On Fri, 15 Jul 2022 18:16:27 +0100 Joao Martins <joao.m.mart...@oracle.com> wrote:
> It is assumed that the whole GPA space is available to be DMA > addressable, within a given address space limit, except for a > tiny region before the 4G. Since Linux v5.4, VFIO validates > whether the selected GPA is indeed valid i.e. not reserved by > IOMMU on behalf of some specific devices or platform-defined > restrictions, and thus failing the ioctl(VFIO_DMA_MAP) with > -EINVAL. > > AMD systems with an IOMMU are examples of such platforms and > particularly may only have these ranges as allowed: > > 0000000000000000 - 00000000fedfffff (0 .. 3.982G) > 00000000fef00000 - 000000fcffffffff (3.983G .. 1011.9G) > 0000010000000000 - ffffffffffffffff (1Tb .. 16Pb[*]) > > We already account for the 4G hole, albeit if the guest is big > enough we will fail to allocate a guest with >1010G due to the > ~12G hole at the 1Tb boundary, reserved for HyperTransport (HT). > > [*] there is another reserved region unrelated to HT that exists > in the 256T boundary in Fam 17h according to Errata #1286, > documeted also in "Open-Source Register Reference for AMD Family > 17h Processors (PUB)" > > When creating the region above 4G, take into account that on AMD > platforms the HyperTransport range is reserved and hence it > cannot be used either as GPAs. On those cases rather than > establishing the start of ram-above-4g to be 4G, relocate instead > to 1Tb. See AMD IOMMU spec, section 2.1.2 "IOMMU Logical > Topology", for more information on the underlying restriction of > IOVAs. > > After accounting for the 1Tb hole on AMD hosts, mtree should > look like: > > 0000000000000000-000000007fffffff (prio 0, i/o): > alias ram-below-4g @pc.ram 0000000000000000-000000007fffffff > 0000010000000000-000001ff7fffffff (prio 0, i/o): > alias ram-above-4g @pc.ram 0000000080000000-000000ffffffffff > > If the relocation is done or the address space covers it, we > also add the the reserved HT e820 range as reserved. > > Default phys-bits on Qemu is TCG_PHYS_ADDR_BITS (40) which is enough > to address 1Tb (0xff ffff ffff). On AMD platforms, if a > ram-above-4g relocation is attempted and the CPU wasn't configured > with a big enough phys-bits, an error message will be printed > due to the maxphysaddr vs maxusedaddr check previously added. > > Suggested-by: Igor Mammedov <imamm...@redhat.com> > Signed-off-by: Joao Martins <joao.m.mart...@oracle.com> Acked-by: Igor Mammedov <imamm...@redhat.com> > --- > hw/i386/pc.c | 54 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > 1 file changed, 54 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/hw/i386/pc.c b/hw/i386/pc.c > index f30661b7f1a2..a71135930833 100644 > --- a/hw/i386/pc.c > +++ b/hw/i386/pc.c > @@ -892,6 +892,40 @@ static hwaddr pc_max_used_gpa(PCMachineState *pcms, > uint64_t pci_hole64_size) > return pc_pci_hole64_start() + pci_hole64_size - 1; > } > > +/* > + * AMD systems with an IOMMU have an additional hole close to the > + * 1Tb, which are special GPAs that cannot be DMA mapped. Depending > + * on kernel version, VFIO may or may not let you DMA map those ranges. > + * Starting Linux v5.4 we validate it, and can't create guests on AMD > machines > + * with certain memory sizes. It's also wrong to use those IOVA ranges > + * in detriment of leading to IOMMU INVALID_DEVICE_REQUEST or worse. > + * The ranges reserved for Hyper-Transport are: > + * > + * FD_0000_0000h - FF_FFFF_FFFFh > + * > + * The ranges represent the following: > + * > + * Base Address Top Address Use > + * > + * FD_0000_0000h FD_F7FF_FFFFh Reserved interrupt address space > + * FD_F800_0000h FD_F8FF_FFFFh Interrupt/EOI IntCtl > + * FD_F900_0000h FD_F90F_FFFFh Legacy PIC IACK > + * FD_F910_0000h FD_F91F_FFFFh System Management > + * FD_F920_0000h FD_FAFF_FFFFh Reserved Page Tables > + * FD_FB00_0000h FD_FBFF_FFFFh Address Translation > + * FD_FC00_0000h FD_FDFF_FFFFh I/O Space > + * FD_FE00_0000h FD_FFFF_FFFFh Configuration > + * FE_0000_0000h FE_1FFF_FFFFh Extended Configuration/Device Messages > + * FE_2000_0000h FF_FFFF_FFFFh Reserved > + * > + * See AMD IOMMU spec, section 2.1.2 "IOMMU Logical Topology", > + * Table 3: Special Address Controls (GPA) for more information. > + */ > +#define AMD_HT_START 0xfd00000000UL > +#define AMD_HT_END 0xffffffffffUL > +#define AMD_ABOVE_1TB_START (AMD_HT_END + 1) > +#define AMD_HT_SIZE (AMD_ABOVE_1TB_START - AMD_HT_START) > + > void pc_memory_init(PCMachineState *pcms, > MemoryRegion *system_memory, > MemoryRegion *rom_memory, > @@ -915,6 +949,26 @@ void pc_memory_init(PCMachineState *pcms, > > linux_boot = (machine->kernel_filename != NULL); > > + /* > + * The HyperTransport range close to the 1T boundary is unique to AMD > + * hosts with IOMMUs enabled. Restrict the ram-above-4g relocation > + * to above 1T to AMD vCPUs only. > + */ > + if (IS_AMD_CPU(&cpu->env)) { > + /* Bail out if max possible address does not cross HT range */ > + if (pc_max_used_gpa(pcms, pci_hole64_size) >= AMD_HT_START) { > + x86ms->above_4g_mem_start = AMD_ABOVE_1TB_START; > + } > + > + /* > + * Advertise the HT region if address space covers the reserved > + * region or if we relocate. > + */ > + if (cpu->phys_bits >= 40) { > + e820_add_entry(AMD_HT_START, AMD_HT_SIZE, E820_RESERVED); > + } > + } > + > /* > * phys-bits is required to be appropriately configured > * to make sure max used GPA is reachable.