diff mbox series

[3/6] PCI: Indicate that we want to force strict DMA for untrusted devices

Message ID 20210621165230.3.I7accc008905590bb2b46f40f91a4aeda5b378007@changeid (mailing list archive)
State New, archived
Headers show
Series iommu: Enable devices to request non-strict DMA, starting with QCom SD/MMC | expand

Commit Message

Doug Anderson June 21, 2021, 11:52 p.m. UTC
At the moment the generic IOMMU framework reaches into the PCIe device
to check the "untrusted" state and uses this information to figure out
if it should be running the IOMMU in strict or non-strict mode. Let's
instead set the new boolean in "struct device" to indicate when we
want forced strictness.

NOTE: we still continue to set the "untrusted" bit in PCIe since that
apparently is used for more than just IOMMU strictness. It probably
makes sense for a later patchset to clarify all of the other needs we
have for "untrusted" PCIe devices (perhaps add more booleans into the
"struct device") so we can fully eliminate the need for the IOMMU
framework to reach into a PCIe device.

Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>
---

 drivers/pci/probe.c | 4 +++-
 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)

Comments

Greg Kroah-Hartman June 24, 2021, 1:38 p.m. UTC | #1
On Mon, Jun 21, 2021 at 04:52:45PM -0700, Douglas Anderson wrote:
> At the moment the generic IOMMU framework reaches into the PCIe device
> to check the "untrusted" state and uses this information to figure out
> if it should be running the IOMMU in strict or non-strict mode. Let's
> instead set the new boolean in "struct device" to indicate when we
> want forced strictness.
> 
> NOTE: we still continue to set the "untrusted" bit in PCIe since that
> apparently is used for more than just IOMMU strictness. It probably
> makes sense for a later patchset to clarify all of the other needs we
> have for "untrusted" PCIe devices (perhaps add more booleans into the
> "struct device") so we can fully eliminate the need for the IOMMU
> framework to reach into a PCIe device.

It feels like the iommu code should not be messing with pci devices at
all, please don't do this.

Why does this matter?  Why wouldn't a pci device use "strict" iommu at
all times?  What happens if it does not?  Why are PCI devices special?

greg k-h
Doug Anderson June 24, 2021, 1:46 p.m. UTC | #2
Hi,

On Thu, Jun 24, 2021 at 6:38 AM Greg KH <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
>
> On Mon, Jun 21, 2021 at 04:52:45PM -0700, Douglas Anderson wrote:
> > At the moment the generic IOMMU framework reaches into the PCIe device
> > to check the "untrusted" state and uses this information to figure out
> > if it should be running the IOMMU in strict or non-strict mode. Let's
> > instead set the new boolean in "struct device" to indicate when we
> > want forced strictness.
> >
> > NOTE: we still continue to set the "untrusted" bit in PCIe since that
> > apparently is used for more than just IOMMU strictness. It probably
> > makes sense for a later patchset to clarify all of the other needs we
> > have for "untrusted" PCIe devices (perhaps add more booleans into the
> > "struct device") so we can fully eliminate the need for the IOMMU
> > framework to reach into a PCIe device.
>
> It feels like the iommu code should not be messing with pci devices at
> all, please don't do this.

I think it's generally agreed that having the IOMMU code reach into
the PCIe code is pretty non-ideal, but that's not something that my
patch series added. The IOMMU code already has special cases to reach
into PCIe devices to decide strictness. I was actually trying to
reduce the amount of it.

> Why does this matter?  Why wouldn't a pci device use "strict" iommu at
> all times?  What happens if it does not?  Why are PCI devices special?

This is something pre-existing in Linux. In my patch series I was
trying to make PCI devices less special and take some of the concepts
from there and expand them, but in a cleaner way. It sounds like in my
v2 I should steer away from this and leave the existing PCI hacks
alone.

-Doug
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/drivers/pci/probe.c b/drivers/pci/probe.c
index 275204646c68..8d81f0fb3e50 100644
--- a/drivers/pci/probe.c
+++ b/drivers/pci/probe.c
@@ -1572,8 +1572,10 @@  static void set_pcie_untrusted(struct pci_dev *dev)
 	 * untrusted as well.
 	 */
 	parent = pci_upstream_bridge(dev);
-	if (parent && (parent->untrusted || parent->external_facing))
+	if (parent && (parent->untrusted || parent->external_facing)) {
 		dev->untrusted = true;
+		dev->dev.force_strict_iommu = true;
+	}
 }
 
 /**