Commit 139a57a9 authored by Jason Gunthorpe's avatar Jason Gunthorpe Committed by Joerg Roedel

iommu/fsl: Use driver_managed_dma to allow VFIO to work

The FSL driver is mangling the iommu_groups to not have a group for its
PCI bridge/controller (eg the thing passed to fsl_add_bridge()). Robin
says this is so FSL could work with VFIO which would be blocked by having
a probed driver on the platform_device in the same group. This is
supported by comments from FSL:

 https://lore.kernel.org/all/C5ECD7A89D1DC44195F34B25E172658D459471@039-SN2MPN1-013.039d.mgd.msft.net

 ..  PCIe devices share the same device group as the PCI controller. This
  becomes a problem while assigning the devices to the guest, as you are
  required to unbind all the PCIe devices including the controller from the
  host. PCIe controller can't be unbound from the host, so we simply delete
  the controller iommu_group.

However, today, we use driver_managed_dma to allow PCI infrastructure
devices that are 'security safe' to co-exist in groups and still allow
VFIO to work. Set this flag for the fsl_pci_driver.

Change fsl_pamu_device_group() so that it no longer removes the controller
from any groups. For check_pci_ctl_endpt_part() mode this creates an extra
group that contains only the controller.

Otherwise force the controller's single group to be the group of all the
PCI devices on the controller's hose. VFIO continues to work because of
driver_managed_dma.

Remove the iommu_group_remove_device() calls from fsl_pamu and lightly
restructure its fsl_pamu_device_group() function.
Signed-off-by: default avatarJason Gunthorpe <jgg@nvidia.com>
Tested-by: default avatarMichael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/3-v2-ce71068deeec+4cf6-fsl_rm_groups_jgg@nvidia.comSigned-off-by: default avatarJoerg Roedel <jroedel@suse.de>
parent 7977a08e
......@@ -1353,6 +1353,7 @@ static struct platform_driver fsl_pci_driver = {
.of_match_table = pci_ids,
},
.probe = fsl_pci_probe,
.driver_managed_dma = true,
};
static int __init fsl_pci_init(void)
......
......@@ -334,17 +334,6 @@ int fsl_pamu_configure_l1_stash(struct iommu_domain *domain, u32 cpu)
return ret;
}
static struct iommu_group *get_device_iommu_group(struct device *dev)
{
struct iommu_group *group;
group = iommu_group_get(dev);
if (!group)
group = iommu_group_alloc();
return group;
}
static bool check_pci_ctl_endpt_part(struct pci_controller *pci_ctl)
{
u32 version;
......@@ -356,85 +345,38 @@ static bool check_pci_ctl_endpt_part(struct pci_controller *pci_ctl)
return version >= 0x204;
}
/* Get iommu group information from peer devices or devices on the parent bus */
static struct iommu_group *get_shared_pci_device_group(struct pci_dev *pdev)
static struct iommu_group *fsl_pamu_device_group(struct device *dev)
{
struct pci_dev *tmp;
struct iommu_group *group;
struct pci_bus *bus = pdev->bus;
struct pci_dev *pdev;
/*
* Traverese the pci bus device list to get
* the shared iommu group.
* For platform devices we allocate a separate group for each of the
* devices.
*/
while (bus) {
list_for_each_entry(tmp, &bus->devices, bus_list) {
if (tmp == pdev)
continue;
group = iommu_group_get(&tmp->dev);
if (group)
return group;
}
bus = bus->parent;
}
return NULL;
}
static struct iommu_group *get_pci_device_group(struct pci_dev *pdev)
{
struct pci_controller *pci_ctl;
bool pci_endpt_partitioning;
struct iommu_group *group = NULL;
pci_ctl = pci_bus_to_host(pdev->bus);
pci_endpt_partitioning = check_pci_ctl_endpt_part(pci_ctl);
/* We can partition PCIe devices so assign device group to the device */
if (pci_endpt_partitioning) {
group = pci_device_group(&pdev->dev);
if (!dev_is_pci(dev))
return generic_device_group(dev);
/*
* PCIe controller is not a paritionable entity
* free the controller device iommu_group.
*/
if (pci_ctl->parent->iommu_group)
iommu_group_remove_device(pci_ctl->parent);
} else {
/*
* All devices connected to the controller will share the
* PCI controllers device group. If this is the first
* device to be probed for the pci controller, copy the
* device group information from the PCI controller device
* node and remove the PCI controller iommu group.
* For subsequent devices, the iommu group information can
* be obtained from sibling devices (i.e. from the bus_devices
* link list).
* We can partition PCIe devices so assign device group to the device
*/
if (pci_ctl->parent->iommu_group) {
group = get_device_iommu_group(pci_ctl->parent);
iommu_group_remove_device(pci_ctl->parent);
} else {
group = get_shared_pci_device_group(pdev);
}
}
if (!group)
group = ERR_PTR(-ENODEV);
return group;
}
pdev = to_pci_dev(dev);
if (check_pci_ctl_endpt_part(pci_bus_to_host(pdev->bus)))
return pci_device_group(&pdev->dev);
static struct iommu_group *fsl_pamu_device_group(struct device *dev)
{
/*
* For platform devices we allocate a separate group for
* each of the devices.
* All devices connected to the controller will share the same device
* group.
*
* Due to ordering between fsl_pamu_init() and fsl_pci_init() it is
* guaranteed that the pci_ctl->parent platform_device will have the
* iommu driver bound and will already have a group set. So we just
* re-use this group as the group for every device in the hose.
*/
if (!dev_is_pci(dev))
return generic_device_group(dev);
return get_pci_device_group(to_pci_dev(dev));
group = iommu_group_get(pci_bus_to_host(pdev->bus)->parent);
if (WARN_ON(!group))
return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL);
return group;
}
static struct iommu_device *fsl_pamu_probe_device(struct device *dev)
......
Markdown is supported
0%
or
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Please register or to comment