[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH V3 12/29] x86/vvtd: Add MMIO handler for VVTD
On Thu, Oct 19, 2017 at 12:34:54PM +0100, Roger Pau Monné wrote: >On Thu, Sep 21, 2017 at 11:01:53PM -0400, Lan Tianyu wrote: >> From: Chao Gao <chao.gao@xxxxxxxxx> >> >> This patch adds VVTD MMIO handler to deal with MMIO access. >> >> Signed-off-by: Chao Gao <chao.gao@xxxxxxxxx> >> Signed-off-by: Lan Tianyu <tianyu.lan@xxxxxxxxx> >> --- >> xen/drivers/passthrough/vtd/vvtd.c | 91 >> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >> 1 file changed, 91 insertions(+) >> >> diff --git a/xen/drivers/passthrough/vtd/vvtd.c >> b/xen/drivers/passthrough/vtd/vvtd.c >> index c851ec7..a3002c3 100644 >> --- a/xen/drivers/passthrough/vtd/vvtd.c >> +++ b/xen/drivers/passthrough/vtd/vvtd.c >> @@ -47,6 +47,29 @@ struct vvtd { >> struct page_info *regs_page; >> }; >> >> +/* Setting viommu_verbose enables debugging messages of vIOMMU */ >> +bool __read_mostly viommu_verbose; >> +boolean_runtime_param("viommu_verbose", viommu_verbose); >> + >> +#ifndef NDEBUG >> +#define vvtd_info(fmt...) do { \ >> + if ( viommu_verbose ) \ >> + gprintk(XENLOG_G_INFO, ## fmt); \ > >If you use gprintk you should use XENLOG_INFO, the '_G_' variants are >only used with plain printk. > >> +} while(0) >> +#define vvtd_debug(fmt...) do { \ >> + if ( viommu_verbose && printk_ratelimit() ) \ > >Not sure why you need printk_ratelimit, XENLOG_G_DEBUG is already >rate-limited. > >> + printk(XENLOG_G_DEBUG fmt); \ > >Any reason why vvtd_info uses gprintk and here you use printk? > >> +} while(0) >> +#else >> +#define vvtd_info(fmt...) do {} while(0) >> +#define vvtd_debug(fmt...) do {} while(0) > >No need for 'fmt...' just '...' will suffice since you are discarding >the parameters anyway. > >> +#endif >> + >> +struct vvtd *domain_vvtd(struct domain *d) >> +{ >> + return (d->viommu) ? d->viommu->priv : NULL; > >Unneeded parentheses around d->viommu. > >Also, it seems wring to call domain_vvtd with !d->viommu. So I think >this helper should just be removed, and d->viommu->priv fetched >directly. > >> +} >> + >> static inline void vvtd_set_reg(struct vvtd *vtd, uint32_t reg, uint32_t >> value) >> { >> vtd->regs->data32[reg/sizeof(uint32_t)] = value; >> @@ -68,6 +91,73 @@ static inline uint64_t vvtd_get_reg_quad(struct vvtd >> *vtd, uint32_t reg) >> return vtd->regs->data64[reg/sizeof(uint64_t)]; >> } >> >> +static int vvtd_in_range(struct vcpu *v, unsigned long addr) >> +{ >> + struct vvtd *vvtd = domain_vvtd(v->domain); >> + >> + if ( vvtd ) >> + return (addr >= vvtd->base_addr) && >> + (addr < vvtd->base_addr + PAGE_SIZE); > >So the register set covers a PAGE_SIZE, but hvm_hw_vvtd_regs only >covers from 0 to 1024B, it seems like there's something wrong here... > >> + return 0; >> +} >> + >> +static int vvtd_read(struct vcpu *v, unsigned long addr, >> + unsigned int len, unsigned long *pval) >> +{ >> + struct vvtd *vvtd = domain_vvtd(v->domain); >> + unsigned int offset = addr - vvtd->base_addr; >> + >> + vvtd_info("Read offset %x len %d\n", offset, len); >> + >> + if ( (len != 4 && len != 8) || (offset & (len - 1)) ) > >What value does hardware return when performing unaligned reads or >reads with wrong size? According to VT-d spec section 10.2, "Software must access 64-bit and 128-bit registers as either aligned quadwords or aligned doublewords". I am afraid there is no specific hardware action for unaligned access information. We can treat it as undefined? Then do nothing. But I did see windows driver has such accesses. We need to add a workaround for windows later. > >Here you return with pval not set, which is dangerous. Indeed. But I need check whether the pval is initialized by the caller. If that, it is safe. > >> + return X86EMUL_OKAY; >> + >> + if ( len == 4 ) >> + *pval = vvtd_get_reg(vvtd, offset); >> + else >> + *pval = vvtd_get_reg_quad(vvtd, offset); > >...yet here you don't check for offset < 1024. > >> + >> + return X86EMUL_OKAY; >> +} >> + >> +static int vvtd_write(struct vcpu *v, unsigned long addr, >> + unsigned int len, unsigned long val) >> +{ >> + struct vvtd *vvtd = domain_vvtd(v->domain); >> + unsigned int offset = addr - vvtd->base_addr; >> + >> + vvtd_info("Write offset %x len %d val %lx\n", offset, len, val); >> + >> + if ( (len != 4 && len != 8) || (offset & (len - 1)) ) >> + return X86EMUL_OKAY; >> + >> + if ( len == 4 ) >> + { >> + switch ( offset ) >> + { >> + case DMAR_IEDATA_REG: >> + case DMAR_IEADDR_REG: >> + case DMAR_IEUADDR_REG: >> + case DMAR_FEDATA_REG: >> + case DMAR_FEADDR_REG: >> + case DMAR_FEUADDR_REG: >> + vvtd_set_reg(vvtd, offset, val); > >Hm, so you are using a full page when you only care for 6 4B >registers? Seem like quite of a waste of memory. Registers are added here when according features are introduced. Thanks Chao _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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