Wei Yang weiyang@linux.vnet.ibm.com
Benjamin Herrenschmidt benh@au1.ibm.com
Bjorn Helgaas bhelgaas@google.com
26 Aug 2014
This document describes the requirement from hardware for PCI MMIO resource
sizing and assignment on PowerKVM and how generic PCI code handles this
requirement. The first two sections describe the concepts of Partitionable
Endpoints and the implementation on P8 (IODA2). The next two sections talks
about considerations on enabling SRIOV on IODA2.
- Introduction to Partitionable Endpoints
A Partitionable Endpoint (PE) is a way to group the various resources
associated with a device or a set of devices to provide isolation between
partitions (i.e., filtering of DMA, MSIs etc.) and to provide a mechanism
to freeze a device that is causing errors in order to limit the possibility
of propagation of bad data.
There is thus, in HW, a table of PE states that contains a pair of “frozen”
state bits (one for MMIO and one for DMA, they get set together but can be
cleared independently) for each PE.
When a PE is frozen, all stores in any direction are dropped and all loads
return all 1’s value. MSIs are also blocked. There’s a bit more state that
captures things like the details of the error that caused the freeze etc., but
that’s not critical.
The interesting part is how the various PCIe transactions (MMIO, DMA, …)
are matched to their corresponding PEs.
The following section provides a rough description of what we have on P8
(IODA2). Keep in mind that this is all per PHB (PCI host bridge). Each PHB
is a completely separate HW entity that replicates the entire logic, so has
its own set of PEs, etc.
- Implementation of Partitionable Endpoints on P8 (IODA2)
P8 supports up to 256 Partitionable Endpoints per PHB.
Inbound
For DMA, MSIs and inbound PCIe error messages, we have a table (in
memory but accessed in HW by the chip) that provides a direct
correspondence between a PCIe RID (bus/dev/fn) with a PE number.
We call this the RTT.For DMA we then provide an entire address space for each PE that can
contain two “windows”, depending on the value of PCI address bit 59.
Each window can be configured to be remapped via a “TCE table” (IOMMU
translation table), which has various configurable characteristics
not described here.For MSIs, we have two windows in the address space (one at the top of
the 32-bit space and one much higher) which, via a combination of the
address and MSI value, will result in one of the 2048 interrupts per
bridge being triggered. There’s a PE# in the interrupt controller
descriptor table as well which is compared with the PE# obtained from
the RTT to “authorize” the device to emit that specific interrupt.Error messages just use the RTT.
Outbound. That’s where the tricky part is.
Like other PCI host bridges, the Power8 IODA2 PHB supports “windows”
from the CPU address space to the PCI address space. There is one M32
window and sixteen M64 windows. They have different characteristics.
First what they have in common: they forward a configurable portion of
the CPU address space to the PCIe bus and must be naturally aligned
power of two in size. The rest is different:The M32 window:
Is limited to 4GB in size.
Drops the top bits of the address (above the size) and replaces
them with a configurable value. This is typically used to generate
32-bit PCIe accesses. We configure that window at boot from FW and
don’t touch it from Linux; it’s usually set to forward a 2GB
portion of address space from the CPU to PCIe
0x8000_0000..0xffff_ffff. (Note: The top 64KB are actually
reserved for MSIs but this is not a problem at this point; we just
need to ensure Linux doesn’t assign anything there, the M32 logic
ignores that however and will forward in that space if we try).It is divided into 256 segments of equal size. A table in the chip
maps each segment to a PE#. That allows portions of the MMIO space
to be assigned to PEs on a segment granularity. For a 2GB window,
the segment granularity is 2GB/256 = 8MB.
Now, this is the “main” window we use in Linux today (excluding
SR-IOV). We basically use the trick of forcing the bridge MMIO windows
onto a segment alignment/granularity so that the space behind a bridge
can be assigned to a PE.Ideally we would like to be able to have individual functions in PEs
but that would mean using a completely different address allocation
scheme where individual function BARs can be “grouped” to fit in one or
more segments.The M64 windows:
Must be at least 256MB in size.
Do not translate addresses (the address on PCIe is the same as the
address on the PowerBus). There is a way to also set the top 14
bits which are not conveyed by PowerBus but we don’t use this.Can be configured to be segmented. When not segmented, we can
specify the PE# for the entire window. When segmented, a window
has 256 segments; however, there is no table for mapping a segment
to a PE#. The segment number is the PE#.Support overlaps. If an address is covered by multiple windows,
there’s a defined ordering for which window applies.
We have code (fairly new compared to the M32 stuff) that exploits that
for large BARs in 64-bit space:We configure an M64 window to cover the entire region of address space
that has been assigned by FW for the PHB (about 64GB, ignore the space
for the M32, it comes out of a different “reserve”). We configure it
as segmented.Then we do the same thing as with M32, using the bridge alignment
trick, to match to those giant segments.Since we cannot remap, we have two additional constraints:
We do the PE# allocation after the 64-bit space has been assigned
because the addresses we use directly determine the PE#. We then
update the M32 PE# for the devices that use both 32-bit and 64-bit
spaces or assign the remaining PE# to 32-bit only devices.We cannot “group” segments in HW, so if a device ends up using more
than one segment, we end up with more than one PE#. There is a HW
mechanism to make the freeze state cascade to “companion” PEs but
that only works for PCIe error messages (typically used so that if
you freeze a switch, it freezes all its children). So we do it in
SW. We lose a bit of effectiveness of EEH in that case, but that’s
the best we found. So when any of the PEs freezes, we freeze the
other ones for that “domain”. We thus introduce the concept of
“master PE” which is the one used for DMA, MSIs, etc., and “secondary
PEs” that are used for the remaining M64 segments.
We would like to investigate using additional M64 windows in “single
PE” mode to overlay over specific BARs to work around some of that, for
example for devices with very large BARs, e.g., GPUs. It would make
sense, but we haven’t done it yet.
- Considerations for SR-IOV on PowerKVM
SR-IOV Background
The PCIe SR-IOV feature allows a single Physical Function (PF) to
support several Virtual Functions (VFs). Registers in the PF’s SR-IOV
Capability control the number of VFs and whether they are enabled.When VFs are enabled, they appear in Configuration Space like normal
PCI devices, but the BARs in VF config space headers are unusual. For
a non-VF device, software uses BARs in the config space header to
discover the BAR sizes and assign addresses for them. For VF devices,
software uses VF BAR registers in the PF SR-IOV Capability to
discover sizes and assign addresses. The BARs in the VF’s config space
header are read-only zeros.When a VF BAR in the PF SR-IOV Capability is programmed, it sets the
base address for all the corresponding VF(n) BARs. For example, if the
PF SR-IOV Capability is programmed to enable eight VFs, and it has a
1MB VF BAR0, the address in that VF BAR sets the base of an 8MB region.
This region is divided into eight contiguous 1MB regions, each of which
is a BAR0 for one of the VFs. Note that even though the VF BAR
describes an 8MB region, the alignment requirement is for a single VF,
i.e., 1MB in this example.There are several strategies for isolating VFs in PEs:
M32 window: There’s one M32 window, and it is split into 256
equally-sized segments. The finest granularity possible is a 256MB
window with 1MB segments. VF BARs that are 1MB or larger could be
mapped to separate PEs in this window. Each segment can be
individually mapped to a PE via the lookup table, so this is quite
flexible, but it works best when all the VF BARs are the same size. If
they are different sizes, the entire window has to be small enough that
the segment size matches the smallest VF BAR, which means larger VF
BARs span several segments.Non-segmented M64 window: A non-segmented M64 window is mapped entirely
to a single PE, so it could only isolate one VF.Single segmented M64 windows: A segmented M64 window could be used just
like the M32 window, but the segments can’t be individually mapped to
PEs (the segment number is the PE#), so there isn’t as much
flexibility. A VF with multiple BARs would have to be in a “domain” of
multiple PEs, which is not as well isolated as a single PE.Multiple segmented M64 windows: As usual, each window is split into 256
equally-sized segments, and the segment number is the PE#. But if we
use several M64 windows, they can be set to different base addresses
and different segment sizes. If we have VFs that each have a 1MB BAR
and a 32MB BAR, we could use one M64 window to assign 1MB segments and
another M64 window to assign 32MB segments.Finally, the plan to use M64 windows for SR-IOV, which will be described
more in the next two sections. For a given VF BAR, we need to
effectively reserve the entire 256 segments (256 * VF BAR size) and
position the VF BAR to start at the beginning of a free range of
segments/PEs inside that M64 window.The goal is of course to be able to give a separate PE for each VF.
The IODA2 platform has 16 M64 windows, which are used to map MMIO
range to PE#. Each M64 window defines one MMIO range and this range is
divided into 256 segments, with each segment corresponding to one PE.We decide to leverage this M64 window to map VFs to individual PEs, since
SR-IOV VF BARs are all the same size.But doing so introduces another problem: total_VFs is usually smaller
than the number of M64 window segments, so if we map one VF BAR directly
to one M64 window, some part of the M64 window will map to another
device’s MMIO range.IODA supports 256 PEs, so segmented windows contain 256 segments, so if
total_VFs is less than 256, we have the situation in Figure 1.0, where
segments [total_VFs, 255] of the M64 window may map to some MMIO range on
other devices:0 1 total_VFs - 1
+——+——+- -+——+——+
| | | … | | |
+——+——+- -+——+——+VF(n) BAR space
0 1 total_VFs - 1 255
+——+——+- -+——+——+- -+——+——+
| | | … | | | … | | |
+——+——+- -+——+——+- -+——+——+M64 window Figure 1.0 Direct map VF(n) BAR space
Our current solution is to allocate 256 segments even if the VF(n) BAR
space doesn’t need that much, as shown in Figure 1.1:0 1 total_VFs - 1 255
+——+——+- -+——+——+- -+——+——+
| | | … | | | … | | |
+——+——+- -+——+——+- -+——+——+VF(n) BAR space + extra
0 1 total_VFs - 1 255
+——+——+- -+——+——+- -+——+——+
| | | … | | | … | | |
+——+——+- -+——+——+- -+——+——+M64 window Figure 1.1 Map VF(n) BAR space + extra
Allocating the extra space ensures that the entire M64 window will be
assigned to this one SR-IOV device and none of the space will be
available for other devices. Note that this only expands the space
reserved in software; there are still only total_VFs VFs, and they only
respond to segments [0, total_VFs - 1]. There’s nothing in hardware that
responds to segments [total_VFs, 255].
- Implications for the Generic PCI Code
The PCIe SR-IOV spec requires that the base of the VF(n) BAR space be
aligned to the size of an individual VF BAR.
In IODA2, the MMIO address determines the PE#. If the address is in an M32
window, we can set the PE# by updating the table that translates segments
to PE#s. Similarly, if the address is in an unsegmented M64 window, we can
set the PE# for the window. But if it’s in a segmented M64 window, the
segment number is the PE#.
Therefore, the only way to control the PE# for a VF is to change the base
of the VF(n) BAR space in the VF BAR. If the PCI core allocates the exact
amount of space required for the VF(n) BAR space, the VF BAR value is fixed
and cannot be changed.
On the other hand, if the PCI core allocates additional space, the VF BAR
value can be changed as long as the entire VF(n) BAR space remains inside
the space allocated by the core.
Ideally the segment size will be the same as an individual VF BAR size.
Then each VF will be in its own PE. The VF BARs (and therefore the PE#s)
are contiguous. If VF0 is in PE(x), then VF(n) is in PE(x+n). If we
allocate 256 segments, there are (256 - numVFs) choices for the PE# of VF0.
If the segment size is smaller than the VF BAR size, it will take several
segments to cover a VF BAR, and a VF will be in several PEs. This is
possible, but the isolation isn’t as good, and it reduces the number of PE#
choices because instead of consuming only numVFs segments, the VF(n) BAR
space will consume (numVFs * n) segments. That means there aren’t as many
available segments for adjusting base of the VF(n) BAR space.