linux/drivers/iommu/io-pgfault.c
Lu Baolu 07838f7fd5 iommufd: Add iommufd fault object
An iommufd fault object provides an interface for delivering I/O page
faults to user space. These objects are created and destroyed by user
space, and they can be associated with or dissociated from hardware page
table objects during page table allocation or destruction.

User space interacts with the fault object through a file interface. This
interface offers a straightforward and efficient way for user space to
handle page faults. It allows user space to read fault messages
sequentially and respond to them by writing to the same file. The file
interface supports reading messages in poll mode, so it's recommended that
user space applications use io_uring to enhance read and write efficiency.

A fault object can be associated with any iopf-capable iommufd_hw_pgtable
during the pgtable's allocation. All I/O page faults triggered by devices
when accessing the I/O addresses of an iommufd_hw_pgtable are routed
through the fault object to user space. Similarly, user space's responses
to these page faults are routed back to the iommu device driver through
the same fault object.

Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240702063444.105814-7-baolu.lu@linux.intel.com
Signed-off-by: Lu Baolu <baolu.lu@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Kevin Tian <kevin.tian@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@nvidia.com>
2024-07-09 13:54:32 -03:00

503 lines
15 KiB
C

// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
/*
* Handle device page faults
*
* Copyright (C) 2020 ARM Ltd.
*/
#include <linux/iommu.h>
#include <linux/list.h>
#include <linux/sched/mm.h>
#include <linux/slab.h>
#include <linux/workqueue.h>
#include "iommu-priv.h"
/*
* Return the fault parameter of a device if it exists. Otherwise, return NULL.
* On a successful return, the caller takes a reference of this parameter and
* should put it after use by calling iopf_put_dev_fault_param().
*/
static struct iommu_fault_param *iopf_get_dev_fault_param(struct device *dev)
{
struct dev_iommu *param = dev->iommu;
struct iommu_fault_param *fault_param;
rcu_read_lock();
fault_param = rcu_dereference(param->fault_param);
if (fault_param && !refcount_inc_not_zero(&fault_param->users))
fault_param = NULL;
rcu_read_unlock();
return fault_param;
}
/* Caller must hold a reference of the fault parameter. */
static void iopf_put_dev_fault_param(struct iommu_fault_param *fault_param)
{
if (refcount_dec_and_test(&fault_param->users))
kfree_rcu(fault_param, rcu);
}
static void __iopf_free_group(struct iopf_group *group)
{
struct iopf_fault *iopf, *next;
list_for_each_entry_safe(iopf, next, &group->faults, list) {
if (!(iopf->fault.prm.flags & IOMMU_FAULT_PAGE_REQUEST_LAST_PAGE))
kfree(iopf);
}
/* Pair with iommu_report_device_fault(). */
iopf_put_dev_fault_param(group->fault_param);
}
void iopf_free_group(struct iopf_group *group)
{
__iopf_free_group(group);
kfree(group);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iopf_free_group);
/* Non-last request of a group. Postpone until the last one. */
static int report_partial_fault(struct iommu_fault_param *fault_param,
struct iommu_fault *fault)
{
struct iopf_fault *iopf;
iopf = kzalloc(sizeof(*iopf), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!iopf)
return -ENOMEM;
iopf->fault = *fault;
mutex_lock(&fault_param->lock);
list_add(&iopf->list, &fault_param->partial);
mutex_unlock(&fault_param->lock);
return 0;
}
static struct iopf_group *iopf_group_alloc(struct iommu_fault_param *iopf_param,
struct iopf_fault *evt,
struct iopf_group *abort_group)
{
struct iopf_fault *iopf, *next;
struct iopf_group *group;
group = kzalloc(sizeof(*group), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!group) {
/*
* We always need to construct the group as we need it to abort
* the request at the driver if it can't be handled.
*/
group = abort_group;
}
group->fault_param = iopf_param;
group->last_fault.fault = evt->fault;
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&group->faults);
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&group->pending_node);
list_add(&group->last_fault.list, &group->faults);
/* See if we have partial faults for this group */
mutex_lock(&iopf_param->lock);
list_for_each_entry_safe(iopf, next, &iopf_param->partial, list) {
if (iopf->fault.prm.grpid == evt->fault.prm.grpid)
/* Insert *before* the last fault */
list_move(&iopf->list, &group->faults);
}
list_add(&group->pending_node, &iopf_param->faults);
mutex_unlock(&iopf_param->lock);
group->fault_count = list_count_nodes(&group->faults);
return group;
}
/**
* iommu_report_device_fault() - Report fault event to device driver
* @dev: the device
* @evt: fault event data
*
* Called by IOMMU drivers when a fault is detected, typically in a threaded IRQ
* handler. If this function fails then ops->page_response() was called to
* complete evt if required.
*
* This module doesn't handle PCI PASID Stop Marker; IOMMU drivers must discard
* them before reporting faults. A PASID Stop Marker (LRW = 0b100) doesn't
* expect a response. It may be generated when disabling a PASID (issuing a
* PASID stop request) by some PCI devices.
*
* The PASID stop request is issued by the device driver before unbind(). Once
* it completes, no page request is generated for this PASID anymore and
* outstanding ones have been pushed to the IOMMU (as per PCIe 4.0r1.0 - 6.20.1
* and 10.4.1.2 - Managing PASID TLP Prefix Usage). Some PCI devices will wait
* for all outstanding page requests to come back with a response before
* completing the PASID stop request. Others do not wait for page responses, and
* instead issue this Stop Marker that tells us when the PASID can be
* reallocated.
*
* It is safe to discard the Stop Marker because it is an optimization.
* a. Page requests, which are posted requests, have been flushed to the IOMMU
* when the stop request completes.
* b. The IOMMU driver flushes all fault queues on unbind() before freeing the
* PASID.
*
* So even though the Stop Marker might be issued by the device *after* the stop
* request completes, outstanding faults will have been dealt with by the time
* the PASID is freed.
*
* Any valid page fault will be eventually routed to an iommu domain and the
* page fault handler installed there will get called. The users of this
* handling framework should guarantee that the iommu domain could only be
* freed after the device has stopped generating page faults (or the iommu
* hardware has been set to block the page faults) and the pending page faults
* have been flushed.
*/
void iommu_report_device_fault(struct device *dev, struct iopf_fault *evt)
{
struct iommu_fault *fault = &evt->fault;
struct iommu_fault_param *iopf_param;
struct iopf_group abort_group = {};
struct iopf_group *group;
iopf_param = iopf_get_dev_fault_param(dev);
if (WARN_ON(!iopf_param))
return;
if (!(fault->prm.flags & IOMMU_FAULT_PAGE_REQUEST_LAST_PAGE)) {
report_partial_fault(iopf_param, fault);
iopf_put_dev_fault_param(iopf_param);
/* A request that is not the last does not need to be ack'd */
}
/*
* This is the last page fault of a group. Allocate an iopf group and
* pass it to domain's page fault handler. The group holds a reference
* count of the fault parameter. It will be released after response or
* error path of this function. If an error is returned, the caller
* will send a response to the hardware. We need to clean up before
* leaving, otherwise partial faults will be stuck.
*/
group = iopf_group_alloc(iopf_param, evt, &abort_group);
if (group == &abort_group)
goto err_abort;
if (fault->prm.flags & IOMMU_FAULT_PAGE_REQUEST_PASID_VALID) {
group->attach_handle = iommu_attach_handle_get(dev->iommu_group,
fault->prm.pasid,
0);
if (IS_ERR(group->attach_handle)) {
const struct iommu_ops *ops = dev_iommu_ops(dev);
if (!ops->user_pasid_table)
goto err_abort;
/*
* The iommu driver for this device supports user-
* managed PASID table. Therefore page faults for
* any PASID should go through the NESTING domain
* attached to the device RID.
*/
group->attach_handle =
iommu_attach_handle_get(dev->iommu_group,
IOMMU_NO_PASID,
IOMMU_DOMAIN_NESTED);
if (IS_ERR(group->attach_handle))
goto err_abort;
}
} else {
group->attach_handle =
iommu_attach_handle_get(dev->iommu_group, IOMMU_NO_PASID, 0);
if (IS_ERR(group->attach_handle))
goto err_abort;
}
if (!group->attach_handle->domain->iopf_handler)
goto err_abort;
/*
* On success iopf_handler must call iopf_group_response() and
* iopf_free_group()
*/
if (group->attach_handle->domain->iopf_handler(group))
goto err_abort;
return;
err_abort:
dev_warn_ratelimited(dev, "iopf with pasid %d aborted\n",
fault->prm.pasid);
iopf_group_response(group, IOMMU_PAGE_RESP_FAILURE);
if (group == &abort_group)
__iopf_free_group(group);
else
iopf_free_group(group);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iommu_report_device_fault);
/**
* iopf_queue_flush_dev - Ensure that all queued faults have been processed
* @dev: the endpoint whose faults need to be flushed.
*
* The IOMMU driver calls this before releasing a PASID, to ensure that all
* pending faults for this PASID have been handled, and won't hit the address
* space of the next process that uses this PASID. The driver must make sure
* that no new fault is added to the queue. In particular it must flush its
* low-level queue before calling this function.
*
* Return: 0 on success and <0 on error.
*/
int iopf_queue_flush_dev(struct device *dev)
{
struct iommu_fault_param *iopf_param;
/*
* It's a driver bug to be here after iopf_queue_remove_device().
* Therefore, it's safe to dereference the fault parameter without
* holding the lock.
*/
iopf_param = rcu_dereference_check(dev->iommu->fault_param, true);
if (WARN_ON(!iopf_param))
return -ENODEV;
flush_workqueue(iopf_param->queue->wq);
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iopf_queue_flush_dev);
/**
* iopf_group_response - Respond a group of page faults
* @group: the group of faults with the same group id
* @status: the response code
*/
void iopf_group_response(struct iopf_group *group,
enum iommu_page_response_code status)
{
struct iommu_fault_param *fault_param = group->fault_param;
struct iopf_fault *iopf = &group->last_fault;
struct device *dev = group->fault_param->dev;
const struct iommu_ops *ops = dev_iommu_ops(dev);
struct iommu_page_response resp = {
.pasid = iopf->fault.prm.pasid,
.grpid = iopf->fault.prm.grpid,
.code = status,
};
/* Only send response if there is a fault report pending */
mutex_lock(&fault_param->lock);
if (!list_empty(&group->pending_node)) {
ops->page_response(dev, &group->last_fault, &resp);
list_del_init(&group->pending_node);
}
mutex_unlock(&fault_param->lock);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iopf_group_response);
/**
* iopf_queue_discard_partial - Remove all pending partial fault
* @queue: the queue whose partial faults need to be discarded
*
* When the hardware queue overflows, last page faults in a group may have been
* lost and the IOMMU driver calls this to discard all partial faults. The
* driver shouldn't be adding new faults to this queue concurrently.
*
* Return: 0 on success and <0 on error.
*/
int iopf_queue_discard_partial(struct iopf_queue *queue)
{
struct iopf_fault *iopf, *next;
struct iommu_fault_param *iopf_param;
if (!queue)
return -EINVAL;
mutex_lock(&queue->lock);
list_for_each_entry(iopf_param, &queue->devices, queue_list) {
mutex_lock(&iopf_param->lock);
list_for_each_entry_safe(iopf, next, &iopf_param->partial,
list) {
list_del(&iopf->list);
kfree(iopf);
}
mutex_unlock(&iopf_param->lock);
}
mutex_unlock(&queue->lock);
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iopf_queue_discard_partial);
/**
* iopf_queue_add_device - Add producer to the fault queue
* @queue: IOPF queue
* @dev: device to add
*
* Return: 0 on success and <0 on error.
*/
int iopf_queue_add_device(struct iopf_queue *queue, struct device *dev)
{
int ret = 0;
struct dev_iommu *param = dev->iommu;
struct iommu_fault_param *fault_param;
const struct iommu_ops *ops = dev_iommu_ops(dev);
if (!ops->page_response)
return -ENODEV;
mutex_lock(&queue->lock);
mutex_lock(&param->lock);
if (rcu_dereference_check(param->fault_param,
lockdep_is_held(&param->lock))) {
ret = -EBUSY;
goto done_unlock;
}
fault_param = kzalloc(sizeof(*fault_param), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!fault_param) {
ret = -ENOMEM;
goto done_unlock;
}
mutex_init(&fault_param->lock);
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&fault_param->faults);
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&fault_param->partial);
fault_param->dev = dev;
refcount_set(&fault_param->users, 1);
list_add(&fault_param->queue_list, &queue->devices);
fault_param->queue = queue;
rcu_assign_pointer(param->fault_param, fault_param);
done_unlock:
mutex_unlock(&param->lock);
mutex_unlock(&queue->lock);
return ret;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iopf_queue_add_device);
/**
* iopf_queue_remove_device - Remove producer from fault queue
* @queue: IOPF queue
* @dev: device to remove
*
* Removing a device from an iopf_queue. It's recommended to follow these
* steps when removing a device:
*
* - Disable new PRI reception: Turn off PRI generation in the IOMMU hardware
* and flush any hardware page request queues. This should be done before
* calling into this helper.
* - Acknowledge all outstanding PRQs to the device: Respond to all outstanding
* page requests with IOMMU_PAGE_RESP_INVALID, indicating the device should
* not retry. This helper function handles this.
* - Disable PRI on the device: After calling this helper, the caller could
* then disable PRI on the device.
*
* Calling iopf_queue_remove_device() essentially disassociates the device.
* The fault_param might still exist, but iommu_page_response() will do
* nothing. The device fault parameter reference count has been properly
* passed from iommu_report_device_fault() to the fault handling work, and
* will eventually be released after iommu_page_response().
*/
void iopf_queue_remove_device(struct iopf_queue *queue, struct device *dev)
{
struct iopf_fault *partial_iopf;
struct iopf_fault *next;
struct iopf_group *group, *temp;
struct dev_iommu *param = dev->iommu;
struct iommu_fault_param *fault_param;
const struct iommu_ops *ops = dev_iommu_ops(dev);
mutex_lock(&queue->lock);
mutex_lock(&param->lock);
fault_param = rcu_dereference_check(param->fault_param,
lockdep_is_held(&param->lock));
if (WARN_ON(!fault_param || fault_param->queue != queue))
goto unlock;
mutex_lock(&fault_param->lock);
list_for_each_entry_safe(partial_iopf, next, &fault_param->partial, list)
kfree(partial_iopf);
list_for_each_entry_safe(group, temp, &fault_param->faults, pending_node) {
struct iopf_fault *iopf = &group->last_fault;
struct iommu_page_response resp = {
.pasid = iopf->fault.prm.pasid,
.grpid = iopf->fault.prm.grpid,
.code = IOMMU_PAGE_RESP_INVALID
};
ops->page_response(dev, iopf, &resp);
list_del_init(&group->pending_node);
}
mutex_unlock(&fault_param->lock);
list_del(&fault_param->queue_list);
/* dec the ref owned by iopf_queue_add_device() */
rcu_assign_pointer(param->fault_param, NULL);
iopf_put_dev_fault_param(fault_param);
unlock:
mutex_unlock(&param->lock);
mutex_unlock(&queue->lock);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iopf_queue_remove_device);
/**
* iopf_queue_alloc - Allocate and initialize a fault queue
* @name: a unique string identifying the queue (for workqueue)
*
* Return: the queue on success and NULL on error.
*/
struct iopf_queue *iopf_queue_alloc(const char *name)
{
struct iopf_queue *queue;
queue = kzalloc(sizeof(*queue), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!queue)
return NULL;
/*
* The WQ is unordered because the low-level handler enqueues faults by
* group. PRI requests within a group have to be ordered, but once
* that's dealt with, the high-level function can handle groups out of
* order.
*/
queue->wq = alloc_workqueue("iopf_queue/%s", WQ_UNBOUND, 0, name);
if (!queue->wq) {
kfree(queue);
return NULL;
}
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&queue->devices);
mutex_init(&queue->lock);
return queue;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iopf_queue_alloc);
/**
* iopf_queue_free - Free IOPF queue
* @queue: queue to free
*
* Counterpart to iopf_queue_alloc(). The driver must not be queuing faults or
* adding/removing devices on this queue anymore.
*/
void iopf_queue_free(struct iopf_queue *queue)
{
struct iommu_fault_param *iopf_param, *next;
if (!queue)
return;
list_for_each_entry_safe(iopf_param, next, &queue->devices, queue_list)
iopf_queue_remove_device(queue, iopf_param->dev);
destroy_workqueue(queue->wq);
kfree(queue);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(iopf_queue_free);