On 2023-08-30 04:22, Hui Fang wrote:
> Hi, guys
> Thanks for your time.
> I wonder if only NXP met the "swiotlb buffer full" issue.
> In theory, when format is YUYV, those resolutions no greater than 320x240 (153600 bytes, which less than the max mapping size 256K ) can't meet the issue.
> But resolutions no less than 640x480 (307200 bytes), may have chances to trigger the issue.
> On our side, we tested on 1080p, easy to reproduce.
> Or maybe "dma_max_mapping_size(dev)" is much bigger than 256K on your side?
I would imagine that in most cases, people either have an IOMMU, or they
don't have more RAM than the device can access directly.
And in fact I think we've missed looking deep enough and that's the real
problem here - the overall context is a buffer allocator, so if SWIOTLB
is bouncing anything in that dma_map_sg() call, then it means we're
allocating a buffer for a device out of pages that that device can't
actually access, which seems fundamentally bad. Unfortunately there
isn't currently an easy way to do the right thing - dma-debug would
probably get very unhappy about scraping a bunch of dma_alloc_pages()
allocations into a scatterlist and subsequently calling dma_sync_sg() on
it, while dma_alloc_noncontiguous() does at least return a scatterlist
but would be overly restrictive since we don't need it to be
dma-contiguous either. I guess we could do with some sort of
dma_alloc_sgt() API that joins the relevant internal bits together to
replace vb2_dma_sg_alloc_compacted() with proper DMA-mask-aware
allocation, and probably also allocates the sg_table as well?
Thanks,
Robin.
>
> BRs,
> Fang Hui
> ________________________________
> From: Christoph Hellwig <[email protected]>
> Sent: Tuesday, August 29, 2023 11:04 PM
> To: Robin Murphy <[email protected]>
> Cc: Tomasz Figa <[email protected]>; Anle Pan <[email protected]>; Christoph Hellwig <[email protected]>; [email protected] <[email protected]>; [email protected] <[email protected]>; [email protected] <[email protected]>; [email protected] <[email protected]>; Hui Fang <[email protected]>
> Subject: [EXT] Re: [PATCH] media: videobuf2-dma-sg: limit the sg segment size
>
> Caution: This is an external email. Please take care when clicking links or opening attachments. When in doubt, report the message using the 'Report this email' button
>
>
> On Tue, Aug 29, 2023 at 12:14:44PM +0100, Robin Murphy wrote:
>> dma_get_max_seg_size() represents a capability of the device itself, namely
>> the largest contiguous range it can be programmed to access in a single DMA
>> descriptor/register/whatever.
>
> Yes. In a way it's a bit odd that it ended up in a field in
> struct device, as the feature might actually be different for different
> DMA engines or features in a device. If I was to redesign it from
> scratch I'd just pass it to dma_map_sg.
>
>>> Generally looking at videobuf2-dma-sg, I feel like we would benefit
>>> from some kind of dma_alloc_table_from_pages() that simply takes the
>>> struct dev pointer and does everything necessary.
>>
>> Possibly; this code already looks lifted from drm_prime_pages_to_sg(), and
>> if it's needed here then presumably vb2_dma_sg_get_userptr() also needs it,
>> at the very least.
>
> Yes, there's tons of them. But I'd feel really bad adding even more
> struct scatterlist based APIs given how bad of a data structure that is.
>