[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [Xen-devel] Shattering superpages impact on IOMMU in Xen



On 03/04/17 17:24, Oleksandr Tyshchenko wrote:
> Hi, all.
>
> Playing with non-shared IOMMU in Xen on ARM I faced one interesting
> thing. I found out that the superpages were shattered during domain
> life cycle.
> This is the result of mapping of foreign pages, ballooning memory,
> even if domain maps Xen shared pages, etc.
> I don't bother with the memory fragmentation at the moment. But,
> shattering bothers me from the IOMMU point of view.
> As the Xen owns IOMMU it might manipulate IOMMU page tables when
> passthoughed/protected device doing DMA in Linux. It is hard to detect
> when the DMA transaction isn't in progress
> in order to prevent this race. So, if we have inflight transaction
> from a device when changing IOMMU mapping we might get into trouble.
> Unfortunately, not in all the cases the
> faulting transaction can be restarted. The chance to hit the problem
> increases during shattering.
>
> I did next test:
> The dom0 on my setup contains ethernet IP that are protected by IOMMU.
> What is more, as the IOMMU I am playing with supports superpages (2M,
> 1G) the IOMMU driver
> takes into account these capabilities when building page tables. As I
> gave 256 MB for dom0, the IOMMU mapping was built by 2M memory blocks
> only. As I am using NFS for both dom0 and domU the ethernet IP
> performs DMA transactions almost all the time.
> Sometimes, I see the IOMMU page faults during creating guest domain. I
> think, it happens during Xen is shattering 2M mappings 4K mappings (it
> unmaps dom0 pages by one 4K page at a time, then maps domU pages there
> for copying domU images).
> But, I don't see any page faults when the IOMMU page table was built
> by 4K pages only.
>
> I had a talk with Julien on IIRC and we came to conclusion that the
> safest way would be to use 4K pages to prevent shattering, so the
> IOMMU shouldn't report superpage capability.
> On the other hand, if we build IOMMU from 4K pages we will have
> performance drop (during building, walking page tables), TLB pressure,
> etc.
> Another possible solution Julien was suggesting is to always
> ballooning with 2M, 1G, and not using 4K. That would help us to
> prevent shattering effect.
> The discussion was moved to the ML since it seems to be a generic
> issue and the right solution should be think of.
>
> What do you think is the right way to follow? Use 4K pages and don't
> bother with shattering or try to optimize? And if the idea to make
> balloon mechanism smarter makes sense how to teach balloon to do so?
> Thank you.

Ballooning and foreign mappings are terrible for trying to retain
superpage mappings.  No OS, not even Linux, can sensibly provide victim
pages in a useful way to avoid shattering.

If you care about performance, don't ever balloon.  Foreign mappings in
translated guests should start from the top of RAM, and work upwards.


As for the IOMMU specifically, things are rather easier.  It is the
guests responsibility to ensure that frames offered up for ballooning or
foreign mappings are unused.  Therefore, if anything cares about the
specific 4K region becoming non-present in the IOMMU mappings, it is the
guest kernels fault for offering up a frame already in use.

For the shattering however, It is Xen's responsibility to ensure that
all other mappings stay valid at all points.  The correct way to do this
is to construct a new L1 table, mirroring the L2 superpage but lacking
the specific 4K mapping in question, then atomically replace the L2
superpage entry with the new L1 table, then issue an IOMMU TLB
invalidation to remove any cached mappings.

By following that procedure, all DMA within the 2M region, but not
hitting the 4K frame, won't observe any interim lack of mappings.  It
appears from your description that Xen isn't following the procedure.

~Andrew

_______________________________________________
Xen-devel mailing list
Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel

 


Rackspace

Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our
servers 24x7x365 and backed by RackSpace's Fanatical Support®.