On 2/24/21 9:45 AM, Daniel Vetter wrote:
On Wed, Feb 24, 2021 at 8:46 AM Thomas Hellström (Intel)
<thomas...@shipmail.org> wrote:

On 2/23/21 11:59 AM, Daniel Vetter wrote:
tldr; DMA buffers aren't normal memory, expecting that you can use
them like that (like calling get_user_pages works, or that they're
accounting like any other normal memory) cannot be guaranteed.

Since some userspace only runs on integrated devices, where all
buffers are actually all resident system memory, there's a huge
temptation to assume that a struct page is always present and useable
like for any more pagecache backed mmap. This has the potential to
result in a uapi nightmare.

To stop this gap require that DMA buffer mmaps are VM_PFNMAP, which
blocks get_user_pages and all the other struct page based
infrastructure for everyone. In spirit this is the uapi counterpart to
the kernel-internal CONFIG_DMABUF_DEBUG.

Motivated by a recent patch which wanted to swich the system dma-buf
heap to vm_insert_page instead of vm_insert_pfn.

v2:

Jason brought up that we also want to guarantee that all ptes have the
pte_special flag set, to catch fast get_user_pages (on architectures
that support this). Allowing VM_MIXEDMAP (like VM_SPECIAL does) would
still allow vm_insert_page, but limiting to VM_PFNMAP will catch that.

  From auditing the various functions to insert pfn pte entires
(vm_insert_pfn_prot, remap_pfn_range and all it's callers like
dma_mmap_wc) it looks like VM_PFNMAP is already required anyway, so
this should be the correct flag to check for.

If we require VM_PFNMAP, for ordinary page mappings, we also need to
disallow COW mappings, since it will not work on architectures that
don't have CONFIG_ARCH_HAS_PTE_SPECIAL, (see the docs for vm_normal_page()).
Hm I figured everyone just uses MAP_SHARED for buffer objects since
COW really makes absolutely no sense. How would we enforce this?

Perhaps returning -EINVAL on is_cow_mapping() at mmap time. Either that or allowing MIXEDMAP.

Also worth noting is the comment in  ttm_bo_mmap_vma_setup() with
possible performance implications with x86 + PAT + VM_PFNMAP + normal
pages. That's a very old comment, though, and might not be valid anymore.
I think that's why ttm has a page cache for these, because it indeed
sucks. The PAT changes on pages are rather expensive.

IIRC the page cache was implemented because of the slowness of the caching mode transition itself, more specifically the wbinvd() call + global TLB flush.


There is still an issue for iomem mappings, because the PAT validation
does a linear walk of the resource tree (lol) for every vm_insert_pfn.
But for i915 at least this is fixed by using the io_mapping
infrastructure, which does the PAT reservation only once when you set
up the mapping area at driver load.

Yes, I guess that was the issue that the comment describes, but the issue wasn't there with vm_insert_mixed() + VM_MIXEDMAP.


Also TTM uses VM_PFNMAP right now for everything, so it can't be a
problem that hurts much :-)

Hmm, both 5.11 and drm-tip appears to still use MIXEDMAP?

https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/latest/source/drivers/gpu/drm/ttm/ttm_bo_vm.c#L554

-Daniel

/Thomas


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