>-----Original Message-----
>From: 'Joerg Roedel' [mailto:[email protected]]
>Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2017 3:56 AM
>To: Deucher, Alexander
>Cc: 'Joerg Roedel'; Bjorn Helgaas; [email protected]; linux-
>[email protected]; Daniel Drake; Nath, Arindam
>Subject: Re: [PATCH] PCI: Blacklist AMD Stoney GPU devices for ATS
>
>On Tue, Mar 28, 2017 at 09:13:23PM +0000, Deucher, Alexander wrote:
>> If I understand Arindam's patch correctly, it only flushes TLB entries
>> for domains in the flush queue whereas the previous behavior was to
>> flush all domains.  If there was no TLB flush in the queue for that
>> domain, could flushing it cause a problem?
>
>No, that can't cause a problem. An io/tlb flush for the device is just a
>message that the device should invalidate its own tlb. The device can't
>know and doesn't need to know whether the page-tables it used to fill
>the tlb really changed.

Joerg, as per my limited understanding of ATS, the ATC will respond to 
invalidation requests after making sure there are no in-flight DMA transactions 
with the address requested by IOMMU to be invalidated. Now since the IOMMU was 
sending invalidate command to GPU even though there was no explicit page 
unmapping request from the graphics subsystem, we _might_ end up in a situation 
where the ATC takes longer than the invalidation timeout to respond to IOMMU.

With the patch I provided, since only those domains who have actually requested 
for unmapping pages have been added to the flush queue, we send TLB 
invalidation commands to only those specific domains. This avoids sending 
invalidation command to GPU ATC every single flush.

I do agree that the Stoney might have some issue which causes it not to be able 
complete the invalidation command in time since we are not observing the issue 
on CZ and other ASICs.

Thanks,
Arindam

>
>As it looks, the problem we are seeing here is that we are sending a
>large amount of these requests to the GPU device, and wait for its
>completion every time. This shouldn't be a problem for ATS devices, but
>the GPU here seems to fail at some point and doesn't answer to the
>invalidation request anymore, causing the completion-wait loop timeouts.
>
>Arindam's patch makes the high flush-frequency less likely, but it can
>still happen, depending on how the GPU is used. So its the best to
>keep ATS disabled on the device as it doesn't work correctly and we risk
>running in the same problem again when we leave it enabled and just make
>the trigger less likely.
>
>
>       Joerg

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