Hi Jason, Somehow this got stuck somewhere in the mail queues, only popped up just now ...
On Thu, Jun 11, 2020 at 11:15:15AM -0300, Jason Gunthorpe wrote: > On Thu, Jun 11, 2020 at 10:34:30AM +0200, Daniel Vetter wrote: > > > I still have my doubts about allowing fence waiting from within shrinkers. > > > IMO ideally they should use a trywait approach, in order to allow memory > > > allocation during command submission for drivers that > > > publish fences before command submission. (Since early reservation object > > > release requires that). > > > > Yeah it is a bit annoying, e.g. for drm/scheduler I think we'll end up > > with a mempool to make sure it can handle it's allocations. > > > > > But since drivers are already waiting from within shrinkers and I take > > > your > > > word for HMM requiring this, > > > > Yeah the big trouble is HMM and mmu notifiers. That's the really awkward > > one, the shrinker one is a lot less established. > > I really question if HW that needs something like DMA fence should > even be using mmu notifiers - the best use is HW that can fence the > DMA directly without having to get involved with some command stream > processing. > > Or at the very least it should not be a generic DMA fence but a > narrowed completion tied only into the same GPU driver's command > completion processing which should be able to progress without > blocking. The problem with gpus is that these completions leak across the board like mad. Both internally within memory managers (made a lot worse with p2p direct access to vram), and through uapi. Many gpus still have a very hard time preempting, so doing an overall switch in drivers/gpu to a memory management model where that is required is not a very realistic option. And minimally you need either preempt (still takes a while, but a lot faster generally than waiting for work to complete) or hw faults (just a bunch of tlb flushes plus virtual indexed caches, so just the caveat of that for a gpu, which has lots and big tlbs and caches). So preventing the completion leaks within the kernel is I think unrealistic, except if we just say "well sorry, run on windows, mkay" for many gpu workloads. Or more realistic "well sorry, run on the nvidia blob with nvidia hw". The userspace side we can somewhat isolate, at least for pure compute workloads. But the thing is drivers/gpu is a continum from tiny socs (where dma_fence is a very nice model) to huge compute stuff (where it's maybe not the nicest, but hey hw sucks so still neeeded). Doing full on break in uapi somewhere in there is at least a bit awkward, e.g. some of the media codec code on intel runs all the way from the smallest intel soc to the big transcode servers. So the current status quo is "total mess, every driver defines their own rules". All I'm trying to do is some common rules here, do make this mess slightly more manageable and overall reviewable and testable. I have no illusions that this is fundamentally pretty horrible, and the leftover wiggle room for writing memory manager is barely more than a hairline. Just not seeing how other options are better. > The intent of notifiers was never to endlessly block while vast > amounts of SW does work. > > Going around and switching everything in a GPU to GFP_ATOMIC seems > like bad idea. It's not everyone, or at least not everywhere, it's some fairly limited cases. Also, even if we drop the mmu_notifier on the floor, then we're stuck with shrinkers and GFP_NOFS. Still need a mempool of some sorts to guarantee you get out of a bind, so not much better. At least that's my current understanding of where we are across all drivers. > > I've pinged a bunch of armsoc gpu driver people and ask them how much this > > hurts, so that we have a clear answer. On x86 I don't think we have much > > of a choice on this, with userptr in amd and i915 and hmm work in nouveau > > (but nouveau I think doesn't use dma_fence in there). > > Right, nor will RDMA ODP. Hm, what's the context here? I thought RDMA side you really don't want dma_fence in mmu_notifiers, so not clear to me what you're agreeing on here. -Daniel -- Daniel Vetter Software Engineer, Intel Corporation http://blog.ffwll.ch