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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v1 09/47] vidoe: fbdev: atyfb: remove and fix MTRR MMIO "hole" work around



On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 12:45 PM, Luis R. Rodriguez <mcgrof@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 01, 2015 at 05:04:08PM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
>> On Wed, Apr 1, 2015 at 4:52 PM, Luis R. Rodriguez <mcgrof@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> > On Sat, Mar 28, 2015 at 02:23:34PM +0200, Ville SyrjÃlà wrote:
>> >> On Sat, Mar 28, 2015 at 01:28:18AM +0100, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote:
>> >> > On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 03:02:10PM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
>> >> > > On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 2:56 PM, Ville SyrjÃlà <syrjala@xxxxxx> wrote:
>> >> > > > On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 08:57:59PM +0100, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote:
>> >> > > >> On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 12:43:55PM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
>> >> > > >> > On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 12:38 PM, Luis R. Rodriguez 
>> >> > > >> > <mcgrof@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >> > > >> > > On Sat, Mar 21, 2015 at 11:15:14AM +0200, Ville SyrjÃlà wrote:
>> >> > > >> > >> On Fri, Mar 20, 2015 at 04:17:59PM -0700, Luis R. Rodriguez 
>> >> > > >> > >> wrote:
>> >> > > >> > >> > diff --git a/drivers/video/fbdev/aty/atyfb_base.c 
>> >> > > >> > >> > b/drivers/video/fbdev/aty/atyfb_base.c
>> >> > > >> > >> > index 8025624..8875e56 100644
>> >> > > >> > >> > --- a/drivers/video/fbdev/aty/atyfb_base.c
>> >> > > >> > >> > +++ b/drivers/video/fbdev/aty/atyfb_base.c
>> >> > > >> > >> > @@ -2630,21 +2630,10 @@ static int aty_init(struct fb_info 
>> >> > > >> > >> > *info)
>> >> > > >> > >> >
>> >> > > >> > >> >  #ifdef CONFIG_MTRR
>> >> > > >> > >> >     par->mtrr_aper = -1;
>> >> > > >> > >> > -   par->mtrr_reg = -1;
>> >> > > >> > >> >     if (!nomtrr) {
>> >> > > >> > >> > -           /* Cover the whole resource. */
>> >> > > >> > >> > -           par->mtrr_aper = mtrr_add(par->res_start, 
>> >> > > >> > >> > par->res_size,
>> >> > > >> > >> > +           par->mtrr_aper = mtrr_add(info->fix.smem_start,
>> >> > > >> > >> > +                                     info->fix.smem_len,
>> >> > > >> > >> >                                       MTRR_TYPE_WRCOMB, 1);
>> >> > > >> > >>
>> >> > > >> > >> MTRRs need power of two size, so how is this supposed to work?
>> >> > > >> > >
>> >> > > >> > > As per mtrr_add_page() [0] the base and size are just supposed 
>> >> > > >> > > to be in units
>> >> > > >> > > of 4 KiB, although the practice is to use powers of 2 in 
>> >> > > >> > > *some* drivers this
>> >> > > >> > > is not standardized and by no means recorded as a requirement. 
>> >> > > >> > > Obviously
>> >> > > >> > > powers of 2 will work too and you'd end up neatly aligned as 
>> >> > > >> > > well. mtrr_add()
>> >> > > >> > > will use mtrr_check() to verify the the same requirement. 
>> >> > > >> > > Furthermore,
>> >> > > >> > > as per my commit log message:
>> >> > > >> >
>> >> > > >> > Whatever the code may or may not do, the x86 architecture uses
>> >> > > >> > power-of-two MTRR sizes.  So I'm confused.
>> >> > > >>
>> >> > > >> There should be no confusion, I simply did not know that *was* the
>> >> > > >> requirement for x86, if that is the case we should add a check for 
>> >> > > >> that
>> >> > > >> and perhaps generalize a helper that does the power of two helper 
>> >> > > >> changes,
>> >> > > >> the cleanest I found was the vesafb driver solution.
>> >> > > >>
>> >> > > >> Thoughts?
>> >> > > >
>> >> > > > The vesafb solution is bad since you'll only end up covering only
>> >> > > > the first 4MB of the framebuffer instead of the almost 8MB you want.
>> >> > > > Which in practice will mean throwing away half the VRAM since you 
>> >> > > > really
>> >> > > > don't want the massive performance hit from accessing it as UC. And 
>> >> > > > that
>> >> > > > would mean giving up decent display resolutions as well :(
>> >> > > >
>> >> > > > And the other option of trying to cover the remainder with multiple 
>> >> > > > ever
>> >> > > > smaller MTRRs doesn't work either since you'll run out of MTRRs very
>> >> > > > quickly.
>> >> > > >
>> >> > > > This is precisely why I used the hole method in atyfb in the first
>> >> > > > place.
>> >> > > >
>> >> > > > I don't really like the idea of any new mtrr code not supporting 
>> >> > > > that
>> >> > > > use case, especially as these things tend to be present in older 
>> >> > > > machines
>> >> > > > where PAT isn't an option.
>> >> > >
>> >> > > According to the Intel SDM, volume 3, section 11.5.2.1, table 11-6,
>> >> > > non-PAT CPUs that have a WC MTRR, PCD = 1, and PWT = 1 (aka UC) have
>> >> > > an effective memory type of UC.
>> >
>> > This is true but non-PAT systems that use just ioremap() will default to
>> > _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC_MINUS, not _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC, and 
>> > _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC_MINUS
>> > on Linux has PCD = 1, PWT = 0. The list comes from:
>> >
>> > uint16_t __cachemode2pte_tbl[_PAGE_CACHE_MODE_NUM] = {
>> >         [_PAGE_CACHE_MODE_WB      ]     = 0         | 0        ,
>> >         [_PAGE_CACHE_MODE_WC      ]     = _PAGE_PWT | 0        ,
>> >         [_PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC_MINUS]     = 0         | _PAGE_PCD,
>> >         [_PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC      ]     = _PAGE_PWT | _PAGE_PCD,
>> >         [_PAGE_CACHE_MODE_WT      ]     = 0         | _PAGE_PCD,
>> >         [_PAGE_CACHE_MODE_WP      ]     = 0         | _PAGE_PCD,
>> > };
>> >
>> > This can better be read here:
>> >
>> >  PAT
>> >  |PCD
>> >  ||PWT
>> >  |||
>> >  000 WB          _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_WB
>> >  001 WC          _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_WC
>> >  010 UC-         _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC_MINUS
>> >  011 UC          _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC
>> >
>> > On x86 ioremap() defaults to ioremap_nocache() and right now that uses
>> > _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC_MINUS not _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC. We have two cases
>> > to consider for non-PAT systems then:
>> >
>> > a) Right now as ioremap() and ioremap_nocache() default to 
>> > _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC_MINUS
>> >    on x86. In this case using a WC MTRR seems to use PWT=0, PCD=1, and
>> >    table table 11-6 on non-PAT systems seems to place this situation as
>> >    "implementation defined" and not encouraged.
>> >
>> > a) when commit de33c442e "x86 PAT: fix performance drop for glx, use
>> >    UC minus for ioremap(), ioremap_nocache() and pci_mmap_page_range()"
>> >    gets reverted and we use _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC by default. In this
>> >    case on x86 for both ioremap() and ioremap_nocache() as they will
>> >    both default to _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC we'll end up as you note with
>> >    an effective memory type of UC.
>> >
>> > If I've understood this correctly then neither of these situations are 
>> > good and
>> > its just by chance that on some systems situation a) has lead to proper WC.
>> >
>> > On a PAT system we have a bit different combinatorial results (based on 
>> > Table
>> > 11-7):
>> >
>> > a) Right now ioremap() and ioremap_nocache() defaulting to
>> >     _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC_MINUS yields + MTRR WC = WC
>> >
>> > b) When commit de33c442e gets reverted _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC + MTRR WC = UC
>> >
>> > So to be clear right now atyfb should work fine on PAT systems
>> > with de33c442e in place, once reverted as-is right now we'd end
>> > up with UC effective memory type.
>> >
>> > For both PAT and non-PAT systems when commit de33c442e gets reverted
>> > we'd end up with UC as the effective memory type for atyfb. Right
>> > now it shoud work on PAT systems and by chance its suspected to work
>> > on non-PAT systems. We want to phase MTRR though, specially to avoid
>> > all this insane combinatorial nightmware.
>> >
>> >> > > Hence my suggestion to add
>> >> > > ioremap_x86_uc and/or set_memory_x86_uc to punch a UC hole in an
>> >> > > otherwise WC MTRR-covered region.
>> >
>> > To be clear I think you mean then that ioremap_x86_uc() would help us 
>> > avoid the
>> > jumps between combinatorial issues with MTRR on PAT / non-PAT systems 
>> > before
>> > and after commit de33c442e gets reverted. So for instance if we had on the
>> > atyfb driver:
>> >
>> > ioremap_x86_uc(PCI BAR)
>> > ioremap_wc(framebuffer)
>> > arch_phys_add_wc(PCI BAR)
>> >
>> > On non-PAT systems on the MMIO region with PWT=1, PCD=1 we'd end up with 
>> > UC.
>> > Sadly though since _PAGE_CACHE_WC on non-PAT has PWT=1, PCD=0, the WC
>> > MTRR that follows would mean we'd end up with another grey area (but
>> > similar to before as technically an effectivethe memory type of WC).
>> >
>> > On PAT systems the above would not use MTRRs but we'd be counting on
>> > overlapping memory types -- its not clear if aliasing here is a problem.
>> >
>> > Also Intel SDM, volume 3, section "11.11.4 Range Size and Alignment 
>> > Requirement"
>> > describes that: "the minimum range size is 4 KiB, the base address must be 
>> > on
>> > a 4 KiB boundary. For ranges greater than 4 KiB each range must be of 
>> > length
>> > 2^n and its base address must be alinged on a 2^n boundary where n is a 
>> > value
>> > equal or greatar then 12. The base-address alignment value cannot be less
>> > than its length. For example, an 8-KiB range cannot be aligned on a
>> > 4-KiB boundary. It must be aligned on at least an 8-KiB boundary"
>> >
>> > So to answer my own question: indeed, our framebuffer base address must be
>> > aligned on a 2^n boundary, the size also has to be a power of 2. MTRR 
>> > supports
>> > fixed range sizes and variable range sizes, in case of the MMIO that does
>> > not need to abide by the power of 2 rule as a fixed range size of 4 KiB
>> > could be used although upon review ouf our own implemetnation its unclear 
>> > if
>> > that is what is used for 4 KiB sized MTRRs.
>> >
>> > Hence my arch_phys_add_wc(PCI BAR) as above.
>> >
>> >> > OK I think I get it now.
>> >> >
>> >> > And I take it this would hopefully only be used for non-PAT systems?
>> >
>> > Since we likely could care to use ioremap_x86_uc() on PAT systems as well 
>> > we
>> > could make the effective for both PAT and non-PAT obviously then.  Later 
>> > when
>> > we get ioremap() to default to strong UC we could drop ioremap_x86_uc() as 
>> > we'd
>> > only need it as transitory until then -- that is unless we want perhaps a 
>> > strong
>> > UC ioremap primitive which is always following strong UC when available 
>> > regardless
>> > of these default transitions.
>> >
>> > The big issue I see here is simply the combinatorial issues, so I do think
>> > its best to annotate these corner cases well and avoid them.
>> >
>> >> > Would there be a use case for PAT systems? I wonder if we can wrap
>> >> > this under some APIs to make it clean and hide this dirty thing
>> >> > behind the scenes, it seems a fragile and error prone and my hope
>> >> > would be that we won't need more specialization in this area for
>> >> > PAT systems.
>> >>
>> >> One potential complication is kernel vs. userspace mmap. MTRR applies to
>> >> the physical address, but PAT applies to the virtual address, so with
>> >> the WC MTRR you get WC for userspace "for free" as well.
>> >
>> > What is the performance impact of having the conversion being done by the
>> > kernel? Has anyone done measurements? If significant can't the subsystem 
>> > mmap()
>> > cache the phys address for PAT? Shouldn't the TLB take care of those 
>> > considerations
>> > for us? If this is generally desirable shouldn't we just generalize the 
>> > cache
>> > for devices for O(1) access through a generic API?
>>
>> We're pretty much required to keep the PTE memory types consistent for
>> aliasses of the same page.
>
> Hrm, OK so overlapping ioremap() calls should be frowed upon?
>
> I think its important to clarify the few different scenarios we have
> for atyfb, both for today when uc- is default and when uc becomes the
> default. I'll also clarify what this series originally tried to do
> but the issues that size requirements prohibit us to do along with
> combinatorial issues that would also be present when and if uc becomes
> default. Finally I'll clarify what I am thinking we should do in light
> of all this.
>
> _______________________________________________________________________
> |                                                       |             |
> |_______________________________________________________|_____________|
>
> \______________________________________________________/ \____________/
>
>                 Framebuffer (8 MiB)                         MMIO (4 KiB)
>
> Currently we have:
>
> Page_cache_mode's _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_ is removed below for brevity.
> The atyfb PCI BAR is condensed to:
>
> Frambuffer,MMIO
>
> Keeping in mind:
>
> Intel SDM, volume 3, section 11.5.2.1, table 11-6 (NonPAT combinatorial)
> Intel SDM, volume 3, section 11.5.2.2, table 11-7 (PAT    combinatorial)
>
> Linux PCD, PWT bits:
>
>  PAT
>  |PCD
>  ||PWT
>  |||
>  000 WB          _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_WB
>  001 WC          _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_WC
>  010 UC-         _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC_MINUS
>  011 UC          _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC
>
> (*)   below denotes grey area as per SDM, implementation-defined
> (%)   below denotes not posislbe due to size / base requirements of MTRRs
> (+)   below denotes combinatorial issue
>
> Non-PAT systems use PCD, PWT values, their respective bit settings for
> these are given although internally we use _PAGE_CACHE_MODE* on the
> ioremap* calls for both non-PAT and PAT. For instance
> _PAGE_CACHE_MODE_UC_MINUS is 10 for PCD=1, PWT=0.
>
> Today we have:
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> Calls                   |    Page_cache_mode  |  Effective memtype  |
> ------------------------|---------------------|---------------------
>                         |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> ioremap(MMIO)           | xxx, 10  | xxx, UC- | xxx, UC  | xxx, UC- |
> ioremap(PCI BAR)        | 10 , 10  | UC-, UC- | UC,  UC  | UC-, UC- |
> MTRR WC(PCI BAR)        | 10 , 10  | UC-, UC- | WC*, WC* | WC , WC  |
> MTRR UC(MMIO)           | 10 , 10  | UC-, UC- | WC*, UC  | WC , UC  |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> If today we revert commit de33c442e and UC becomes default this would run into
> the combinatorial issue:
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> Calls                   |    Page_cache_mode  |  Effective memtype  |
> ------------------------|---------------------|---------------------
>                         |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> ioremap(MMIO)           | xxx, 11  | xxx, UC  | xxx, UC  | xxx, UC  |
> ioremap(PCI BAR)        | 11 , 11  | UC , UC  | UC,  UC  | UC , UC  |
> MTRR WC(PCI BAR)        | 11 , 11  | UC,  UC  | UC+, UC+ | UC+, UC+ |
> MTRR UC(MMIO)           | 11 , 11  | UC,  UC  | UC+, UC  | UC+, UC  |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> We ideally would like to do the following but can't because of the restriction
> of having to use powers of two for both size and base address for MTRRs, we'd
> have two steps, one with mtrr_add, and another with arch_phys_add_wc(). This 
> is
> what this series was proposing for atyfb.
>
> With mtrr_add():
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> Calls                   |    Page_cache_mode  |  Effective memtype  |
> ------------------------|---------------------|---------------------
>                         |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> ioremap_nocache(MMIO)   | xxx, 10  | xxx, UC- | xxx, UC  | xxx, UC- |
> ioremap_wc(fb)          | 01 , 10  | WC , UC- | UC , UC  | WC , UC- |
> MTRR WC(fb)             | 01 , 10  | UC-, WC  | WC%*,UC  | WC%, UC- |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Then we'd change this to arch_phys_add_wc():
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> Calls                   |    Page_cache_mode  |  Effective memtype  |
> ------------------------|---------------------|---------------------
>                         |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> ioremap_nocache(MMIO)   | xxx, 10  | xxx, UC- | xxx, UC  | UC-, UC- |
> ioremap_wc(fb)          | 01 , 10  | WC , UC- | UC , UC  | WC , UC- |
> arch_phys_add_wc(fb)    | 01 , 10  | WC , WC  | WC%*,UC  | WC , UC- |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> With the above code as well we have to consider the issues if we
> revert commit de33c442e and UC becomes default, we'd run into then
> both the size issue and also a grey area:
>
> With mtrr_add():
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> Calls                   |    Page_cache_mode  |  Effective memtype  |
> ------------------------|---------------------|---------------------
>                         |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> ioremap_nocache(MMIO)   | xxx, 11  | xxx, UC  | xxx, UC  | xxx, UC  |
> ioremap_wc(fb)          | 01 , 11  | WC , UC  | UC , UC  | WC , UC  |
> MTRR WC(fb)             | 01 , 11  | WC , UC  | WC%* ,UC  | WC , UC  |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Then with arch_phys_add_wc():
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> Calls                   |    Page_cache_mode  |  Effective memtype  |
> ------------------------|---------------------|---------------------
>                         |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> ioremap_nocache(MMIO)   | xxx, 11  | xxx, UC  | xxx, UC  | xxx, UC  |
> ioremap_wc(fb)          | 01 , 11  | WC , UC  | UC , UC  | WC , UC  |
> arch_phys_add_wc(fb)    | 01 , 11  | WC , UC  | WC%*,UC  | WC , UC  |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> So what we *could* do then if we add ioremap_uc() (use strong UC always),
> then override the framebuffer area with wc, and finally use MTRR on the
> full PCI BAR, relying on that strong UC won't let the MTRR override
> the earlier UC on the MMIO area. There is a grey area here for non-PAT
> systemes but that is also the case as-is today.
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> Calls                   |    Page_cache_mode  |  Effective memtype  |
> ------------------------|---------------------|---------------------
>                         |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> ioremap_uc(PCI BAR)     | 11 , 11  | UC , UC  | UC , UC  | UC , UC  |
> ioremap_wc(fb)          | 01 , 11  | WC , UC  | UC , UC  | WC , UC  |
> MTRR_WC(PCI BAR)        | 01 , 11  | WC , UC  | WC*, UC  | WC , UC  |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Finally with the arch_phys_add_wc() we'd end up with:
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> Calls                   |    Page_cache_mode  |  Effective memtype  |
> ------------------------|---------------------|---------------------
>                         |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |  Non-PAT |    PAT   |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> ioremap_uc(PCI BAR)     | 11 , 11  | UC , UC  | UC , UC  | UC , UC  |
> ioremap_wc(fb)          | 01 , 11  | WC , UC  | UC , UC  | WC , UC  |
> arch_phys_add_wc(PCIBAR)| 01 , 11  | WC , UC  | WC*, UC  | WC , UC  |
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> In this case a revert of de33c442e won't have any effect as the driver
> was already well prepared for it by using ioremap_uc().
>
>> I think that the x86 pageattr code is
>> supposed to take care of this.  IOW, if everything is working right,
>> then the supposedly uncached mmap should either fail, be promoted to
>> WC, or cause the existing WC map to degrade to UC.  The code is really
>> overcomplicated right now.
>
> Yeah aliasing things are not clear for the above picture for me, someone
> who is knee-deep in this can likely confirm of any issues with the above
> pictures. But most importrantly if we believe however that the last two sets
> above don't have any issues then I think we can move forward. Since we only
> have a few drivers that need special handling I think it makes sense to treat
> them specially and document this strategy for the "hole" work around.
>

Seems reaonable to me.

--Andy

> Thoughts?
>
>   Luis



-- 
Andy Lutomirski
AMA Capital Management, LLC

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