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authorMark-PK Tsai <mark-pk.tsai@mediatek.com>2024-07-02 15:05:39 +0300
committerWill Deacon <will@kernel.org>2024-07-09 13:08:17 +0300
commit228159802bcebd95438b54b0bd7c97798582178b (patch)
treee2ab029c33ff5b7aab0f0e30e83059a292b16406 /Documentation/userspace-api
parentb95a40122a8183873736e0506df8e3a881178099 (diff)
downloadlinux-228159802bcebd95438b54b0bd7c97798582178b.tar.xz
docs: iommu: Remove outdated Documentation/userspace-api/iommu.rst
The Documentation/userspace-api/iommu.rst file has become outdated due to the removal of associated structures and APIs. Specifically, struct such as iommu_cache_invalidate_info and guest pasid related uapi were removed in commit 0c9f17877891 ("iommu: Remove guest pasid related interfaces and definitions"). And the corresponding uapi/linux/iommu.h file was removed in commit 00a9bc607043 ("iommu: Move iommu fault data to linux/iommu.h"). Signed-off-by: Mark-PK Tsai <mark-pk.tsai@mediatek.com> Reviewed-by: Lu Baolu <baolu.lu@linux.intel.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240702120617.26882-1-mark-pk.tsai@mediatek.com [will: Remove stale reference to 'iommu' from index.rst] Signed-off-by: Will Deacon <will@kernel.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/userspace-api')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/userspace-api/index.rst1
-rw-r--r--Documentation/userspace-api/iommu.rst209
2 files changed, 0 insertions, 210 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/userspace-api/index.rst b/Documentation/userspace-api/index.rst
index 5926115ec0ed..2e0bb6068583 100644
--- a/Documentation/userspace-api/index.rst
+++ b/Documentation/userspace-api/index.rst
@@ -44,7 +44,6 @@ Devices and I/O
accelerators/ocxl
dma-buf-alloc-exchange
gpio/index
- iommu
iommufd
media/index
dcdbas
diff --git a/Documentation/userspace-api/iommu.rst b/Documentation/userspace-api/iommu.rst
deleted file mode 100644
index d3108c1519d5..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/userspace-api/iommu.rst
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,209 +0,0 @@
-.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
-.. iommu:
-
-=====================================
-IOMMU Userspace API
-=====================================
-
-IOMMU UAPI is used for virtualization cases where communications are
-needed between physical and virtual IOMMU drivers. For baremetal
-usage, the IOMMU is a system device which does not need to communicate
-with userspace directly.
-
-The primary use cases are guest Shared Virtual Address (SVA) and
-guest IO virtual address (IOVA), wherein the vIOMMU implementation
-relies on the physical IOMMU and for this reason requires interactions
-with the host driver.
-
-.. contents:: :local:
-
-Functionalities
-===============
-Communications of user and kernel involve both directions. The
-supported user-kernel APIs are as follows:
-
-1. Bind/Unbind guest PASID (e.g. Intel VT-d)
-2. Bind/Unbind guest PASID table (e.g. ARM SMMU)
-3. Invalidate IOMMU caches upon guest requests
-4. Report errors to the guest and serve page requests
-
-Requirements
-============
-The IOMMU UAPIs are generic and extensible to meet the following
-requirements:
-
-1. Emulated and para-virtualised vIOMMUs
-2. Multiple vendors (Intel VT-d, ARM SMMU, etc.)
-3. Extensions to the UAPI shall not break existing userspace
-
-Interfaces
-==========
-Although the data structures defined in IOMMU UAPI are self-contained,
-there are no user API functions introduced. Instead, IOMMU UAPI is
-designed to work with existing user driver frameworks such as VFIO.
-
-Extension Rules & Precautions
------------------------------
-When IOMMU UAPI gets extended, the data structures can *only* be
-modified in two ways:
-
-1. Adding new fields by re-purposing the padding[] field. No size change.
-2. Adding new union members at the end. May increase the structure sizes.
-
-No new fields can be added *after* the variable sized union in that it
-will break backward compatibility when offset moves. A new flag must
-be introduced whenever a change affects the structure using either
-method. The IOMMU driver processes the data based on flags which
-ensures backward compatibility.
-
-Version field is only reserved for the unlikely event of UAPI upgrade
-at its entirety.
-
-It's *always* the caller's responsibility to indicate the size of the
-structure passed by setting argsz appropriately.
-Though at the same time, argsz is user provided data which is not
-trusted. The argsz field allows the user app to indicate how much data
-it is providing; it's still the kernel's responsibility to validate
-whether it's correct and sufficient for the requested operation.
-
-Compatibility Checking
-----------------------
-When IOMMU UAPI extension results in some structure size increase,
-IOMMU UAPI code shall handle the following cases:
-
-1. User and kernel has exact size match
-2. An older user with older kernel header (smaller UAPI size) running on a
- newer kernel (larger UAPI size)
-3. A newer user with newer kernel header (larger UAPI size) running
- on an older kernel.
-4. A malicious/misbehaving user passing illegal/invalid size but within
- range. The data may contain garbage.
-
-Feature Checking
-----------------
-While launching a guest with vIOMMU, it is strongly advised to check
-the compatibility upfront, as some subsequent errors happening during
-vIOMMU operation, such as cache invalidation failures cannot be nicely
-escalated to the guest due to IOMMU specifications. This can lead to
-catastrophic failures for the users.
-
-User applications such as QEMU are expected to import kernel UAPI
-headers. Backward compatibility is supported per feature flags.
-For example, an older QEMU (with older kernel header) can run on newer
-kernel. Newer QEMU (with new kernel header) may refuse to initialize
-on an older kernel if new feature flags are not supported by older
-kernel. Simply recompiling existing code with newer kernel header should
-not be an issue in that only existing flags are used.
-
-IOMMU vendor driver should report the below features to IOMMU UAPI
-consumers (e.g. via VFIO).
-
-1. IOMMU_NESTING_FEAT_SYSWIDE_PASID
-2. IOMMU_NESTING_FEAT_BIND_PGTBL
-3. IOMMU_NESTING_FEAT_BIND_PASID_TABLE
-4. IOMMU_NESTING_FEAT_CACHE_INVLD
-5. IOMMU_NESTING_FEAT_PAGE_REQUEST
-
-Take VFIO as example, upon request from VFIO userspace (e.g. QEMU),
-VFIO kernel code shall query IOMMU vendor driver for the support of
-the above features. Query result can then be reported back to the
-userspace caller. Details can be found in
-Documentation/driver-api/vfio.rst.
-
-
-Data Passing Example with VFIO
-------------------------------
-As the ubiquitous userspace driver framework, VFIO is already IOMMU
-aware and shares many key concepts such as device model, group, and
-protection domain. Other user driver frameworks can also be extended
-to support IOMMU UAPI but it is outside the scope of this document.
-
-In this tight-knit VFIO-IOMMU interface, the ultimate consumer of the
-IOMMU UAPI data is the host IOMMU driver. VFIO facilitates user-kernel
-transport, capability checking, security, and life cycle management of
-process address space ID (PASID).
-
-VFIO layer conveys the data structures down to the IOMMU driver. It
-follows the pattern below::
-
- struct {
- __u32 argsz;
- __u32 flags;
- __u8 data[];
- };
-
-Here data[] contains the IOMMU UAPI data structures. VFIO has the
-freedom to bundle the data as well as parse data size based on its own flags.
-
-In order to determine the size and feature set of the user data, argsz
-and flags (or the equivalent) are also embedded in the IOMMU UAPI data
-structures.
-
-A "__u32 argsz" field is *always* at the beginning of each structure.
-
-For example:
-::
-
- struct iommu_cache_invalidate_info {
- __u32 argsz;
- #define IOMMU_CACHE_INVALIDATE_INFO_VERSION_1 1
- __u32 version;
- /* IOMMU paging structure cache */
- #define IOMMU_CACHE_INV_TYPE_IOTLB (1 << 0) /* IOMMU IOTLB */
- #define IOMMU_CACHE_INV_TYPE_DEV_IOTLB (1 << 1) /* Device IOTLB */
- #define IOMMU_CACHE_INV_TYPE_PASID (1 << 2) /* PASID cache */
- #define IOMMU_CACHE_INV_TYPE_NR (3)
- __u8 cache;
- __u8 granularity;
- __u8 padding[6];
- union {
- struct iommu_inv_pasid_info pasid_info;
- struct iommu_inv_addr_info addr_info;
- } granu;
- };
-
-VFIO is responsible for checking its own argsz and flags. It then
-invokes appropriate IOMMU UAPI functions. The user pointers are passed
-to the IOMMU layer for further processing. The responsibilities are
-divided as follows:
-
-- Generic IOMMU layer checks argsz range based on UAPI data in the
- current kernel version.
-
-- Generic IOMMU layer checks content of the UAPI data for non-zero
- reserved bits in flags, padding fields, and unsupported version.
- This is to ensure not breaking userspace in the future when these
- fields or flags are used.
-
-- Vendor IOMMU driver checks argsz based on vendor flags. UAPI data
- is consumed based on flags. Vendor driver has access to
- unadulterated argsz value in case of vendor specific future
- extensions. Currently, it does not perform the copy_from_user()
- itself. A __user pointer can be provided in some future scenarios
- where there's vendor data outside of the structure definition.
-
-IOMMU code treats UAPI data in two categories:
-
-- structure contains vendor data
- (Example: iommu_uapi_cache_invalidate())
-
-- structure contains only generic data
- (Example: iommu_uapi_sva_bind_gpasid())
-
-
-
-Sharing UAPI with in-kernel users
----------------------------------
-For UAPIs that are shared with in-kernel users, a wrapper function is
-provided to distinguish the callers. For example,
-
-Userspace caller ::
-
- int iommu_uapi_sva_unbind_gpasid(struct iommu_domain *domain,
- struct device *dev,
- void __user *udata)
-
-In-kernel caller ::
-
- int iommu_sva_unbind_gpasid(struct iommu_domain *domain,
- struct device *dev, ioasid_t ioasid);