| Keshavamurthy, Anil S | ba39592 | 2007-10-21 16:41:49 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | Linux IOMMU Support | 
 | 2 | =================== | 
 | 3 |  | 
 | 4 | The architecture spec can be obtained from the below location. | 
 | 5 |  | 
 | 6 | http://www.intel.com/technology/virtualization/ | 
 | 7 |  | 
 | 8 | This guide gives a quick cheat sheet for some basic understanding. | 
 | 9 |  | 
 | 10 | Some Keywords | 
 | 11 |  | 
 | 12 | DMAR - DMA remapping | 
 | 13 | DRHD - DMA Engine Reporting Structure | 
 | 14 | RMRR - Reserved memory Region Reporting Structure | 
 | 15 | ZLR  - Zero length reads from PCI devices | 
 | 16 | IOVA - IO Virtual address. | 
 | 17 |  | 
 | 18 | Basic stuff | 
 | 19 | ----------- | 
 | 20 |  | 
 | 21 | ACPI enumerates and lists the different DMA engines in the platform, and | 
 | 22 | device scope relationships between PCI devices and which DMA engine  controls | 
 | 23 | them. | 
 | 24 |  | 
 | 25 | What is RMRR? | 
 | 26 | ------------- | 
 | 27 |  | 
 | 28 | There are some devices the BIOS controls, for e.g USB devices to perform | 
 | 29 | PS2 emulation. The regions of memory used for these devices are marked | 
 | 30 | reserved in the e820 map. When we turn on DMA translation, DMA to those | 
 | 31 | regions will fail. Hence BIOS uses RMRR to specify these regions along with | 
 | 32 | devices that need to access these regions. OS is expected to setup | 
 | 33 | unity mappings for these regions for these devices to access these regions. | 
 | 34 |  | 
 | 35 | How is IOVA generated? | 
 | 36 | --------------------- | 
 | 37 |  | 
 | 38 | Well behaved drivers call pci_map_*() calls before sending command to device | 
 | 39 | that needs to perform DMA. Once DMA is completed and mapping is no longer | 
 | 40 | required, device performs a pci_unmap_*() calls to unmap the region. | 
 | 41 |  | 
 | 42 | The Intel IOMMU driver allocates a virtual address per domain. Each PCIE | 
 | 43 | device has its own domain (hence protection). Devices under p2p bridges | 
 | 44 | share the virtual address with all devices under the p2p bridge due to | 
 | 45 | transaction id aliasing for p2p bridges. | 
 | 46 |  | 
 | 47 | IOVA generation is pretty generic. We used the same technique as vmalloc() | 
 | 48 | but these are not global address spaces, but separate for each domain. | 
 | 49 | Different DMA engines may support different number of domains. | 
 | 50 |  | 
| Matt LaPlante | d919588 | 2008-07-25 19:45:33 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 51 | We also allocate guard pages with each mapping, so we can attempt to catch | 
| Keshavamurthy, Anil S | ba39592 | 2007-10-21 16:41:49 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 52 | any overflow that might happen. | 
 | 53 |  | 
 | 54 |  | 
 | 55 | Graphics Problems? | 
 | 56 | ------------------ | 
 | 57 | If you encounter issues with graphics devices, you can try adding | 
 | 58 | option intel_iommu=igfx_off to turn off the integrated graphics engine. | 
| David Woodhouse | 0c02a20 | 2009-09-19 09:37:23 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 59 | If this fixes anything, please ensure you file a bug reporting the problem. | 
| Keshavamurthy, Anil S | e820482 | 2007-10-21 16:41:55 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 60 |  | 
| Keshavamurthy, Anil S | ba39592 | 2007-10-21 16:41:49 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 61 | Some exceptions to IOVA | 
 | 62 | ----------------------- | 
 | 63 | Interrupt ranges are not address translated, (0xfee00000 - 0xfeefffff). | 
 | 64 | The same is true for peer to peer transactions. Hence we reserve the | 
 | 65 | address from PCI MMIO ranges so they are not allocated for IOVA addresses. | 
 | 66 |  | 
| Keshavamurthy, Anil S | 3460a6d | 2007-10-21 16:41:54 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 67 |  | 
 | 68 | Fault reporting | 
 | 69 | --------------- | 
 | 70 | When errors are reported, the DMA engine signals via an interrupt. The fault | 
 | 71 | reason and device that caused it with fault reason is printed on console. | 
 | 72 |  | 
 | 73 | See below for sample. | 
 | 74 |  | 
 | 75 |  | 
| Keshavamurthy, Anil S | ba39592 | 2007-10-21 16:41:49 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 76 | Boot Message Sample | 
 | 77 | ------------------- | 
 | 78 |  | 
 | 79 | Something like this gets printed indicating presence of DMAR tables | 
 | 80 | in ACPI. | 
 | 81 |  | 
 | 82 | ACPI: DMAR (v001 A M I  OEMDMAR  0x00000001 MSFT 0x00000097) @ 0x000000007f5b5ef0 | 
 | 83 |  | 
 | 84 | When DMAR is being processed and initialized by ACPI, prints DMAR locations | 
 | 85 | and any RMRR's processed. | 
 | 86 |  | 
 | 87 | ACPI DMAR:Host address width 36 | 
 | 88 | ACPI DMAR:DRHD (flags: 0x00000000)base: 0x00000000fed90000 | 
 | 89 | ACPI DMAR:DRHD (flags: 0x00000000)base: 0x00000000fed91000 | 
 | 90 | ACPI DMAR:DRHD (flags: 0x00000001)base: 0x00000000fed93000 | 
 | 91 | ACPI DMAR:RMRR base: 0x00000000000ed000 end: 0x00000000000effff | 
 | 92 | ACPI DMAR:RMRR base: 0x000000007f600000 end: 0x000000007fffffff | 
 | 93 |  | 
 | 94 | When DMAR is enabled for use, you will notice.. | 
 | 95 |  | 
 | 96 | PCI-DMA: Using DMAR IOMMU | 
 | 97 |  | 
| Keshavamurthy, Anil S | 3460a6d | 2007-10-21 16:41:54 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 98 | Fault reporting | 
 | 99 | --------------- | 
 | 100 |  | 
 | 101 | DMAR:[DMA Write] Request device [00:02.0] fault addr 6df084000 | 
 | 102 | DMAR:[fault reason 05] PTE Write access is not set | 
 | 103 | DMAR:[DMA Write] Request device [00:02.0] fault addr 6df084000 | 
 | 104 | DMAR:[fault reason 05] PTE Write access is not set | 
 | 105 |  | 
| Keshavamurthy, Anil S | ba39592 | 2007-10-21 16:41:49 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 106 | TBD | 
 | 107 | ---- | 
 | 108 |  | 
 | 109 | - For compatibility testing, could use unity map domain for all devices, just | 
 | 110 |   provide a 1-1 for all useful memory under a single domain for all devices. | 
| Matt LaPlante | d919588 | 2008-07-25 19:45:33 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 111 | - API for paravirt ops for abstracting functionality for VMM folks. |