_page_dev_to_cpu() >>> => >>> __dma_page_cpu_to_dev(op=dmac_unmap_area) >>> => >>> cpu_cache.dma_unmap_area() >>> >>> dma_map_area() always does cache invalidate. >>> >>> But for a couple of CPU variant, dma_unmap_area() is a noop, so >>> sync_for_cpu() does nothing. >>> >>> Toke's patch will break ath9k on those platforms (mostly silent >>> breakage, rx corruption leading to bad performance) >> >> Okay, so that would be bad obviously. So if I'm reading you correctly >> (cf my question above), we can't fix this properly from the driver side, >> and we should go with the partial SWIOTLB revert instead? > > Do you have any other way of telling if DMA is idle, or temporarily > pausing it before the sync_for_cpu, such that you could honour the > notion of ownership transfer properly? I'll go check with someone who has a better grasp of how the hardware works, but I don't think so... > As mentioned elsewhere I suspect the only "real" fix if you really do > need to allow concurrent access is to use the coherent DMA API for > buffers rather than streaming mappings, but that's obviously some far > more significant surgery. That would imply copying the packet data out of that (persistent) coherent mapping each time we do a recv operation, though, right? That would be quite a performance hit... If all we need is a way to make dma_sync_single_for_cpu() guarantee a cache invalidation, why can't we just add a separate version that does that (dma_sync_single_for_cpu_peek() or something)? Using that with the patch I posted earlier should be enough to resolve the issue, AFAICT? -Toke