[PATCH 2/9] iommu/rockchip: Attach multiple power domains

Robin Murphy robin.murphy at arm.com
Fri Jun 14 12:07:29 UTC 2024


On 2024-06-13 10:38 pm, Sebastian Reichel wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> On Thu, Jun 13, 2024 at 11:34:02AM GMT, Tomeu Vizoso wrote:
>> On Thu, Jun 13, 2024 at 11:24 AM Tomeu Vizoso <tomeu at tomeuvizoso.net> wrote:
>>> On Thu, Jun 13, 2024 at 2:05 AM Sebastian Reichel
>>> <sebastian.reichel at collabora.com> wrote:
>>>> On Wed, Jun 12, 2024 at 03:52:55PM GMT, Tomeu Vizoso wrote:
>>>>> IOMMUs with multiple base addresses can also have multiple power
>>>>> domains.
>>>>>
>>>>> The base framework only takes care of a single power domain, as some
>>>>> devices will need for these power domains to be powered on in a specific
>>>>> order.
>>>>>
>>>>> Use a helper function to stablish links in the order in which they are
>>>>> in the DT.
>>>>>
>>>>> This is needed by the IOMMU used by the NPU in the RK3588.
>>>>>
>>>>> Signed-off-by: Tomeu Vizoso <tomeu at tomeuvizoso.net>
>>>>> ---
>>>>
>>>> To me it looks like this is multiple IOMMUs, which should each get
>>>> their own node. I don't see a good reason for merging these
>>>> together.
>>>
>>> I have made quite a few attempts at splitting the IOMMUs and also the
>>> cores, but I wasn't able to get things working stably. The TRM is
>>> really scant about how the 4 IOMMU instances relate to each other, and
>>> what the fourth one is for.
>>>
>>> Given that the vendor driver treats them as a single IOMMU with four
>>> instances and we don't have any information on them, I resigned myself
>>> to just have them as a single device.
>>>
>>> I would love to be proved wrong though and find a way fo getting
>>> things stably as different devices so they can be powered on and off
>>> as needed. We could save quite some code as well.
>>
>> FWIW, here a few ways how I tried to structure the DT nodes, none of
>> these worked reliably:
>>
>> https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/tomeu/linux/-/blob/6.10-rocket-multiple-devices-power/arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi?ref_type=heads#L1163
>> https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/tomeu/linux/-/blob/6.10-rocket-schema-subnodes//arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi?ref_type=heads#L1162
>> https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/tomeu/linux/-/blob/6.10-rocket-multiple-devices//arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi?ref_type=heads#L1163
>> https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/tomeu/linux/-/blob/6.10-rocket-multiple-iommus//arch/arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588s.dtsi?ref_type=heads#L2669
>>
>> I can very well imagine I missed some way of getting this to work, but
>> for every attempt, the domains, iommus and cores were resumed in
>> different orders that presumably caused problems during concurrent
>> execution fo workloads.
>>
>> So I fell back to what the vendor driver does, which works reliably
>> (but all cores have to be powered on at the same time).
> 
> Mh. The "6.10-rocket-multiple-iommus" branch seems wrong. There is
> only one iommu node in that. I would have expected a test with
> 
> rknn {
>      // combined device
> 
>      iommus = <&iommu1>, <&iommu2>, ...;
> };
> 
> Otherwise I think I would go with the schema-subnodes variant. The
> driver can initially walk through the sub-nodes and collect the
> resources into the main device, so on the driver side nothing would
> really change. But that has a couple of advantages:
> 
> 1. DT and DT binding are easier to read
> 2. It's similar to e.g. CPU cores each having their own node
> 3. Easy to extend to more cores in the future
> 4. The kernel can easily switch to proper per-core device model when
>     the problem has been identified

It also would seem to permit describing and associating the per-core 
IOMMUs individually - apart from core 0's apparent coupling to whatever 
shared "uncore" stuff exists for the whole thing, from the distinct 
clocks, interrupts, power domains etc. lining up with each core I'd 
guess those IOMMUs are not interrelated the same way the ISP's 
read/write IOMMUs are (which was the main justification for adopting the 
multiple-reg design originally vs. distinct DT nodes like Exynos does). 
However, practically that would require the driver to at least populate 
per-core child devices to make DMA API or IOMMU API mappings with, since 
we couldn't spread the "collect the resources" trick into those 
subsystems as well.

Thanks,
Robin.


More information about the dri-devel mailing list