freebsd-dev/sys/x86/iommu/busdma_dmar.c

1051 lines
29 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
/*-
* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD
*
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
* Copyright (c) 2013 The FreeBSD Foundation
* All rights reserved.
*
* This software was developed by Konstantin Belousov <kib@FreeBSD.org>
* under sponsorship from the FreeBSD Foundation.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/domainset.h>
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/bus.h>
#include <sys/conf.h>
#include <sys/interrupt.h>
#include <sys/iommu.h>
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/ktr.h>
#include <sys/lock.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/memdesc.h>
#include <sys/mutex.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
#include <sys/rman.h>
#include <sys/taskqueue.h>
#include <sys/tree.h>
#include <sys/uio.h>
Use VT-d interrupt remapping block (IR) to perform FSB messages translation. In particular, despite IO-APICs only take 8bit apic id, IR translation structures accept 32bit APIC Id, which allows x2APIC mode to function properly. Extend msi_cpu of struct msi_intrsrc and io_cpu of ioapic_intsrc to full int from one byte. KPI of IR is isolated into the x86/iommu/iommu_intrmap.h, to avoid bringing all dmar headers into interrupt code. The non-PCI(e) devices which generate message interrupts on FSB require special handling. The HPET FSB interrupts are remapped, while DMAR interrupts are not. For each msi and ioapic interrupt source, the iommu cookie is added, which is in fact index of the IRE (interrupt remap entry) in the IR table. Cookie is made at the source allocation time, and then used at the map time to fill both IRE and device registers. The MSI address/data registers and IO-APIC redirection registers are programmed with the special values which are recognized by IR and used to restore the IRE index, to find proper delivery mode and target. Map all MSI interrupts in the block when msi_map() is called. Since an interrupt source setup and dismantle code are done in the non-sleepable context, flushing interrupt entries cache in the IR hardware, which is done async and ideally waits for the interrupt, requires busy-wait for queue to drain. The dmar_qi_wait_for_seq() is modified to take a boolean argument requesting busy-wait for the written sequence number instead of waiting for interrupt. Some interrupts are configured before IR is initialized, e.g. ACPI SCI. Add intr_reprogram() function to reprogram all already configured interrupts, and call it immediately before an IR unit is enabled. There is still a small window after the IO-APIC redirection entry is reprogrammed with cookie but before the unit is enabled, but to fix this properly, IR must be started much earlier. Add workarounds for 5500 and X58 northbridges, some revisions of which have severe flaws in handling IR. Use the same identification methods as employed by Linux. Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1892 Reviewed by: neel Discussed with: jhb Tested by: glebius, pho (previous versions) Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 3 weeks
2015-03-19 13:57:47 +00:00
#include <sys/vmem.h>
#include <dev/pci/pcireg.h>
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
#include <dev/pci/pcivar.h>
#include <vm/vm.h>
#include <vm/vm_extern.h>
#include <vm/vm_kern.h>
#include <vm/vm_object.h>
#include <vm/vm_page.h>
#include <vm/vm_map.h>
#include <machine/atomic.h>
#include <machine/bus.h>
#include <machine/md_var.h>
#if defined(__amd64__) || defined(__i386__)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
#include <machine/specialreg.h>
#include <x86/include/busdma_impl.h>
#include <x86/iommu/intel_reg.h>
#include <x86/iommu/busdma_dmar.h>
#include <x86/iommu/intel_dmar.h>
#endif
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
/*
* busdma_dmar.c, the implementation of the busdma(9) interface using
* DMAR units from Intel VT-d.
*/
static bool
iommu_bus_dma_is_dev_disabled(int domain, int bus, int slot, int func)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
char str[128], *env;
int default_bounce;
bool ret;
static const char bounce_str[] = "bounce";
static const char iommu_str[] = "iommu";
static const char dmar_str[] = "dmar"; /* compatibility */
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
default_bounce = 0;
env = kern_getenv("hw.busdma.default");
if (env != NULL) {
if (strcmp(env, bounce_str) == 0)
default_bounce = 1;
else if (strcmp(env, iommu_str) == 0 ||
strcmp(env, dmar_str) == 0)
default_bounce = 0;
freeenv(env);
}
snprintf(str, sizeof(str), "hw.busdma.pci%d.%d.%d.%d",
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
domain, bus, slot, func);
env = kern_getenv(str);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (env == NULL)
return (default_bounce != 0);
if (strcmp(env, bounce_str) == 0)
ret = true;
else if (strcmp(env, iommu_str) == 0 ||
strcmp(env, dmar_str) == 0)
ret = false;
else
ret = default_bounce != 0;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
freeenv(env);
return (ret);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
}
/*
* Given original device, find the requester ID that will be seen by
* the IOMMU unit and used for page table lookup. PCI bridges may take
* ownership of transactions from downstream devices, so it may not be
* the same as the BSF of the target device. In those cases, all
* devices downstream of the bridge must share a single mapping
* domain, and must collectively be assigned to use either IOMMU or
* bounce mapping.
*/
Use VT-d interrupt remapping block (IR) to perform FSB messages translation. In particular, despite IO-APICs only take 8bit apic id, IR translation structures accept 32bit APIC Id, which allows x2APIC mode to function properly. Extend msi_cpu of struct msi_intrsrc and io_cpu of ioapic_intsrc to full int from one byte. KPI of IR is isolated into the x86/iommu/iommu_intrmap.h, to avoid bringing all dmar headers into interrupt code. The non-PCI(e) devices which generate message interrupts on FSB require special handling. The HPET FSB interrupts are remapped, while DMAR interrupts are not. For each msi and ioapic interrupt source, the iommu cookie is added, which is in fact index of the IRE (interrupt remap entry) in the IR table. Cookie is made at the source allocation time, and then used at the map time to fill both IRE and device registers. The MSI address/data registers and IO-APIC redirection registers are programmed with the special values which are recognized by IR and used to restore the IRE index, to find proper delivery mode and target. Map all MSI interrupts in the block when msi_map() is called. Since an interrupt source setup and dismantle code are done in the non-sleepable context, flushing interrupt entries cache in the IR hardware, which is done async and ideally waits for the interrupt, requires busy-wait for queue to drain. The dmar_qi_wait_for_seq() is modified to take a boolean argument requesting busy-wait for the written sequence number instead of waiting for interrupt. Some interrupts are configured before IR is initialized, e.g. ACPI SCI. Add intr_reprogram() function to reprogram all already configured interrupts, and call it immediately before an IR unit is enabled. There is still a small window after the IO-APIC redirection entry is reprogrammed with cookie but before the unit is enabled, but to fix this properly, IR must be started much earlier. Add workarounds for 5500 and X58 northbridges, some revisions of which have severe flaws in handling IR. Use the same identification methods as employed by Linux. Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1892 Reviewed by: neel Discussed with: jhb Tested by: glebius, pho (previous versions) Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 3 weeks
2015-03-19 13:57:47 +00:00
device_t
iommu_get_requester(device_t dev, uint16_t *rid)
{
devclass_t pci_class;
device_t l, pci, pcib, pcip, pcibp, requester;
int cap_offset;
uint16_t pcie_flags;
bool bridge_is_pcie;
pci_class = devclass_find("pci");
l = requester = dev;
*rid = pci_get_rid(dev);
/*
* Walk the bridge hierarchy from the target device to the
* host port to find the translating bridge nearest the IOMMU
* unit.
*/
for (;;) {
pci = device_get_parent(l);
KASSERT(pci != NULL, ("iommu_get_requester(%s): NULL parent "
"for %s", device_get_name(dev), device_get_name(l)));
KASSERT(device_get_devclass(pci) == pci_class,
("iommu_get_requester(%s): non-pci parent %s for %s",
device_get_name(dev), device_get_name(pci),
device_get_name(l)));
pcib = device_get_parent(pci);
KASSERT(pcib != NULL, ("iommu_get_requester(%s): NULL bridge "
"for %s", device_get_name(dev), device_get_name(pci)));
/*
* The parent of our "bridge" isn't another PCI bus,
* so pcib isn't a PCI->PCI bridge but rather a host
* port, and the requester ID won't be translated
* further.
*/
pcip = device_get_parent(pcib);
if (device_get_devclass(pcip) != pci_class)
break;
pcibp = device_get_parent(pcip);
if (pci_find_cap(l, PCIY_EXPRESS, &cap_offset) == 0) {
/*
* Do not stop the loop even if the target
* device is PCIe, because it is possible (but
* unlikely) to have a PCI->PCIe bridge
* somewhere in the hierarchy.
*/
l = pcib;
} else {
/*
* Device is not PCIe, it cannot be seen as a
* requester by IOMMU unit. Check whether the
* bridge is PCIe.
*/
bridge_is_pcie = pci_find_cap(pcib, PCIY_EXPRESS,
&cap_offset) == 0;
requester = pcib;
/*
* Check for a buggy PCIe/PCI bridge that
* doesn't report the express capability. If
* the bridge above it is express but isn't a
* PCI bridge, then we know pcib is actually a
* PCIe/PCI bridge.
*/
if (!bridge_is_pcie && pci_find_cap(pcibp,
PCIY_EXPRESS, &cap_offset) == 0) {
pcie_flags = pci_read_config(pcibp,
cap_offset + PCIER_FLAGS, 2);
if ((pcie_flags & PCIEM_FLAGS_TYPE) !=
PCIEM_TYPE_PCI_BRIDGE)
bridge_is_pcie = true;
}
if (bridge_is_pcie) {
/*
* The current device is not PCIe, but
* the bridge above it is. This is a
* PCIe->PCI bridge. Assume that the
* requester ID will be the secondary
* bus number with slot and function
* set to zero.
*
* XXX: Doesn't handle the case where
* the bridge is PCIe->PCI-X, and the
* bridge will only take ownership of
* requests in some cases. We should
* provide context entries with the
* same page tables for taken and
* non-taken transactions.
*/
*rid = PCI_RID(pci_get_bus(l), 0, 0);
l = pcibp;
} else {
/*
* Neither the device nor the bridge
* above it are PCIe. This is a
* conventional PCI->PCI bridge, which
* will use the bridge's BSF as the
* requester ID.
*/
*rid = pci_get_rid(pcib);
l = pcib;
}
}
}
return (requester);
}
struct iommu_ctx *
iommu_instantiate_ctx(struct iommu_unit *unit, device_t dev, bool rmrr)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
device_t requester;
struct iommu_ctx *ctx;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
bool disabled;
uint16_t rid;
requester = iommu_get_requester(dev, &rid);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
/*
* If the user requested the IOMMU disabled for the device, we
* cannot disable the IOMMU unit, due to possibility of other
* devices on the same IOMMU unit still requiring translation.
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
* Instead provide the identity mapping for the device
* context.
*/
disabled = iommu_bus_dma_is_dev_disabled(pci_get_domain(requester),
pci_get_bus(requester), pci_get_slot(requester),
pci_get_function(requester));
ctx = iommu_get_ctx(unit, requester, rid, disabled, rmrr);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (ctx == NULL)
return (NULL);
if (disabled) {
/*
* Keep the first reference on context, release the
* later refs.
*/
IOMMU_LOCK(unit);
if ((ctx->flags & IOMMU_CTX_DISABLED) == 0) {
ctx->flags |= IOMMU_CTX_DISABLED;
IOMMU_UNLOCK(unit);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
} else {
iommu_free_ctx_locked(unit, ctx);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
}
ctx = NULL;
}
return (ctx);
}
bus_dma_tag_t
acpi_iommu_get_dma_tag(device_t dev, device_t child)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
struct iommu_unit *unit;
struct iommu_ctx *ctx;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
bus_dma_tag_t res;
unit = iommu_find(child, bootverbose);
/* Not in scope of any IOMMU ? */
if (unit == NULL)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
return (NULL);
if (!unit->dma_enabled)
Use VT-d interrupt remapping block (IR) to perform FSB messages translation. In particular, despite IO-APICs only take 8bit apic id, IR translation structures accept 32bit APIC Id, which allows x2APIC mode to function properly. Extend msi_cpu of struct msi_intrsrc and io_cpu of ioapic_intsrc to full int from one byte. KPI of IR is isolated into the x86/iommu/iommu_intrmap.h, to avoid bringing all dmar headers into interrupt code. The non-PCI(e) devices which generate message interrupts on FSB require special handling. The HPET FSB interrupts are remapped, while DMAR interrupts are not. For each msi and ioapic interrupt source, the iommu cookie is added, which is in fact index of the IRE (interrupt remap entry) in the IR table. Cookie is made at the source allocation time, and then used at the map time to fill both IRE and device registers. The MSI address/data registers and IO-APIC redirection registers are programmed with the special values which are recognized by IR and used to restore the IRE index, to find proper delivery mode and target. Map all MSI interrupts in the block when msi_map() is called. Since an interrupt source setup and dismantle code are done in the non-sleepable context, flushing interrupt entries cache in the IR hardware, which is done async and ideally waits for the interrupt, requires busy-wait for queue to drain. The dmar_qi_wait_for_seq() is modified to take a boolean argument requesting busy-wait for the written sequence number instead of waiting for interrupt. Some interrupts are configured before IR is initialized, e.g. ACPI SCI. Add intr_reprogram() function to reprogram all already configured interrupts, and call it immediately before an IR unit is enabled. There is still a small window after the IO-APIC redirection entry is reprogrammed with cookie but before the unit is enabled, but to fix this properly, IR must be started much earlier. Add workarounds for 5500 and X58 northbridges, some revisions of which have severe flaws in handling IR. Use the same identification methods as employed by Linux. Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1892 Reviewed by: neel Discussed with: jhb Tested by: glebius, pho (previous versions) Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 3 weeks
2015-03-19 13:57:47 +00:00
return (NULL);
#if defined(__amd64__) || defined(__i386__)
dmar_quirks_pre_use(unit);
dmar_instantiate_rmrr_ctxs(unit);
#endif
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
ctx = iommu_instantiate_ctx(unit, child, false);
res = ctx == NULL ? NULL : (bus_dma_tag_t)ctx->tag;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
return (res);
}
bool
bus_dma_dmar_set_buswide(device_t dev)
{
struct iommu_unit *unit;
device_t parent;
u_int busno, slot, func;
parent = device_get_parent(dev);
if (device_get_devclass(parent) != devclass_find("pci"))
return (false);
unit = iommu_find(dev, bootverbose);
if (unit == NULL)
return (false);
busno = pci_get_bus(dev);
slot = pci_get_slot(dev);
func = pci_get_function(dev);
if (slot != 0 || func != 0) {
if (bootverbose) {
device_printf(dev,
"dmar%d pci%d:%d:%d requested buswide busdma\n",
unit->unit, busno, slot, func);
}
return (false);
}
dmar_set_buswide_ctx(unit, busno);
return (true);
}
static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_IOMMU_DMAMAP, "iommu_dmamap", "IOMMU DMA Map");
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
static void iommu_bus_schedule_dmamap(struct iommu_unit *unit,
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
static int
iommu_bus_dma_tag_create(bus_dma_tag_t parent, bus_size_t alignment,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
bus_addr_t boundary, bus_addr_t lowaddr, bus_addr_t highaddr,
bus_dma_filter_t *filter, void *filterarg, bus_size_t maxsize,
int nsegments, bus_size_t maxsegsz, int flags, bus_dma_lock_t *lockfunc,
void *lockfuncarg, bus_dma_tag_t *dmat)
{
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *newtag, *oldtag;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
int error;
*dmat = NULL;
error = common_bus_dma_tag_create(parent != NULL ?
&((struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)parent)->common : NULL, alignment,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
boundary, lowaddr, highaddr, filter, filterarg, maxsize,
nsegments, maxsegsz, flags, lockfunc, lockfuncarg,
sizeof(struct bus_dma_tag_iommu), (void **)&newtag);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (error != 0)
goto out;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
oldtag = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)parent;
newtag->common.impl = &bus_dma_iommu_impl;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
newtag->ctx = oldtag->ctx;
newtag->owner = oldtag->owner;
*dmat = (bus_dma_tag_t)newtag;
out:
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
CTR4(KTR_BUSDMA, "%s returned tag %p tag flags 0x%x error %d",
__func__, newtag, (newtag != NULL ? newtag->common.flags : 0),
error);
return (error);
}
static int
iommu_bus_dma_tag_set_domain(bus_dma_tag_t dmat)
{
return (0);
}
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
static int
iommu_bus_dma_tag_destroy(bus_dma_tag_t dmat1)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *dmat, *dmat_copy, *parent;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
int error;
error = 0;
dmat_copy = dmat = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat1;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (dmat != NULL) {
if (dmat->map_count != 0) {
error = EBUSY;
goto out;
}
while (dmat != NULL) {
parent = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat->common.parent;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (atomic_fetchadd_int(&dmat->common.ref_count, -1) ==
1) {
if (dmat == dmat->ctx->tag)
iommu_free_ctx(dmat->ctx);
free_domain(dmat->segments, M_IOMMU_DMAMAP);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
free(dmat, M_DEVBUF);
dmat = parent;
} else
dmat = NULL;
}
}
out:
CTR3(KTR_BUSDMA, "%s tag %p error %d", __func__, dmat_copy, error);
return (error);
}
static bool
iommu_bus_dma_id_mapped(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, vm_paddr_t buf, bus_size_t buflen)
{
return (false);
}
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
static int
iommu_bus_dmamap_create(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, int flags, bus_dmamap_t *mapp)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag;
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
tag = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat;
map = malloc_domainset(sizeof(*map), M_IOMMU_DMAMAP,
DOMAINSET_PREF(tag->common.domain), M_NOWAIT | M_ZERO);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (map == NULL) {
*mapp = NULL;
return (ENOMEM);
}
if (tag->segments == NULL) {
tag->segments = malloc_domainset(sizeof(bus_dma_segment_t) *
tag->common.nsegments, M_IOMMU_DMAMAP,
DOMAINSET_PREF(tag->common.domain), M_NOWAIT);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (tag->segments == NULL) {
free_domain(map, M_IOMMU_DMAMAP);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
*mapp = NULL;
return (ENOMEM);
}
}
TAILQ_INIT(&map->map_entries);
map->tag = tag;
map->locked = true;
map->cansleep = false;
tag->map_count++;
*mapp = (bus_dmamap_t)map;
2014-03-18 15:59:06 +00:00
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
return (0);
}
static int
iommu_bus_dmamap_destroy(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, bus_dmamap_t map1)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag;
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map;
struct iommu_domain *domain;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
tag = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat;
map = (struct bus_dmamap_iommu *)map1;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (map != NULL) {
domain = tag->ctx->domain;
IOMMU_DOMAIN_LOCK(domain);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (!TAILQ_EMPTY(&map->map_entries)) {
IOMMU_DOMAIN_UNLOCK(domain);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
return (EBUSY);
}
IOMMU_DOMAIN_UNLOCK(domain);
free_domain(map, M_IOMMU_DMAMAP);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
}
tag->map_count--;
return (0);
}
static int
iommu_bus_dmamem_alloc(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, void** vaddr, int flags,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
bus_dmamap_t *mapp)
{
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag;
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
int error, mflags;
vm_memattr_t attr;
error = iommu_bus_dmamap_create(dmat, flags, mapp);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (error != 0)
return (error);
mflags = (flags & BUS_DMA_NOWAIT) != 0 ? M_NOWAIT : M_WAITOK;
mflags |= (flags & BUS_DMA_ZERO) != 0 ? M_ZERO : 0;
attr = (flags & BUS_DMA_NOCACHE) != 0 ? VM_MEMATTR_UNCACHEABLE :
VM_MEMATTR_DEFAULT;
2014-03-18 15:59:06 +00:00
tag = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat;
map = (struct bus_dmamap_iommu *)*mapp;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (tag->common.maxsize < PAGE_SIZE &&
tag->common.alignment <= tag->common.maxsize &&
attr == VM_MEMATTR_DEFAULT) {
*vaddr = malloc_domainset(tag->common.maxsize, M_DEVBUF,
DOMAINSET_PREF(tag->common.domain), mflags);
map->flags |= BUS_DMAMAP_IOMMU_MALLOC;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
} else {
*vaddr = (void *)kmem_alloc_attr_domainset(
DOMAINSET_PREF(tag->common.domain), tag->common.maxsize,
mflags, 0ul, BUS_SPACE_MAXADDR, attr);
map->flags |= BUS_DMAMAP_IOMMU_KMEM_ALLOC;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
}
if (*vaddr == NULL) {
iommu_bus_dmamap_destroy(dmat, *mapp);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
*mapp = NULL;
return (ENOMEM);
}
return (0);
}
static void
iommu_bus_dmamem_free(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, void *vaddr, bus_dmamap_t map1)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag;
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
tag = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat;
map = (struct bus_dmamap_iommu *)map1;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if ((map->flags & BUS_DMAMAP_IOMMU_MALLOC) != 0) {
free_domain(vaddr, M_DEVBUF);
map->flags &= ~BUS_DMAMAP_IOMMU_MALLOC;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
} else {
KASSERT((map->flags & BUS_DMAMAP_IOMMU_KMEM_ALLOC) != 0,
("iommu_bus_dmamem_free for non alloced map %p", map));
kmem_free((vm_offset_t)vaddr, tag->common.maxsize);
map->flags &= ~BUS_DMAMAP_IOMMU_KMEM_ALLOC;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
}
iommu_bus_dmamap_destroy(dmat, map1);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
}
static int
iommu_bus_dmamap_load_something1(struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag,
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map, vm_page_t *ma, int offset, bus_size_t buflen,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
int flags, bus_dma_segment_t *segs, int *segp,
struct iommu_map_entries_tailq *unroll_list)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
struct iommu_ctx *ctx;
struct iommu_domain *domain;
struct iommu_map_entry *entry;
iommu_gaddr_t size;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
bus_size_t buflen1;
int error, idx, gas_flags, seg;
KASSERT(offset < IOMMU_PAGE_SIZE, ("offset %d", offset));
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (segs == NULL)
segs = tag->segments;
ctx = tag->ctx;
domain = ctx->domain;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
seg = *segp;
error = 0;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
idx = 0;
while (buflen > 0) {
seg++;
if (seg >= tag->common.nsegments) {
error = EFBIG;
break;
}
buflen1 = buflen > tag->common.maxsegsz ?
tag->common.maxsegsz : buflen;
size = round_page(offset + buflen1);
/*
* (Too) optimistically allow split if there are more
* then one segments left.
*/
gas_flags = map->cansleep ? IOMMU_MF_CANWAIT : 0;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (seg + 1 < tag->common.nsegments)
gas_flags |= IOMMU_MF_CANSPLIT;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
error = iommu_map(domain, &tag->common, size, offset,
IOMMU_MAP_ENTRY_READ |
((flags & BUS_DMA_NOWRITE) == 0 ? IOMMU_MAP_ENTRY_WRITE : 0),
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
gas_flags, ma + idx, &entry);
if (error != 0)
break;
if ((gas_flags & IOMMU_MF_CANSPLIT) != 0) {
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
KASSERT(size >= entry->end - entry->start,
("split increased entry size %jx %jx %jx",
(uintmax_t)size, (uintmax_t)entry->start,
(uintmax_t)entry->end));
size = entry->end - entry->start;
if (buflen1 > size)
buflen1 = size;
} else {
KASSERT(entry->end - entry->start == size,
("no split allowed %jx %jx %jx",
(uintmax_t)size, (uintmax_t)entry->start,
(uintmax_t)entry->end));
}
if (offset + buflen1 > size)
buflen1 = size - offset;
if (buflen1 > tag->common.maxsegsz)
buflen1 = tag->common.maxsegsz;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
KASSERT(((entry->start + offset) & (tag->common.alignment - 1))
== 0,
("alignment failed: ctx %p start 0x%jx offset %x "
"align 0x%jx", ctx, (uintmax_t)entry->start, offset,
(uintmax_t)tag->common.alignment));
KASSERT(entry->end <= tag->common.lowaddr ||
entry->start >= tag->common.highaddr,
("entry placement failed: ctx %p start 0x%jx end 0x%jx "
"lowaddr 0x%jx highaddr 0x%jx", ctx,
(uintmax_t)entry->start, (uintmax_t)entry->end,
(uintmax_t)tag->common.lowaddr,
(uintmax_t)tag->common.highaddr));
KASSERT(iommu_test_boundary(entry->start + offset, buflen1,
tag->common.boundary),
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
("boundary failed: ctx %p start 0x%jx end 0x%jx "
"boundary 0x%jx", ctx, (uintmax_t)entry->start,
(uintmax_t)entry->end, (uintmax_t)tag->common.boundary));
KASSERT(buflen1 <= tag->common.maxsegsz,
("segment too large: ctx %p start 0x%jx end 0x%jx "
"buflen1 0x%jx maxsegsz 0x%jx", ctx,
(uintmax_t)entry->start, (uintmax_t)entry->end,
(uintmax_t)buflen1, (uintmax_t)tag->common.maxsegsz));
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
IOMMU_DOMAIN_LOCK(domain);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&map->map_entries, entry, dmamap_link);
entry->flags |= IOMMU_MAP_ENTRY_MAP;
IOMMU_DOMAIN_UNLOCK(domain);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(unroll_list, entry, unroll_link);
segs[seg].ds_addr = entry->start + offset;
segs[seg].ds_len = buflen1;
idx += OFF_TO_IDX(trunc_page(offset + buflen1));
offset += buflen1;
offset &= IOMMU_PAGE_MASK;
buflen -= buflen1;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
}
if (error == 0)
*segp = seg;
return (error);
}
static int
iommu_bus_dmamap_load_something(struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag,
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map, vm_page_t *ma, int offset, bus_size_t buflen,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
int flags, bus_dma_segment_t *segs, int *segp)
{
struct iommu_ctx *ctx;
struct iommu_domain *domain;
struct iommu_map_entry *entry, *entry1;
struct iommu_map_entries_tailq unroll_list;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
int error;
ctx = tag->ctx;
domain = ctx->domain;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
atomic_add_long(&ctx->loads, 1);
TAILQ_INIT(&unroll_list);
error = iommu_bus_dmamap_load_something1(tag, map, ma, offset,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
buflen, flags, segs, segp, &unroll_list);
if (error != 0) {
/*
* The busdma interface does not allow us to report
* partial buffer load, so unfortunately we have to
* revert all work done.
*/
IOMMU_DOMAIN_LOCK(domain);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
TAILQ_FOREACH_SAFE(entry, &unroll_list, unroll_link,
entry1) {
/*
* No entries other than what we have created
* during the failed run might have been
* inserted there in between, since we own ctx
* pglock.
*/
TAILQ_REMOVE(&map->map_entries, entry, dmamap_link);
TAILQ_REMOVE(&unroll_list, entry, unroll_link);
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&domain->unload_entries, entry,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
dmamap_link);
}
IOMMU_DOMAIN_UNLOCK(domain);
taskqueue_enqueue(domain->iommu->delayed_taskqueue,
&domain->unload_task);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
}
if (error == ENOMEM && (flags & BUS_DMA_NOWAIT) == 0 &&
!map->cansleep)
error = EINPROGRESS;
if (error == EINPROGRESS)
iommu_bus_schedule_dmamap(domain->iommu, map);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
return (error);
}
static int
iommu_bus_dmamap_load_ma(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, bus_dmamap_t map1,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
struct vm_page **ma, bus_size_t tlen, int ma_offs, int flags,
bus_dma_segment_t *segs, int *segp)
{
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag;
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
tag = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat;
map = (struct bus_dmamap_iommu *)map1;
return (iommu_bus_dmamap_load_something(tag, map, ma, ma_offs, tlen,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
flags, segs, segp));
}
static int
iommu_bus_dmamap_load_phys(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, bus_dmamap_t map1,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
vm_paddr_t buf, bus_size_t buflen, int flags, bus_dma_segment_t *segs,
int *segp)
{
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag;
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map;
vm_page_t *ma, fma;
vm_paddr_t pstart, pend, paddr;
int error, i, ma_cnt, mflags, offset;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
tag = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat;
map = (struct bus_dmamap_iommu *)map1;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
pstart = trunc_page(buf);
pend = round_page(buf + buflen);
offset = buf & PAGE_MASK;
ma_cnt = OFF_TO_IDX(pend - pstart);
mflags = map->cansleep ? M_WAITOK : M_NOWAIT;
ma = malloc(sizeof(vm_page_t) * ma_cnt, M_DEVBUF, mflags);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (ma == NULL)
return (ENOMEM);
fma = NULL;
for (i = 0; i < ma_cnt; i++) {
paddr = pstart + ptoa(i);
ma[i] = PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE(paddr);
if (ma[i] == NULL || VM_PAGE_TO_PHYS(ma[i]) != paddr) {
/*
* If PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE() returned NULL or the
* vm_page was not initialized we'll use a
* fake page.
*/
if (fma == NULL) {
fma = malloc(sizeof(struct vm_page) * ma_cnt,
M_DEVBUF, M_ZERO | mflags);
if (fma == NULL) {
free(ma, M_DEVBUF);
return (ENOMEM);
}
}
vm_page_initfake(&fma[i], pstart + ptoa(i),
VM_MEMATTR_DEFAULT);
ma[i] = &fma[i];
}
}
error = iommu_bus_dmamap_load_something(tag, map, ma, offset, buflen,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
flags, segs, segp);
free(fma, M_DEVBUF);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
free(ma, M_DEVBUF);
return (error);
}
static int
iommu_bus_dmamap_load_buffer(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, bus_dmamap_t map1, void *buf,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
bus_size_t buflen, pmap_t pmap, int flags, bus_dma_segment_t *segs,
int *segp)
{
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag;
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
vm_page_t *ma, fma;
vm_paddr_t pstart, pend, paddr;
int error, i, ma_cnt, mflags, offset;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
tag = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat;
map = (struct bus_dmamap_iommu *)map1;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
pstart = trunc_page((vm_offset_t)buf);
pend = round_page((vm_offset_t)buf + buflen);
offset = (vm_offset_t)buf & PAGE_MASK;
ma_cnt = OFF_TO_IDX(pend - pstart);
mflags = map->cansleep ? M_WAITOK : M_NOWAIT;
ma = malloc(sizeof(vm_page_t) * ma_cnt, M_DEVBUF, mflags);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (ma == NULL)
return (ENOMEM);
fma = NULL;
for (i = 0; i < ma_cnt; i++, pstart += PAGE_SIZE) {
if (pmap == kernel_pmap)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
paddr = pmap_kextract(pstart);
else
paddr = pmap_extract(pmap, pstart);
ma[i] = PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE(paddr);
if (ma[i] == NULL || VM_PAGE_TO_PHYS(ma[i]) != paddr) {
/*
* If PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE() returned NULL or the
* vm_page was not initialized we'll use a
* fake page.
*/
if (fma == NULL) {
fma = malloc(sizeof(struct vm_page) * ma_cnt,
M_DEVBUF, M_ZERO | mflags);
if (fma == NULL) {
free(ma, M_DEVBUF);
return (ENOMEM);
}
}
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
vm_page_initfake(&fma[i], paddr, VM_MEMATTR_DEFAULT);
ma[i] = &fma[i];
}
}
error = iommu_bus_dmamap_load_something(tag, map, ma, offset, buflen,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
flags, segs, segp);
free(ma, M_DEVBUF);
free(fma, M_DEVBUF);
return (error);
}
static void
iommu_bus_dmamap_waitok(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, bus_dmamap_t map1,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
struct memdesc *mem, bus_dmamap_callback_t *callback, void *callback_arg)
{
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (map1 == NULL)
return;
map = (struct bus_dmamap_iommu *)map1;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
map->mem = *mem;
map->tag = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
map->callback = callback;
map->callback_arg = callback_arg;
}
static bus_dma_segment_t *
iommu_bus_dmamap_complete(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, bus_dmamap_t map1,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
bus_dma_segment_t *segs, int nsegs, int error)
{
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag;
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
tag = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat;
map = (struct bus_dmamap_iommu *)map1;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
if (!map->locked) {
KASSERT(map->cansleep,
("map not locked and not sleepable context %p", map));
/*
* We are called from the delayed context. Relock the
* driver.
*/
(tag->common.lockfunc)(tag->common.lockfuncarg, BUS_DMA_LOCK);
map->locked = true;
}
if (segs == NULL)
segs = tag->segments;
return (segs);
}
/*
* The limitations of busdma KPI forces the iommu to perform the actual
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
* unload, consisting of the unmapping of the map entries page tables,
* from the delayed context on i386, since page table page mapping
* might require a sleep to be successfull. The unfortunate
* consequence is that the DMA requests can be served some time after
* the bus_dmamap_unload() call returned.
*
* On amd64, we assume that sf allocation cannot fail.
*/
static void
iommu_bus_dmamap_unload(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, bus_dmamap_t map1)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag;
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map;
struct iommu_ctx *ctx;
struct iommu_domain *domain;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
#if defined(__amd64__)
struct iommu_map_entries_tailq entries;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
#endif
tag = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat;
map = (struct bus_dmamap_iommu *)map1;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
ctx = tag->ctx;
domain = ctx->domain;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
atomic_add_long(&ctx->unloads, 1);
#if defined(__i386__)
IOMMU_DOMAIN_LOCK(domain);
TAILQ_CONCAT(&domain->unload_entries, &map->map_entries, dmamap_link);
IOMMU_DOMAIN_UNLOCK(domain);
taskqueue_enqueue(domain->iommu->delayed_taskqueue,
&domain->unload_task);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
#else /* defined(__amd64__) */
TAILQ_INIT(&entries);
IOMMU_DOMAIN_LOCK(domain);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
TAILQ_CONCAT(&entries, &map->map_entries, dmamap_link);
IOMMU_DOMAIN_UNLOCK(domain);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
THREAD_NO_SLEEPING();
iommu_domain_unload(domain, &entries, false);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
THREAD_SLEEPING_OK();
KASSERT(TAILQ_EMPTY(&entries), ("lazy iommu_ctx_unload %p", ctx));
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
#endif
}
static void
iommu_bus_dmamap_sync(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, bus_dmamap_t map,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
bus_dmasync_op_t op)
{
}
struct bus_dma_impl bus_dma_iommu_impl = {
.tag_create = iommu_bus_dma_tag_create,
.tag_destroy = iommu_bus_dma_tag_destroy,
.tag_set_domain = iommu_bus_dma_tag_set_domain,
.id_mapped = iommu_bus_dma_id_mapped,
.map_create = iommu_bus_dmamap_create,
.map_destroy = iommu_bus_dmamap_destroy,
.mem_alloc = iommu_bus_dmamem_alloc,
.mem_free = iommu_bus_dmamem_free,
.load_phys = iommu_bus_dmamap_load_phys,
.load_buffer = iommu_bus_dmamap_load_buffer,
.load_ma = iommu_bus_dmamap_load_ma,
.map_waitok = iommu_bus_dmamap_waitok,
.map_complete = iommu_bus_dmamap_complete,
.map_unload = iommu_bus_dmamap_unload,
.map_sync = iommu_bus_dmamap_sync,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
};
static void
iommu_bus_task_dmamap(void *arg, int pending)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag;
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map;
struct iommu_unit *unit;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
unit = arg;
IOMMU_LOCK(unit);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
while ((map = TAILQ_FIRST(&unit->delayed_maps)) != NULL) {
TAILQ_REMOVE(&unit->delayed_maps, map, delay_link);
IOMMU_UNLOCK(unit);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
tag = map->tag;
map->cansleep = true;
map->locked = false;
bus_dmamap_load_mem((bus_dma_tag_t)tag, (bus_dmamap_t)map,
&map->mem, map->callback, map->callback_arg,
BUS_DMA_WAITOK);
map->cansleep = false;
if (map->locked) {
(tag->common.lockfunc)(tag->common.lockfuncarg,
BUS_DMA_UNLOCK);
} else
map->locked = true;
map->cansleep = false;
IOMMU_LOCK(unit);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
}
IOMMU_UNLOCK(unit);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
}
static void
iommu_bus_schedule_dmamap(struct iommu_unit *unit, struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
map->locked = false;
IOMMU_LOCK(unit);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&unit->delayed_maps, map, delay_link);
IOMMU_UNLOCK(unit);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
taskqueue_enqueue(unit->delayed_taskqueue, &unit->dmamap_load_task);
}
int
iommu_init_busdma(struct iommu_unit *unit)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
int error;
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
Use VT-d interrupt remapping block (IR) to perform FSB messages translation. In particular, despite IO-APICs only take 8bit apic id, IR translation structures accept 32bit APIC Id, which allows x2APIC mode to function properly. Extend msi_cpu of struct msi_intrsrc and io_cpu of ioapic_intsrc to full int from one byte. KPI of IR is isolated into the x86/iommu/iommu_intrmap.h, to avoid bringing all dmar headers into interrupt code. The non-PCI(e) devices which generate message interrupts on FSB require special handling. The HPET FSB interrupts are remapped, while DMAR interrupts are not. For each msi and ioapic interrupt source, the iommu cookie is added, which is in fact index of the IRE (interrupt remap entry) in the IR table. Cookie is made at the source allocation time, and then used at the map time to fill both IRE and device registers. The MSI address/data registers and IO-APIC redirection registers are programmed with the special values which are recognized by IR and used to restore the IRE index, to find proper delivery mode and target. Map all MSI interrupts in the block when msi_map() is called. Since an interrupt source setup and dismantle code are done in the non-sleepable context, flushing interrupt entries cache in the IR hardware, which is done async and ideally waits for the interrupt, requires busy-wait for queue to drain. The dmar_qi_wait_for_seq() is modified to take a boolean argument requesting busy-wait for the written sequence number instead of waiting for interrupt. Some interrupts are configured before IR is initialized, e.g. ACPI SCI. Add intr_reprogram() function to reprogram all already configured interrupts, and call it immediately before an IR unit is enabled. There is still a small window after the IO-APIC redirection entry is reprogrammed with cookie but before the unit is enabled, but to fix this properly, IR must be started much earlier. Add workarounds for 5500 and X58 northbridges, some revisions of which have severe flaws in handling IR. Use the same identification methods as employed by Linux. Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1892 Reviewed by: neel Discussed with: jhb Tested by: glebius, pho (previous versions) Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 3 weeks
2015-03-19 13:57:47 +00:00
unit->dma_enabled = 1;
error = TUNABLE_INT_FETCH("hw.iommu.dma", &unit->dma_enabled);
if (error == 0) /* compatibility */
TUNABLE_INT_FETCH("hw.dmar.dma", &unit->dma_enabled);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
TAILQ_INIT(&unit->delayed_maps);
TASK_INIT(&unit->dmamap_load_task, 0, iommu_bus_task_dmamap, unit);
unit->delayed_taskqueue = taskqueue_create("iommu", M_WAITOK,
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
taskqueue_thread_enqueue, &unit->delayed_taskqueue);
taskqueue_start_threads(&unit->delayed_taskqueue, 1, PI_DISK,
"iommu%d busdma taskq", unit->unit);
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
return (0);
}
void
iommu_fini_busdma(struct iommu_unit *unit)
Import the driver for VT-d DMAR hardware, as specified in the revision 1.3 of Intelб╝ Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O Architecture Specification. The Extended Context and PASIDs from the rev. 2.2 are not supported, but I am not aware of any released hardware which implements them. Code does not use queued invalidation, see comments for the reason, and does not provide interrupt remapping services. Code implements the management of the guest address space per domain and allows to establish and tear down arbitrary mappings, but not partial unmapping. The superpages are created as needed, but not promoted. Faults are recorded, fault records could be obtained programmatically, and printed on the console. Implement the busdma(9) using DMARs. This busdma backend avoids bouncing and provides security against misbehaving hardware and driver bad programming, preventing leaks and corruption of the memory by wild DMA accesses. By default, the implementation is compiled into amd64 GENERIC kernel but disabled; to enable, set hw.dmar.enable=1 loader tunable. Code is written to work on i386, but testing there was low priority, and driver is not enabled in GENERIC. Even with the DMAR turned on, individual devices could be directed to use the bounce busdma with the hw.busdma.pci<domain>:<bus>:<device>:<function>.bounce=1 tunable. If DMARs are capable of the pass-through translations, it is used, otherwise, an identity-mapping page table is constructed. The driver was tested on Xeon 5400/5500 chipset legacy machine, Haswell desktop and E5 SandyBridge dual-socket boxes, with ahci(4), ata(4), bce(4), ehci(4), mfi(4), uhci(4), xhci(4) devices. It also works with em(4) and igb(4), but there some fixes are needed for drivers, which are not committed yet. Intel GPUs do not work with DMAR (yet). Many thanks to John Baldwin, who explained me the newbus integration; Peter Holm, who did all testing and helped me to discover and understand several incredible bugs; and to Jim Harris for the access to the EDS and BWG and for listening when I have to explain my findings to somebody. Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation MFC after: 1 month
2013-10-28 13:33:29 +00:00
{
if (unit->delayed_taskqueue == NULL)
return;
taskqueue_drain(unit->delayed_taskqueue, &unit->dmamap_load_task);
taskqueue_free(unit->delayed_taskqueue);
unit->delayed_taskqueue = NULL;
}
int
bus_dma_dmar_load_ident(bus_dma_tag_t dmat, bus_dmamap_t map1,
vm_paddr_t start, vm_size_t length, int flags)
{
struct bus_dma_tag_common *tc;
struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *tag;
struct bus_dmamap_iommu *map;
struct iommu_ctx *ctx;
struct iommu_domain *domain;
struct iommu_map_entry *entry;
vm_page_t *ma;
vm_size_t i;
int error;
bool waitok;
MPASS((start & PAGE_MASK) == 0);
MPASS((length & PAGE_MASK) == 0);
MPASS(length > 0);
MPASS(start + length >= start);
MPASS((flags & ~(BUS_DMA_NOWAIT | BUS_DMA_NOWRITE)) == 0);
tc = (struct bus_dma_tag_common *)dmat;
if (tc->impl != &bus_dma_iommu_impl)
return (0);
tag = (struct bus_dma_tag_iommu *)dmat;
ctx = tag->ctx;
domain = ctx->domain;
map = (struct bus_dmamap_iommu *)map1;
waitok = (flags & BUS_DMA_NOWAIT) != 0;
entry = iommu_map_alloc_entry(domain, waitok ? 0 : DMAR_PGF_WAITOK);
if (entry == NULL)
return (ENOMEM);
entry->start = start;
entry->end = start + length;
ma = malloc(sizeof(vm_page_t) * atop(length), M_TEMP, waitok ?
M_WAITOK : M_NOWAIT);
if (ma == NULL) {
iommu_map_free_entry(domain, entry);
return (ENOMEM);
}
for (i = 0; i < atop(length); i++) {
ma[i] = vm_page_getfake(entry->start + PAGE_SIZE * i,
VM_MEMATTR_DEFAULT);
}
error = iommu_map_region(domain, entry, IOMMU_MAP_ENTRY_READ |
((flags & BUS_DMA_NOWRITE) ? 0 : IOMMU_MAP_ENTRY_WRITE),
waitok ? IOMMU_MF_CANWAIT : 0, ma);
if (error == 0) {
IOMMU_DOMAIN_LOCK(domain);
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&map->map_entries, entry, dmamap_link);
entry->flags |= IOMMU_MAP_ENTRY_MAP;
IOMMU_DOMAIN_UNLOCK(domain);
} else {
iommu_domain_unload_entry(entry, true);
}
for (i = 0; i < atop(length); i++)
vm_page_putfake(ma[i]);
free(ma, M_TEMP);
return (error);
}