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author | Oliver O'Halloran <oohall@gmail.com> | 2020-07-22 09:57:05 +0300 |
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committer | Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au> | 2020-07-26 16:34:22 +0300 |
commit | ff79e11af0979b25ecb38e4c843779d4a759a4e2 (patch) | |
tree | 9aa2e3239ba1f58128b488bd8f433c16f14b08ef /arch/powerpc | |
parent | 37b59ef08c546c6f54cdc52eed749f494619a102 (diff) | |
download | linux-ff79e11af0979b25ecb38e4c843779d4a759a4e2.tar.xz |
powerpc/powernv/sriov: Explain how SR-IOV works on PowerNV
SR-IOV support on PowerNV is a byzantine maze of hooks. I have no idea
how anyone is supposed to know how it works except through a lot of
stuffering. Write up some docs about the overall story to help out
the next sucker^Wperson who needs to tinker with it.
Signed-off-by: Oliver O'Halloran <oohall@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexey Kardashevskiy <aik@ozlabs.ru>
Signed-off-by: Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20200722065715.1432738-6-oohall@gmail.com
Diffstat (limited to 'arch/powerpc')
-rw-r--r-- | arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/pci-sriov.c | 130 |
1 files changed, 130 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/pci-sriov.c b/arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/pci-sriov.c index c5b7e20286c6..8f5f0f50281e 100644 --- a/arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/pci-sriov.c +++ b/arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/pci-sriov.c @@ -12,6 +12,136 @@ /* for pci_dev_is_added() */ #include "../../../../drivers/pci/pci.h" +/* + * The majority of the complexity in supporting SR-IOV on PowerNV comes from + * the need to put the MMIO space for each VF into a separate PE. Internally + * the PHB maps MMIO addresses to a specific PE using the "Memory BAR Table". + * The MBT historically only applied to the 64bit MMIO window of the PHB + * so it's common to see it referred to as the "M64BT". + * + * An MBT entry stores the mapped range as an <base>,<mask> pair. This forces + * the address range that we want to map to be power-of-two sized and aligned. + * For conventional PCI devices this isn't really an issue since PCI device BARs + * have the same requirement. + * + * For a SR-IOV BAR things are a little more awkward since size and alignment + * are not coupled. The alignment is set based on the the per-VF BAR size, but + * the total BAR area is: number-of-vfs * per-vf-size. The number of VFs + * isn't necessarily a power of two, so neither is the total size. To fix that + * we need to finesse (read: hack) the Linux BAR allocator so that it will + * allocate the SR-IOV BARs in a way that lets us map them using the MBT. + * + * The changes to size and alignment that we need to do depend on the "mode" + * of MBT entry that we use. We only support SR-IOV on PHB3 (IODA2) and above, + * so as a baseline we can assume that we have the following BAR modes + * available: + * + * NB: $PE_COUNT is the number of PEs that the PHB supports. + * + * a) A segmented BAR that splits the mapped range into $PE_COUNT equally sized + * segments. The n'th segment is mapped to the n'th PE. + * b) An un-segmented BAR that maps the whole address range to a specific PE. + * + * + * We prefer to use mode a) since it only requires one MBT entry per SR-IOV BAR + * For comparison b) requires one entry per-VF per-BAR, or: + * (num-vfs * num-sriov-bars) in total. To use a) we need the size of each segment + * to equal the size of the per-VF BAR area. So: + * + * new_size = per-vf-size * number-of-PEs + * + * The alignment for the SR-IOV BAR also needs to be changed from per-vf-size + * to "new_size", calculated above. Implementing this is a convoluted process + * which requires several hooks in the PCI core: + * + * 1. In pcibios_add_device() we call pnv_pci_ioda_fixup_iov(). + * + * At this point the device has been probed and the device's BARs are sized, + * but no resource allocations have been done. The SR-IOV BARs are sized + * based on the maximum number of VFs supported by the device and we need + * to increase that to new_size. + * + * 2. Later, when Linux actually assigns resources it tries to make the resource + * allocations for each PCI bus as compact as possible. As a part of that it + * sorts the BARs on a bus by their required alignment, which is calculated + * using pci_resource_alignment(). + * + * For IOV resources this goes: + * pci_resource_alignment() + * pci_sriov_resource_alignment() + * pcibios_sriov_resource_alignment() + * pnv_pci_iov_resource_alignment() + * + * Our hook overrides the default alignment, equal to the per-vf-size, with + * new_size computed above. + * + * 3. When userspace enables VFs for a device: + * + * sriov_enable() + * pcibios_sriov_enable() + * pnv_pcibios_sriov_enable() + * + * This is where we actually allocate PE numbers for each VF and setup the + * MBT mapping for each SR-IOV BAR. In steps 1) and 2) we setup an "arena" + * where each MBT segment is equal in size to the VF BAR so we can shift + * around the actual SR-IOV BAR location within this arena. We need this + * ability because the PE space is shared by all devices on the same PHB. + * When using mode a) described above segment 0 in maps to PE#0 which might + * be already being used by another device on the PHB. + * + * As a result we need allocate a contigious range of PE numbers, then shift + * the address programmed into the SR-IOV BAR of the PF so that the address + * of VF0 matches up with the segment corresponding to the first allocated + * PE number. This is handled in pnv_pci_vf_resource_shift(). + * + * Once all that is done we return to the PCI core which then enables VFs, + * scans them and creates pci_devs for each. The init process for a VF is + * largely the same as a normal device, but the VF is inserted into the IODA + * PE that we allocated for it rather than the PE associated with the bus. + * + * 4. When userspace disables VFs we unwind the above in + * pnv_pcibios_sriov_disable(). Fortunately this is relatively simple since + * we don't need to validate anything, just tear down the mappings and + * move SR-IOV resource back to its "proper" location. + * + * That's how mode a) works. In theory mode b) (single PE mapping) is less work + * since we can map each individual VF with a separate BAR. However, there's a + * few limitations: + * + * 1) For IODA2 mode b) has a minimum alignment requirement of 32MB. This makes + * it only usable for devices with very large per-VF BARs. Such devices are + * similar to Big Foot. They definitely exist, but I've never seen one. + * + * 2) The number of MBT entries that we have is limited. PHB3 and PHB4 only + * 16 total and some are needed for. Most SR-IOV capable network cards can support + * more than 16 VFs on each port. + * + * We use b) when using a) would use more than 1/4 of the entire 64 bit MMIO + * window of the PHB. + * + * + * + * PHB4 (IODA3) added a few new features that would be useful for SR-IOV. It + * allowed the MBT to map 32bit MMIO space in addition to 64bit which allows + * us to support SR-IOV BARs in the 32bit MMIO window. This is useful since + * the Linux BAR allocation will place any BAR marked as non-prefetchable into + * the non-prefetchable bridge window, which is 32bit only. It also added two + * new modes: + * + * c) A segmented BAR similar to a), but each segment can be individually + * mapped to any PE. This is matches how the 32bit MMIO window worked on + * IODA1&2. + * + * d) A segmented BAR with 8, 64, or 128 segments. This works similarly to a), + * but with fewer segments and configurable base PE. + * + * i.e. The n'th segment maps to the (n + base)'th PE. + * + * The base PE is also required to be a multiple of the window size. + * + * Unfortunately, the OPAL API doesn't currently (as of skiboot v6.6) allow us + * to exploit any of the IODA3 features. + */ static void pnv_pci_ioda_fixup_iov_resources(struct pci_dev *pdev) { |