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1 | VFIO - "Virtual Function I/O"[1] |
2 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
3 | Many modern system now provide DMA and interrupt remapping facilities | |
4 | to help ensure I/O devices behave within the boundaries they've been | |
5 | allotted. This includes x86 hardware with AMD-Vi and Intel VT-d, | |
6 | POWER systems with Partitionable Endpoints (PEs) and embedded PowerPC | |
7 | systems such as Freescale PAMU. The VFIO driver is an IOMMU/device | |
8 | agnostic framework for exposing direct device access to userspace, in | |
9 | a secure, IOMMU protected environment. In other words, this allows | |
10 | safe[2], non-privileged, userspace drivers. | |
11 | ||
12 | Why do we want that? Virtual machines often make use of direct device | |
13 | access ("device assignment") when configured for the highest possible | |
14 | I/O performance. From a device and host perspective, this simply | |
15 | turns the VM into a userspace driver, with the benefits of | |
16 | significantly reduced latency, higher bandwidth, and direct use of | |
17 | bare-metal device drivers[3]. | |
18 | ||
19 | Some applications, particularly in the high performance computing | |
20 | field, also benefit from low-overhead, direct device access from | |
21 | userspace. Examples include network adapters (often non-TCP/IP based) | |
22 | and compute accelerators. Prior to VFIO, these drivers had to either | |
23 | go through the full development cycle to become proper upstream | |
24 | driver, be maintained out of tree, or make use of the UIO framework, | |
25 | which has no notion of IOMMU protection, limited interrupt support, | |
26 | and requires root privileges to access things like PCI configuration | |
27 | space. | |
28 | ||
29 | The VFIO driver framework intends to unify these, replacing both the | |
30 | KVM PCI specific device assignment code as well as provide a more | |
31 | secure, more featureful userspace driver environment than UIO. | |
32 | ||
33 | Groups, Devices, and IOMMUs | |
34 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
35 | ||
36 | Devices are the main target of any I/O driver. Devices typically | |
37 | create a programming interface made up of I/O access, interrupts, | |
38 | and DMA. Without going into the details of each of these, DMA is | |
39 | by far the most critical aspect for maintaining a secure environment | |
40 | as allowing a device read-write access to system memory imposes the | |
41 | greatest risk to the overall system integrity. | |
42 | ||
43 | To help mitigate this risk, many modern IOMMUs now incorporate | |
44 | isolation properties into what was, in many cases, an interface only | |
45 | meant for translation (ie. solving the addressing problems of devices | |
46 | with limited address spaces). With this, devices can now be isolated | |
47 | from each other and from arbitrary memory access, thus allowing | |
48 | things like secure direct assignment of devices into virtual machines. | |
49 | ||
50 | This isolation is not always at the granularity of a single device | |
51 | though. Even when an IOMMU is capable of this, properties of devices, | |
52 | interconnects, and IOMMU topologies can each reduce this isolation. | |
53 | For instance, an individual device may be part of a larger multi- | |
54 | function enclosure. While the IOMMU may be able to distinguish | |
55 | between devices within the enclosure, the enclosure may not require | |
56 | transactions between devices to reach the IOMMU. Examples of this | |
57 | could be anything from a multi-function PCI device with backdoors | |
58 | between functions to a non-PCI-ACS (Access Control Services) capable | |
59 | bridge allowing redirection without reaching the IOMMU. Topology | |
60 | can also play a factor in terms of hiding devices. A PCIe-to-PCI | |
61 | bridge masks the devices behind it, making transaction appear as if | |
62 | from the bridge itself. Obviously IOMMU design plays a major factor | |
63 | as well. | |
64 | ||
65 | Therefore, while for the most part an IOMMU may have device level | |
66 | granularity, any system is susceptible to reduced granularity. The | |
67 | IOMMU API therefore supports a notion of IOMMU groups. A group is | |
68 | a set of devices which is isolatable from all other devices in the | |
69 | system. Groups are therefore the unit of ownership used by VFIO. | |
70 | ||
71 | While the group is the minimum granularity that must be used to | |
72 | ensure secure user access, it's not necessarily the preferred | |
73 | granularity. In IOMMUs which make use of page tables, it may be | |
74 | possible to share a set of page tables between different groups, | |
75 | reducing the overhead both to the platform (reduced TLB thrashing, | |
76 | reduced duplicate page tables), and to the user (programming only | |
77 | a single set of translations). For this reason, VFIO makes use of | |
78 | a container class, which may hold one or more groups. A container | |
79 | is created by simply opening the /dev/vfio/vfio character device. | |
80 | ||
81 | On its own, the container provides little functionality, with all | |
82 | but a couple version and extension query interfaces locked away. | |
83 | The user needs to add a group into the container for the next level | |
84 | of functionality. To do this, the user first needs to identify the | |
85 | group associated with the desired device. This can be done using | |
86 | the sysfs links described in the example below. By unbinding the | |
87 | device from the host driver and binding it to a VFIO driver, a new | |
88 | VFIO group will appear for the group as /dev/vfio/$GROUP, where | |
89 | $GROUP is the IOMMU group number of which the device is a member. | |
90 | If the IOMMU group contains multiple devices, each will need to | |
91 | be bound to a VFIO driver before operations on the VFIO group | |
92 | are allowed (it's also sufficient to only unbind the device from | |
93 | host drivers if a VFIO driver is unavailable; this will make the | |
94 | group available, but not that particular device). TBD - interface | |
95 | for disabling driver probing/locking a device. | |
96 | ||
97 | Once the group is ready, it may be added to the container by opening | |
98 | the VFIO group character device (/dev/vfio/$GROUP) and using the | |
99 | VFIO_GROUP_SET_CONTAINER ioctl, passing the file descriptor of the | |
100 | previously opened container file. If desired and if the IOMMU driver | |
101 | supports sharing the IOMMU context between groups, multiple groups may | |
102 | be set to the same container. If a group fails to set to a container | |
103 | with existing groups, a new empty container will need to be used | |
104 | instead. | |
105 | ||
106 | With a group (or groups) attached to a container, the remaining | |
107 | ioctls become available, enabling access to the VFIO IOMMU interfaces. | |
108 | Additionally, it now becomes possible to get file descriptors for each | |
109 | device within a group using an ioctl on the VFIO group file descriptor. | |
110 | ||
111 | The VFIO device API includes ioctls for describing the device, the I/O | |
112 | regions and their read/write/mmap offsets on the device descriptor, as | |
113 | well as mechanisms for describing and registering interrupt | |
114 | notifications. | |
115 | ||
116 | VFIO Usage Example | |
117 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
118 | ||
119 | Assume user wants to access PCI device 0000:06:0d.0 | |
120 | ||
121 | $ readlink /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:06:0d.0/iommu_group | |
122 | ../../../../kernel/iommu_groups/26 | |
123 | ||
124 | This device is therefore in IOMMU group 26. This device is on the | |
125 | pci bus, therefore the user will make use of vfio-pci to manage the | |
126 | group: | |
127 | ||
128 | # modprobe vfio-pci | |
129 | ||
130 | Binding this device to the vfio-pci driver creates the VFIO group | |
131 | character devices for this group: | |
132 | ||
133 | $ lspci -n -s 0000:06:0d.0 | |
134 | 06:0d.0 0401: 1102:0002 (rev 08) | |
135 | # echo 0000:06:0d.0 > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:06:0d.0/driver/unbind | |
b37b593e | 136 | # echo 1102 0002 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/vfio-pci/new_id |
4a5b2a20 AW |
137 | |
138 | Now we need to look at what other devices are in the group to free | |
139 | it for use by VFIO: | |
140 | ||
141 | $ ls -l /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:06:0d.0/iommu_group/devices | |
142 | total 0 | |
143 | lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 0 Apr 23 16:13 0000:00:1e.0 -> | |
144 | ../../../../devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1e.0 | |
145 | lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 0 Apr 23 16:13 0000:06:0d.0 -> | |
146 | ../../../../devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1e.0/0000:06:0d.0 | |
147 | lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 0 Apr 23 16:13 0000:06:0d.1 -> | |
148 | ../../../../devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1e.0/0000:06:0d.1 | |
149 | ||
150 | This device is behind a PCIe-to-PCI bridge[4], therefore we also | |
151 | need to add device 0000:06:0d.1 to the group following the same | |
152 | procedure as above. Device 0000:00:1e.0 is a bridge that does | |
153 | not currently have a host driver, therefore it's not required to | |
154 | bind this device to the vfio-pci driver (vfio-pci does not currently | |
155 | support PCI bridges). | |
156 | ||
157 | The final step is to provide the user with access to the group if | |
158 | unprivileged operation is desired (note that /dev/vfio/vfio provides | |
159 | no capabilities on its own and is therefore expected to be set to | |
160 | mode 0666 by the system). | |
161 | ||
162 | # chown user:user /dev/vfio/26 | |
163 | ||
164 | The user now has full access to all the devices and the iommu for this | |
165 | group and can access them as follows: | |
166 | ||
167 | int container, group, device, i; | |
168 | struct vfio_group_status group_status = | |
169 | { .argsz = sizeof(group_status) }; | |
170 | struct vfio_iommu_x86_info iommu_info = { .argsz = sizeof(iommu_info) }; | |
171 | struct vfio_iommu_x86_dma_map dma_map = { .argsz = sizeof(dma_map) }; | |
172 | struct vfio_device_info device_info = { .argsz = sizeof(device_info) }; | |
173 | ||
174 | /* Create a new container */ | |
b0e59b85 | 175 | container = open("/dev/vfio/vfio", O_RDWR); |
4a5b2a20 AW |
176 | |
177 | if (ioctl(container, VFIO_GET_API_VERSION) != VFIO_API_VERSION) | |
178 | /* Unknown API version */ | |
179 | ||
b0e59b85 | 180 | if (!ioctl(container, VFIO_CHECK_EXTENSION, VFIO_TYPE1_IOMMU)) |
4a5b2a20 AW |
181 | /* Doesn't support the IOMMU driver we want. */ |
182 | ||
183 | /* Open the group */ | |
184 | group = open("/dev/vfio/26", O_RDWR); | |
185 | ||
186 | /* Test the group is viable and available */ | |
187 | ioctl(group, VFIO_GROUP_GET_STATUS, &group_status); | |
188 | ||
189 | if (!(group_status.flags & VFIO_GROUP_FLAGS_VIABLE)) | |
190 | /* Group is not viable (ie, not all devices bound for vfio) */ | |
191 | ||
192 | /* Add the group to the container */ | |
193 | ioctl(group, VFIO_GROUP_SET_CONTAINER, &container); | |
194 | ||
195 | /* Enable the IOMMU model we want */ | |
b0e59b85 | 196 | ioctl(container, VFIO_SET_IOMMU, VFIO_TYPE1_IOMMU) |
4a5b2a20 AW |
197 | |
198 | /* Get addition IOMMU info */ | |
199 | ioctl(container, VFIO_IOMMU_GET_INFO, &iommu_info); | |
200 | ||
201 | /* Allocate some space and setup a DMA mapping */ | |
202 | dma_map.vaddr = mmap(0, 1024 * 1024, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, | |
203 | MAP_PRIVATE | MAP_ANONYMOUS, 0, 0); | |
204 | dma_map.size = 1024 * 1024; | |
205 | dma_map.iova = 0; /* 1MB starting at 0x0 from device view */ | |
206 | dma_map.flags = VFIO_DMA_MAP_FLAG_READ | VFIO_DMA_MAP_FLAG_WRITE; | |
207 | ||
208 | ioctl(container, VFIO_IOMMU_MAP_DMA, &dma_map); | |
209 | ||
210 | /* Get a file descriptor for the device */ | |
211 | device = ioctl(group, VFIO_GROUP_GET_DEVICE_FD, "0000:06:0d.0"); | |
212 | ||
213 | /* Test and setup the device */ | |
214 | ioctl(device, VFIO_DEVICE_GET_INFO, &device_info); | |
215 | ||
216 | for (i = 0; i < device_info.num_regions; i++) { | |
217 | struct vfio_region_info reg = { .argsz = sizeof(reg) }; | |
218 | ||
219 | reg.index = i; | |
220 | ||
221 | ioctl(device, VFIO_DEVICE_GET_REGION_INFO, ®); | |
222 | ||
223 | /* Setup mappings... read/write offsets, mmaps | |
224 | * For PCI devices, config space is a region */ | |
225 | } | |
226 | ||
227 | for (i = 0; i < device_info.num_irqs; i++) { | |
228 | struct vfio_irq_info irq = { .argsz = sizeof(irq) }; | |
229 | ||
230 | irq.index = i; | |
231 | ||
232 | ioctl(device, VFIO_DEVICE_GET_IRQ_INFO, ®); | |
233 | ||
234 | /* Setup IRQs... eventfds, VFIO_DEVICE_SET_IRQS */ | |
235 | } | |
236 | ||
237 | /* Gratuitous device reset and go... */ | |
238 | ioctl(device, VFIO_DEVICE_RESET); | |
239 | ||
240 | VFIO User API | |
241 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
242 | ||
243 | Please see include/linux/vfio.h for complete API documentation. | |
244 | ||
245 | VFIO bus driver API | |
246 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
247 | ||
248 | VFIO bus drivers, such as vfio-pci make use of only a few interfaces | |
249 | into VFIO core. When devices are bound and unbound to the driver, | |
250 | the driver should call vfio_add_group_dev() and vfio_del_group_dev() | |
251 | respectively: | |
252 | ||
253 | extern int vfio_add_group_dev(struct iommu_group *iommu_group, | |
254 | struct device *dev, | |
255 | const struct vfio_device_ops *ops, | |
256 | void *device_data); | |
257 | ||
258 | extern void *vfio_del_group_dev(struct device *dev); | |
259 | ||
260 | vfio_add_group_dev() indicates to the core to begin tracking the | |
261 | specified iommu_group and register the specified dev as owned by | |
262 | a VFIO bus driver. The driver provides an ops structure for callbacks | |
263 | similar to a file operations structure: | |
264 | ||
265 | struct vfio_device_ops { | |
266 | int (*open)(void *device_data); | |
267 | void (*release)(void *device_data); | |
268 | ssize_t (*read)(void *device_data, char __user *buf, | |
269 | size_t count, loff_t *ppos); | |
270 | ssize_t (*write)(void *device_data, const char __user *buf, | |
271 | size_t size, loff_t *ppos); | |
272 | long (*ioctl)(void *device_data, unsigned int cmd, | |
273 | unsigned long arg); | |
274 | int (*mmap)(void *device_data, struct vm_area_struct *vma); | |
275 | }; | |
276 | ||
277 | Each function is passed the device_data that was originally registered | |
278 | in the vfio_add_group_dev() call above. This allows the bus driver | |
279 | an easy place to store its opaque, private data. The open/release | |
280 | callbacks are issued when a new file descriptor is created for a | |
281 | device (via VFIO_GROUP_GET_DEVICE_FD). The ioctl interface provides | |
282 | a direct pass through for VFIO_DEVICE_* ioctls. The read/write/mmap | |
283 | interfaces implement the device region access defined by the device's | |
284 | own VFIO_DEVICE_GET_REGION_INFO ioctl. | |
285 | ||
5ffd229c AK |
286 | |
287 | PPC64 sPAPR implementation note | |
288 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
289 | ||
290 | This implementation has some specifics: | |
291 | ||
292 | 1) Only one IOMMU group per container is supported as an IOMMU group | |
293 | represents the minimal entity which isolation can be guaranteed for and | |
294 | groups are allocated statically, one per a Partitionable Endpoint (PE) | |
295 | (PE is often a PCI domain but not always). | |
296 | ||
297 | 2) The hardware supports so called DMA windows - the PCI address range | |
298 | within which DMA transfer is allowed, any attempt to access address space | |
299 | out of the window leads to the whole PE isolation. | |
300 | ||
301 | 3) PPC64 guests are paravirtualized but not fully emulated. There is an API | |
302 | to map/unmap pages for DMA, and it normally maps 1..32 pages per call and | |
303 | currently there is no way to reduce the number of calls. In order to make things | |
304 | faster, the map/unmap handling has been implemented in real mode which provides | |
305 | an excellent performance which has limitations such as inability to do | |
306 | locked pages accounting in real time. | |
307 | ||
308 | So 3 additional ioctls have been added: | |
309 | ||
310 | VFIO_IOMMU_SPAPR_TCE_GET_INFO - returns the size and the start | |
311 | of the DMA window on the PCI bus. | |
312 | ||
313 | VFIO_IOMMU_ENABLE - enables the container. The locked pages accounting | |
314 | is done at this point. This lets user first to know what | |
315 | the DMA window is and adjust rlimit before doing any real job. | |
316 | ||
317 | VFIO_IOMMU_DISABLE - disables the container. | |
318 | ||
319 | ||
320 | The code flow from the example above should be slightly changed: | |
321 | ||
322 | ..... | |
323 | /* Add the group to the container */ | |
324 | ioctl(group, VFIO_GROUP_SET_CONTAINER, &container); | |
325 | ||
326 | /* Enable the IOMMU model we want */ | |
327 | ioctl(container, VFIO_SET_IOMMU, VFIO_SPAPR_TCE_IOMMU) | |
328 | ||
329 | /* Get addition sPAPR IOMMU info */ | |
330 | vfio_iommu_spapr_tce_info spapr_iommu_info; | |
331 | ioctl(container, VFIO_IOMMU_SPAPR_TCE_GET_INFO, &spapr_iommu_info); | |
332 | ||
333 | if (ioctl(container, VFIO_IOMMU_ENABLE)) | |
334 | /* Cannot enable container, may be low rlimit */ | |
335 | ||
336 | /* Allocate some space and setup a DMA mapping */ | |
337 | dma_map.vaddr = mmap(0, 1024 * 1024, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, | |
338 | MAP_PRIVATE | MAP_ANONYMOUS, 0, 0); | |
339 | ||
340 | dma_map.size = 1024 * 1024; | |
341 | dma_map.iova = 0; /* 1MB starting at 0x0 from device view */ | |
342 | dma_map.flags = VFIO_DMA_MAP_FLAG_READ | VFIO_DMA_MAP_FLAG_WRITE; | |
343 | ||
344 | /* Check here is .iova/.size are within DMA window from spapr_iommu_info */ | |
345 | ||
346 | ioctl(container, VFIO_IOMMU_MAP_DMA, &dma_map); | |
347 | ..... | |
348 | ||
4a5b2a20 AW |
349 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
350 | ||
351 | [1] VFIO was originally an acronym for "Virtual Function I/O" in its | |
352 | initial implementation by Tom Lyon while as Cisco. We've since | |
353 | outgrown the acronym, but it's catchy. | |
354 | ||
355 | [2] "safe" also depends upon a device being "well behaved". It's | |
356 | possible for multi-function devices to have backdoors between | |
357 | functions and even for single function devices to have alternative | |
358 | access to things like PCI config space through MMIO registers. To | |
359 | guard against the former we can include additional precautions in the | |
360 | IOMMU driver to group multi-function PCI devices together | |
361 | (iommu=group_mf). The latter we can't prevent, but the IOMMU should | |
362 | still provide isolation. For PCI, SR-IOV Virtual Functions are the | |
363 | best indicator of "well behaved", as these are designed for | |
364 | virtualization usage models. | |
365 | ||
366 | [3] As always there are trade-offs to virtual machine device | |
367 | assignment that are beyond the scope of VFIO. It's expected that | |
368 | future IOMMU technologies will reduce some, but maybe not all, of | |
369 | these trade-offs. | |
370 | ||
371 | [4] In this case the device is below a PCI bridge, so transactions | |
372 | from either function of the device are indistinguishable to the iommu: | |
373 | ||
374 | -[0000:00]-+-1e.0-[06]--+-0d.0 | |
375 | \-0d.1 | |
376 | ||
377 | 00:1e.0 PCI bridge: Intel Corporation 82801 PCI Bridge (rev 90) |