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Re: [RFC PATCH v3 5/6] dt-bindings: of: Add restricted DMA pool



On 2021-01-20 16:53, Rob Herring wrote:
On Wed, Jan 06, 2021 at 11:41:23AM +0800, Claire Chang wrote:
Introduce the new compatible string, restricted-dma-pool, for restricted
DMA. One can specify the address and length of the restricted DMA memory
region by restricted-dma-pool in the device tree.

If this goes into DT, I think we should be able to use dma-ranges for
this purpose instead. Normally, 'dma-ranges' is for physical bus
restrictions, but there's no reason it can't be used for policy or to
express restrictions the firmware has enabled.

There would still need to be some way to tell SWIOTLB to pick up the corresponding chunk of memory and to prevent the kernel from using it for anything else, though.

Signed-off-by: Claire Chang <tientzu@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
  .../reserved-memory/reserved-memory.txt       | 24 +++++++++++++++++++
  1 file changed, 24 insertions(+)

diff --git 
a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/reserved-memory/reserved-memory.txt 
b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/reserved-memory/reserved-memory.txt
index e8d3096d922c..44975e2a1fd2 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/reserved-memory/reserved-memory.txt
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/reserved-memory/reserved-memory.txt
@@ -51,6 +51,20 @@ compatible (optional) - standard definition
            used as a shared pool of DMA buffers for a set of devices. It can
            be used by an operating system to instantiate the necessary pool
            management subsystem if necessary.
+        - restricted-dma-pool: This indicates a region of memory meant to be
+          used as a pool of restricted DMA buffers for a set of devices. The
+          memory region would be the only region accessible to those devices.
+          When using this, the no-map and reusable properties must not be set,
+          so the operating system can create a virtual mapping that will be 
used
+          for synchronization. The main purpose for restricted DMA is to
+          mitigate the lack of DMA access control on systems without an IOMMU,
+          which could result in the DMA accessing the system memory at
+          unexpected times and/or unexpected addresses, possibly leading to 
data
+          leakage or corruption. The feature on its own provides a basic level
+          of protection against the DMA overwriting buffer contents at
+          unexpected times. However, to protect against general data leakage 
and
+          system memory corruption, the system needs to provide way to restrict
+          the DMA to a predefined memory region.
          - vendor specific string in the form <vendor>,[<device>-]<usage>
  no-map (optional) - empty property
      - Indicates the operating system must not create a virtual mapping
@@ -120,6 +134,11 @@ one for multimedia processing (named 
multimedia-memory@77000000, 64MiB).
                        compatible = "acme,multimedia-memory";
                        reg = <0x77000000 0x4000000>;
                };
+
+               restricted_dma_mem_reserved: restricted_dma_mem_reserved {
+                       compatible = "restricted-dma-pool";
+                       reg = <0x50000000 0x400000>;
+               };
        };
/* ... */
@@ -138,4 +157,9 @@ one for multimedia processing (named 
multimedia-memory@77000000, 64MiB).
                memory-region = <&multimedia_reserved>;
                /* ... */
        };
+
+       pcie_device: pcie_device@0,0 {
+               memory-region = <&restricted_dma_mem_reserved>;

PCI hosts often have inbound window configurations that limit the
address range and translate PCI to bus addresses. Those windows happen
to be configured by dma-ranges. In any case, wouldn't you want to put
the configuration in the PCI host node? Is there a usecase of
restricting one PCIe device and not another?

The general design seems to accommodate devices having their own pools such that they can't even snoop on each others' transient DMA data. If the interconnect had a way of wiring up, say, PCI RIDs to AMBA NSAIDs, then in principle you could certainly apply that to PCI endpoints too (presumably you'd also disallow them from peer-to-peer transactions at the PCI level too).

Robin.



 


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