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author | Youquan Song <youquan.song@intel.com> | 2011-05-25 19:13:49 +0100 |
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committer | David Woodhouse <David.Woodhouse@intel.com> | 2011-06-01 12:26:35 +0100 |
commit | 6dd9a7c73761a8a5f5475d5cfdc15368a0f4c06d (patch) | |
tree | cb685e370cc1cb2dec39b29500bdd22fd1814596 /Documentation | |
parent | 7b668357810ecb5fdda4418689d50f5d95aea6a8 (diff) | |
download | linux-6dd9a7c73761a8a5f5475d5cfdc15368a0f4c06d.tar.gz linux-6dd9a7c73761a8a5f5475d5cfdc15368a0f4c06d.tar.bz2 linux-6dd9a7c73761a8a5f5475d5cfdc15368a0f4c06d.zip |
intel-iommu: Enable super page (2MiB, 1GiB, etc.) support
There are no externally-visible changes with this. In the loop in the
internal __domain_mapping() function, we simply detect if we are mapping:
- size >= 2MiB, and
- virtual address aligned to 2MiB, and
- physical address aligned to 2MiB, and
- on hardware that supports superpages.
(and likewise for larger superpages).
We automatically use a superpage for such mappings. We never have to
worry about *breaking* superpages, since we trust that we will always
*unmap* the same range that was mapped. So all we need to do is ensure
that dma_pte_clear_range() will also cope with superpages.
Adjust pfn_to_dma_pte() to take a superpage 'level' as an argument, so
it can return a PTE at the appropriate level rather than always
extending the page tables all the way down to level 1. Again, this is
simplified by the fact that we should never encounter existing small
pages when we're creating a mapping; any old mapping that used the same
virtual range will have been entirely removed and its obsolete page
tables freed.
Provide an 'intel_iommu=sp_off' argument on the command line as a
chicken bit. Not that it should ever be required.
==
The original commit seen in the iommu-2.6.git was Youquan's
implementation (and completion) of my own half-baked code which I'd
typed into an email. Followed by half a dozen subsequent 'fixes'.
I've taken the unusual step of rewriting history and collapsing the
original commits in order to keep the main history simpler, and make
life easier for the people who are going to have to backport this to
older kernels. And also so I can give it a more coherent commit comment
which (hopefully) gives a better explanation of what's going on.
The original sequence of commits leading to identical code was:
Youquan Song (3):
intel-iommu: super page support
intel-iommu: Fix superpage alignment calculation error
intel-iommu: Fix superpage level calculation error in dma_pfn_level_pte()
David Woodhouse (4):
intel-iommu: Precalculate superpage support for dmar_domain
intel-iommu: Fix hardware_largepage_caps()
intel-iommu: Fix inappropriate use of superpages in __domain_mapping()
intel-iommu: Fix phys_pfn in __domain_mapping for sglist pages
Signed-off-by: Youquan Song <youquan.song@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: David Woodhouse <David.Woodhouse@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt | 5 |
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt b/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt index cc85a9278190..d005487c1a22 100644 --- a/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt +++ b/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt @@ -999,7 +999,10 @@ bytes respectively. Such letter suffixes can also be entirely omitted. With this option on every unmap_single operation will result in a hardware IOTLB flush operation as opposed to batching them for performance. - + sp_off [Default Off] + By default, super page will be supported if Intel IOMMU + has the capability. With this option, super page will + not be supported. intremap= [X86-64, Intel-IOMMU] Format: { on (default) | off | nosid } on enable Interrupt Remapping (default) |