[dpdk-dev] [RFC] Add support for device dma mask

Alejandro Lucero alejandro.lucero at netronome.com
Wed Jun 27 12:13:37 CEST 2018


On Wed, Jun 27, 2018 at 9:17 AM, Burakov, Anatoly <anatoly.burakov at intel.com
> wrote:

> On 26-Jun-18 6:37 PM, Alejandro Lucero wrote:
>
>> This RFC tries to handle devices with addressing limitations. NFP devices
>> 4000/6000 can just handle addresses with 40 bits implying problems for
>> handling
>> physical address when machines have more than 1TB of memory. But because
>> how
>> iovas are configured, which can be equivalent to physical addresses or
>> based on
>> virtual addresses, this can be a more likely problem.
>>
>> I tried to solve this some time ago:
>>
>> https://www.mail-archive.com/dev@dpdk.org/msg45214.html
>>
>> It was delayed because there was some changes in progress with EAL device
>> handling, and, being honest, I completely forgot about this until now,
>> when
>> I have had to work on supporting NFP devices with DPDK and non-root users.
>>
>> I was working on a patch for being applied on main DPDK branch upstream,
>> but
>> because changes to memory initialization during the last months, this can
>> not
>> be backported to stable versions, at least the part where the hugepages
>> iovas
>> are checked.
>>
>> I realize stable versions only allow bug fixing, and this patchset could
>> arguably not be considered as so. But without this, it could be, although
>> unlikely, a DPDK used in a machine with more than 1TB, and then NFP using
>> the wrong DMA host addresses.
>>
>> Although virtual addresses used as iovas are more dangerous, for DPDK
>> versions
>> before 18.05 this is not worse than with physical addresses, because
>> iovas,
>> when physical addresses are not available, are based on a starting
>> address set
>> to 0x0.
>>
>
> You might want to look at the following patch:
>
> http://patches.dpdk.org/patch/37149/
>
> Since this patch, IOVA as VA mode uses VA addresses, and that has been
> backported to earlier releases. I don't think there's any case where we
> used zero-based addresses any more.
>
>
But memsegs get the iova based on hugepages physaddr, and for VA mode that
is based on 0x0 as starting point.

And as far as I know, memsegs iovas are what end up being used for IOMMU
mappings and what devices will use.


>
>  Since 18.05, those iovas can, and usually are, higher than 1TB, as they
>
>> are based on 64 bits address space addresses, and by default the kernel
>> uses a
>> starting point far higher than 1TB.
>>
>> This patchset applies to stable 17.11.3 but I will be happy to submit
>> patches, if
>> required, for other DPDK stable versions.
>>
>>
>>
>
> --
> Thanks,
> Anatoly
>


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