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alistair23-linux/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c

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/*
* NVM Express device driver
* Copyright (c) 2011-2014, Intel Corporation.
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
* under the terms and conditions of the GNU General Public License,
* version 2, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for
* more details.
*/
#include <linux/aer.h>
#include <linux/bitops.h>
#include <linux/blkdev.h>
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
#include <linux/blk-mq.h>
#include <linux/blk-mq-pci.h>
#include <linux/dmi.h>
#include <linux/init.h>
#include <linux/interrupt.h>
#include <linux/io.h>
#include <linux/mm.h>
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/mutex.h>
#include <linux/pci.h>
#include <linux/poison.h>
NVMe: Metadata format support Adds support for NVMe metadata formats and exposes block devices for all namespaces regardless of their format. Namespace formats that are unusable will have disk capacity set to 0, but a handle to the block device is created to simplify device management. A namespace is not usable when the format requires host interleave block and metadata in single buffer, has no provisioned storage, or has better data but failed to register with blk integrity. The namespace has to be scanned in two phases to support separate metadata formats. The first establishes the sector size and capacity prior to invoking add_disk. If metadata is required, the capacity will be temporarilly set to 0 until it can be revalidated and registered with the integrity extenstions after add_disk completes. The driver relies on the integrity extensions to provide the metadata buffer. NVMe requires this be a single physically contiguous region, so only one integrity segment is allowed per command. If the metadata is used for T10 PI, the driver provides mappings to save and restore the reftag physical block translation. The driver provides no-op functions for generate and verify if metadata is not used for protection information. This way the setup is always provided by the block layer. If a request does not supply a required metadata buffer, the command is failed with bad address. This could only happen if a user manually disables verify/generate on such a disk. The only exception to where this is okay is if the controller is capable of stripping/generating the metadata, which is possible on some types of formats. The metadata scatter gather list now occupies the spot in the nvme_iod that used to be used to link retryable IOD's, but we don't do that anymore, so the field was unused. Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2015-02-19 13:39:03 -07:00
#include <linux/t10-pi.h>
#include <linux/timer.h>
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/io-64-nonatomic-lo-hi.h>
#include <asm/unaligned.h>
#include <linux/sed-opal.h>
asm-generic: architecture independent readq/writeq for 32bit environment This provides unified readq()/writeq() helper functions for 32-bit drivers. For some cases, readq/writeq without atomicity is harmful, and order of io access has to be specified explicitly. So in this patch, new two header files which contain non-atomic readq/writeq are added. - <asm-generic/io-64-nonatomic-lo-hi.h> provides non-atomic readq/ writeq with the order of lower address -> higher address - <asm-generic/io-64-nonatomic-hi-lo.h> provides non-atomic readq/ writeq with reversed order This allows us to remove some readq()s that were added drivers when the default non-atomic ones were removed in commit dbee8a0affd5 ("x86: remove 32-bit versions of readq()/writeq()") The drivers which need readq/writeq but can do with the non-atomic ones must add the line: #include <asm-generic/io-64-nonatomic-lo-hi.h> /* or hi-lo.h */ But this will be nop in 64-bit environments, and no other #ifdefs are required. So I believe that this patch can solve the problem of 1. driver-specific readq/writeq 2. atomicity and order of io access This patch is tested with building allyesconfig and allmodconfig as ARCH=x86 and ARCH=i386 on top of tip/master. Cc: Kashyap Desai <Kashyap.Desai@lsi.com> Cc: Len Brown <lenb@kernel.org> Cc: Ravi Anand <ravi.anand@qlogic.com> Cc: Vikas Chaudhary <vikas.chaudhary@qlogic.com> Cc: Matthew Garrett <mjg@redhat.com> Cc: Jason Uhlenkott <juhlenko@akamai.com> Cc: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@parallels.com> Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Cc: "H. Peter Anvin" <hpa@zytor.com> Cc: Roland Dreier <roland@purestorage.com> Cc: James Bottomley <jbottomley@parallels.com> Cc: Alan Cox <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk> Cc: Matthew Wilcox <matthew.r.wilcox@intel.com> Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Hitoshi Mitake <h.mitake@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2012-02-06 19:45:33 -07:00
#include "nvme.h"
#define NVME_Q_DEPTH 1024
#define SQ_SIZE(depth) (depth * sizeof(struct nvme_command))
#define CQ_SIZE(depth) (depth * sizeof(struct nvme_completion))
/*
* We handle AEN commands ourselves and don't even let the
* block layer know about them.
*/
#define NVME_AQ_BLKMQ_DEPTH (NVME_AQ_DEPTH - NVME_NR_AERS)
static int use_threaded_interrupts;
module_param(use_threaded_interrupts, int, 0);
static bool use_cmb_sqes = true;
module_param(use_cmb_sqes, bool, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(use_cmb_sqes, "use controller's memory buffer for I/O SQes");
static unsigned int max_host_mem_size_mb = 128;
module_param(max_host_mem_size_mb, uint, 0444);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(max_host_mem_size_mb,
"Maximum Host Memory Buffer (HMB) size per controller (in MiB)");
struct nvme_dev;
struct nvme_queue;
static void nvme_process_cq(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq);
static void nvme_dev_disable(struct nvme_dev *dev, bool shutdown);
/*
* Represents an NVM Express device. Each nvme_dev is a PCI function.
*/
struct nvme_dev {
struct nvme_queue **queues;
struct blk_mq_tag_set tagset;
struct blk_mq_tag_set admin_tagset;
u32 __iomem *dbs;
struct device *dev;
struct dma_pool *prp_page_pool;
struct dma_pool *prp_small_pool;
unsigned online_queues;
unsigned max_qid;
int q_depth;
u32 db_stride;
void __iomem *bar;
unsigned long bar_mapped_size;
struct work_struct remove_work;
struct mutex shutdown_lock;
bool subsystem;
void __iomem *cmb;
dma_addr_t cmb_dma_addr;
u64 cmb_size;
u32 cmbsz;
u32 cmbloc;
struct nvme_ctrl ctrl;
struct completion ioq_wait;
/* shadow doorbell buffer support: */
nvme: improve performance for virtual NVMe devices This change provides a mechanism to reduce the number of MMIO doorbell writes for the NVMe driver. When running in a virtualized environment like QEMU, the cost of an MMIO is quite hefy here. The main idea for the patch is provide the device two memory location locations: 1) to store the doorbell values so they can be lookup without the doorbell MMIO write 2) to store an event index. I believe the doorbell value is obvious, the event index not so much. Similar to the virtio specification, the virtual device can tell the driver (guest OS) not to write MMIO unless you are writing past this value. FYI: doorbell values are written by the nvme driver (guest OS) and the event index is written by the virtual device (host OS). The patch implements a new admin command that will communicate where these two memory locations reside. If the command fails, the nvme driver will work as before without any optimizations. Contributions: Eric Northup <digitaleric@google.com> Frank Swiderski <fes@google.com> Ted Tso <tytso@mit.edu> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Just to give an idea on the performance boost with the vendor extension: Running fio [1], a stock NVMe driver I get about 200K read IOPs with my vendor patch I get about 1000K read IOPs. This was running with a null device i.e. the backing device simply returned success on every read IO request. [1] Running on a 4 core machine: fio --time_based --name=benchmark --runtime=30 --filename=/dev/nvme0n1 --nrfiles=1 --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=32 --direct=1 --invalidate=1 --verify=0 --verify_fatal=0 --numjobs=4 --rw=randread --blocksize=4k --randrepeat=false Signed-off-by: Rob Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> [mlin: port for upstream] Signed-off-by: Ming Lin <mlin@kernel.org> [koike: updated for upstream] Signed-off-by: Helen Koike <helen.koike@collabora.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2017-04-10 09:51:07 -06:00
u32 *dbbuf_dbs;
dma_addr_t dbbuf_dbs_dma_addr;
u32 *dbbuf_eis;
dma_addr_t dbbuf_eis_dma_addr;
/* host memory buffer support: */
u64 host_mem_size;
u32 nr_host_mem_descs;
struct nvme_host_mem_buf_desc *host_mem_descs;
void **host_mem_desc_bufs;
};
nvme: improve performance for virtual NVMe devices This change provides a mechanism to reduce the number of MMIO doorbell writes for the NVMe driver. When running in a virtualized environment like QEMU, the cost of an MMIO is quite hefy here. The main idea for the patch is provide the device two memory location locations: 1) to store the doorbell values so they can be lookup without the doorbell MMIO write 2) to store an event index. I believe the doorbell value is obvious, the event index not so much. Similar to the virtio specification, the virtual device can tell the driver (guest OS) not to write MMIO unless you are writing past this value. FYI: doorbell values are written by the nvme driver (guest OS) and the event index is written by the virtual device (host OS). The patch implements a new admin command that will communicate where these two memory locations reside. If the command fails, the nvme driver will work as before without any optimizations. Contributions: Eric Northup <digitaleric@google.com> Frank Swiderski <fes@google.com> Ted Tso <tytso@mit.edu> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Just to give an idea on the performance boost with the vendor extension: Running fio [1], a stock NVMe driver I get about 200K read IOPs with my vendor patch I get about 1000K read IOPs. This was running with a null device i.e. the backing device simply returned success on every read IO request. [1] Running on a 4 core machine: fio --time_based --name=benchmark --runtime=30 --filename=/dev/nvme0n1 --nrfiles=1 --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=32 --direct=1 --invalidate=1 --verify=0 --verify_fatal=0 --numjobs=4 --rw=randread --blocksize=4k --randrepeat=false Signed-off-by: Rob Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> [mlin: port for upstream] Signed-off-by: Ming Lin <mlin@kernel.org> [koike: updated for upstream] Signed-off-by: Helen Koike <helen.koike@collabora.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2017-04-10 09:51:07 -06:00
static inline unsigned int sq_idx(unsigned int qid, u32 stride)
{
return qid * 2 * stride;
}
static inline unsigned int cq_idx(unsigned int qid, u32 stride)
{
return (qid * 2 + 1) * stride;
}
static inline struct nvme_dev *to_nvme_dev(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl)
{
return container_of(ctrl, struct nvme_dev, ctrl);
}
/*
* An NVM Express queue. Each device has at least two (one for admin
* commands and one for I/O commands).
*/
struct nvme_queue {
struct device *q_dmadev;
struct nvme_dev *dev;
spinlock_t q_lock;
struct nvme_command *sq_cmds;
struct nvme_command __iomem *sq_cmds_io;
volatile struct nvme_completion *cqes;
struct blk_mq_tags **tags;
dma_addr_t sq_dma_addr;
dma_addr_t cq_dma_addr;
u32 __iomem *q_db;
u16 q_depth;
s16 cq_vector;
u16 sq_tail;
u16 cq_head;
u16 qid;
u8 cq_phase;
u8 cqe_seen;
nvme: improve performance for virtual NVMe devices This change provides a mechanism to reduce the number of MMIO doorbell writes for the NVMe driver. When running in a virtualized environment like QEMU, the cost of an MMIO is quite hefy here. The main idea for the patch is provide the device two memory location locations: 1) to store the doorbell values so they can be lookup without the doorbell MMIO write 2) to store an event index. I believe the doorbell value is obvious, the event index not so much. Similar to the virtio specification, the virtual device can tell the driver (guest OS) not to write MMIO unless you are writing past this value. FYI: doorbell values are written by the nvme driver (guest OS) and the event index is written by the virtual device (host OS). The patch implements a new admin command that will communicate where these two memory locations reside. If the command fails, the nvme driver will work as before without any optimizations. Contributions: Eric Northup <digitaleric@google.com> Frank Swiderski <fes@google.com> Ted Tso <tytso@mit.edu> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Just to give an idea on the performance boost with the vendor extension: Running fio [1], a stock NVMe driver I get about 200K read IOPs with my vendor patch I get about 1000K read IOPs. This was running with a null device i.e. the backing device simply returned success on every read IO request. [1] Running on a 4 core machine: fio --time_based --name=benchmark --runtime=30 --filename=/dev/nvme0n1 --nrfiles=1 --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=32 --direct=1 --invalidate=1 --verify=0 --verify_fatal=0 --numjobs=4 --rw=randread --blocksize=4k --randrepeat=false Signed-off-by: Rob Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> [mlin: port for upstream] Signed-off-by: Ming Lin <mlin@kernel.org> [koike: updated for upstream] Signed-off-by: Helen Koike <helen.koike@collabora.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2017-04-10 09:51:07 -06:00
u32 *dbbuf_sq_db;
u32 *dbbuf_cq_db;
u32 *dbbuf_sq_ei;
u32 *dbbuf_cq_ei;
};
/*
* The nvme_iod describes the data in an I/O, including the list of PRP
* entries. You can't see it in this data structure because C doesn't let
* me express that. Use nvme_init_iod to ensure there's enough space
* allocated to store the PRP list.
*/
struct nvme_iod {
struct nvme_request req;
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq;
int aborted;
int npages; /* In the PRP list. 0 means small pool in use */
int nents; /* Used in scatterlist */
int length; /* Of data, in bytes */
dma_addr_t first_dma;
struct scatterlist meta_sg; /* metadata requires single contiguous buffer */
struct scatterlist *sg;
struct scatterlist inline_sg[0];
};
/*
* Check we didin't inadvertently grow the command struct
*/
static inline void _nvme_check_size(void)
{
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_rw_command) != 64);
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_create_cq) != 64);
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_create_sq) != 64);
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_delete_queue) != 64);
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_features) != 64);
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_format_cmd) != 64);
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_abort_cmd) != 64);
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_command) != 64);
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_id_ctrl) != NVME_IDENTIFY_DATA_SIZE);
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_id_ns) != NVME_IDENTIFY_DATA_SIZE);
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_lba_range_type) != 64);
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_smart_log) != 512);
nvme: improve performance for virtual NVMe devices This change provides a mechanism to reduce the number of MMIO doorbell writes for the NVMe driver. When running in a virtualized environment like QEMU, the cost of an MMIO is quite hefy here. The main idea for the patch is provide the device two memory location locations: 1) to store the doorbell values so they can be lookup without the doorbell MMIO write 2) to store an event index. I believe the doorbell value is obvious, the event index not so much. Similar to the virtio specification, the virtual device can tell the driver (guest OS) not to write MMIO unless you are writing past this value. FYI: doorbell values are written by the nvme driver (guest OS) and the event index is written by the virtual device (host OS). The patch implements a new admin command that will communicate where these two memory locations reside. If the command fails, the nvme driver will work as before without any optimizations. Contributions: Eric Northup <digitaleric@google.com> Frank Swiderski <fes@google.com> Ted Tso <tytso@mit.edu> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Just to give an idea on the performance boost with the vendor extension: Running fio [1], a stock NVMe driver I get about 200K read IOPs with my vendor patch I get about 1000K read IOPs. This was running with a null device i.e. the backing device simply returned success on every read IO request. [1] Running on a 4 core machine: fio --time_based --name=benchmark --runtime=30 --filename=/dev/nvme0n1 --nrfiles=1 --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=32 --direct=1 --invalidate=1 --verify=0 --verify_fatal=0 --numjobs=4 --rw=randread --blocksize=4k --randrepeat=false Signed-off-by: Rob Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> [mlin: port for upstream] Signed-off-by: Ming Lin <mlin@kernel.org> [koike: updated for upstream] Signed-off-by: Helen Koike <helen.koike@collabora.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2017-04-10 09:51:07 -06:00
BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(struct nvme_dbbuf) != 64);
}
static inline unsigned int nvme_dbbuf_size(u32 stride)
{
return ((num_possible_cpus() + 1) * 8 * stride);
}
static int nvme_dbbuf_dma_alloc(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
unsigned int mem_size = nvme_dbbuf_size(dev->db_stride);
if (dev->dbbuf_dbs)
return 0;
dev->dbbuf_dbs = dma_alloc_coherent(dev->dev, mem_size,
&dev->dbbuf_dbs_dma_addr,
GFP_KERNEL);
if (!dev->dbbuf_dbs)
return -ENOMEM;
dev->dbbuf_eis = dma_alloc_coherent(dev->dev, mem_size,
&dev->dbbuf_eis_dma_addr,
GFP_KERNEL);
if (!dev->dbbuf_eis) {
dma_free_coherent(dev->dev, mem_size,
dev->dbbuf_dbs, dev->dbbuf_dbs_dma_addr);
dev->dbbuf_dbs = NULL;
return -ENOMEM;
}
return 0;
}
static void nvme_dbbuf_dma_free(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
unsigned int mem_size = nvme_dbbuf_size(dev->db_stride);
if (dev->dbbuf_dbs) {
dma_free_coherent(dev->dev, mem_size,
dev->dbbuf_dbs, dev->dbbuf_dbs_dma_addr);
dev->dbbuf_dbs = NULL;
}
if (dev->dbbuf_eis) {
dma_free_coherent(dev->dev, mem_size,
dev->dbbuf_eis, dev->dbbuf_eis_dma_addr);
dev->dbbuf_eis = NULL;
}
}
static void nvme_dbbuf_init(struct nvme_dev *dev,
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq, int qid)
{
if (!dev->dbbuf_dbs || !qid)
return;
nvmeq->dbbuf_sq_db = &dev->dbbuf_dbs[sq_idx(qid, dev->db_stride)];
nvmeq->dbbuf_cq_db = &dev->dbbuf_dbs[cq_idx(qid, dev->db_stride)];
nvmeq->dbbuf_sq_ei = &dev->dbbuf_eis[sq_idx(qid, dev->db_stride)];
nvmeq->dbbuf_cq_ei = &dev->dbbuf_eis[cq_idx(qid, dev->db_stride)];
}
static void nvme_dbbuf_set(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
struct nvme_command c;
if (!dev->dbbuf_dbs)
return;
memset(&c, 0, sizeof(c));
c.dbbuf.opcode = nvme_admin_dbbuf;
c.dbbuf.prp1 = cpu_to_le64(dev->dbbuf_dbs_dma_addr);
c.dbbuf.prp2 = cpu_to_le64(dev->dbbuf_eis_dma_addr);
if (nvme_submit_sync_cmd(dev->ctrl.admin_q, &c, NULL, 0)) {
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device, "unable to set dbbuf\n");
nvme: improve performance for virtual NVMe devices This change provides a mechanism to reduce the number of MMIO doorbell writes for the NVMe driver. When running in a virtualized environment like QEMU, the cost of an MMIO is quite hefy here. The main idea for the patch is provide the device two memory location locations: 1) to store the doorbell values so they can be lookup without the doorbell MMIO write 2) to store an event index. I believe the doorbell value is obvious, the event index not so much. Similar to the virtio specification, the virtual device can tell the driver (guest OS) not to write MMIO unless you are writing past this value. FYI: doorbell values are written by the nvme driver (guest OS) and the event index is written by the virtual device (host OS). The patch implements a new admin command that will communicate where these two memory locations reside. If the command fails, the nvme driver will work as before without any optimizations. Contributions: Eric Northup <digitaleric@google.com> Frank Swiderski <fes@google.com> Ted Tso <tytso@mit.edu> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Just to give an idea on the performance boost with the vendor extension: Running fio [1], a stock NVMe driver I get about 200K read IOPs with my vendor patch I get about 1000K read IOPs. This was running with a null device i.e. the backing device simply returned success on every read IO request. [1] Running on a 4 core machine: fio --time_based --name=benchmark --runtime=30 --filename=/dev/nvme0n1 --nrfiles=1 --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=32 --direct=1 --invalidate=1 --verify=0 --verify_fatal=0 --numjobs=4 --rw=randread --blocksize=4k --randrepeat=false Signed-off-by: Rob Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> [mlin: port for upstream] Signed-off-by: Ming Lin <mlin@kernel.org> [koike: updated for upstream] Signed-off-by: Helen Koike <helen.koike@collabora.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2017-04-10 09:51:07 -06:00
/* Free memory and continue on */
nvme_dbbuf_dma_free(dev);
}
}
static inline int nvme_dbbuf_need_event(u16 event_idx, u16 new_idx, u16 old)
{
return (u16)(new_idx - event_idx - 1) < (u16)(new_idx - old);
}
/* Update dbbuf and return true if an MMIO is required */
static bool nvme_dbbuf_update_and_check_event(u16 value, u32 *dbbuf_db,
volatile u32 *dbbuf_ei)
{
if (dbbuf_db) {
u16 old_value;
/*
* Ensure that the queue is written before updating
* the doorbell in memory
*/
wmb();
old_value = *dbbuf_db;
*dbbuf_db = value;
if (!nvme_dbbuf_need_event(*dbbuf_ei, value, old_value))
return false;
}
return true;
}
/*
* Max size of iod being embedded in the request payload
*/
#define NVME_INT_PAGES 2
#define NVME_INT_BYTES(dev) (NVME_INT_PAGES * (dev)->ctrl.page_size)
/*
* Will slightly overestimate the number of pages needed. This is OK
* as it only leads to a small amount of wasted memory for the lifetime of
* the I/O.
*/
static int nvme_npages(unsigned size, struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
unsigned nprps = DIV_ROUND_UP(size + dev->ctrl.page_size,
dev->ctrl.page_size);
return DIV_ROUND_UP(8 * nprps, PAGE_SIZE - 8);
}
static unsigned int nvme_iod_alloc_size(struct nvme_dev *dev,
unsigned int size, unsigned int nseg)
{
return sizeof(__le64 *) * nvme_npages(size, dev) +
sizeof(struct scatterlist) * nseg;
}
static unsigned int nvme_cmd_size(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
return sizeof(struct nvme_iod) +
nvme_iod_alloc_size(dev, NVME_INT_BYTES(dev), NVME_INT_PAGES);
}
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
static int nvme_admin_init_hctx(struct blk_mq_hw_ctx *hctx, void *data,
unsigned int hctx_idx)
{
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
struct nvme_dev *dev = data;
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = dev->queues[0];
WARN_ON(hctx_idx != 0);
WARN_ON(dev->admin_tagset.tags[0] != hctx->tags);
WARN_ON(nvmeq->tags);
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
hctx->driver_data = nvmeq;
nvmeq->tags = &dev->admin_tagset.tags[0];
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
return 0;
}
static void nvme_admin_exit_hctx(struct blk_mq_hw_ctx *hctx, unsigned int hctx_idx)
{
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = hctx->driver_data;
nvmeq->tags = NULL;
}
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
static int nvme_init_hctx(struct blk_mq_hw_ctx *hctx, void *data,
unsigned int hctx_idx)
{
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
struct nvme_dev *dev = data;
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = dev->queues[hctx_idx + 1];
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
if (!nvmeq->tags)
nvmeq->tags = &dev->tagset.tags[hctx_idx];
WARN_ON(dev->tagset.tags[hctx_idx] != hctx->tags);
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
hctx->driver_data = nvmeq;
return 0;
}
static int nvme_init_request(struct blk_mq_tag_set *set, struct request *req,
unsigned int hctx_idx, unsigned int numa_node)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev = set->driver_data;
struct nvme_iod *iod = blk_mq_rq_to_pdu(req);
int queue_idx = (set == &dev->tagset) ? hctx_idx + 1 : 0;
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = dev->queues[queue_idx];
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
BUG_ON(!nvmeq);
iod->nvmeq = nvmeq;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
return 0;
}
static int nvme_pci_map_queues(struct blk_mq_tag_set *set)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev = set->driver_data;
return blk_mq_pci_map_queues(set, to_pci_dev(dev->dev));
}
/**
* __nvme_submit_cmd() - Copy a command into a queue and ring the doorbell
* @nvmeq: The queue to use
* @cmd: The command to send
*
* Safe to use from interrupt context
*/
static void __nvme_submit_cmd(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq,
struct nvme_command *cmd)
{
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
u16 tail = nvmeq->sq_tail;
if (nvmeq->sq_cmds_io)
memcpy_toio(&nvmeq->sq_cmds_io[tail], cmd, sizeof(*cmd));
else
memcpy(&nvmeq->sq_cmds[tail], cmd, sizeof(*cmd));
if (++tail == nvmeq->q_depth)
tail = 0;
nvme: improve performance for virtual NVMe devices This change provides a mechanism to reduce the number of MMIO doorbell writes for the NVMe driver. When running in a virtualized environment like QEMU, the cost of an MMIO is quite hefy here. The main idea for the patch is provide the device two memory location locations: 1) to store the doorbell values so they can be lookup without the doorbell MMIO write 2) to store an event index. I believe the doorbell value is obvious, the event index not so much. Similar to the virtio specification, the virtual device can tell the driver (guest OS) not to write MMIO unless you are writing past this value. FYI: doorbell values are written by the nvme driver (guest OS) and the event index is written by the virtual device (host OS). The patch implements a new admin command that will communicate where these two memory locations reside. If the command fails, the nvme driver will work as before without any optimizations. Contributions: Eric Northup <digitaleric@google.com> Frank Swiderski <fes@google.com> Ted Tso <tytso@mit.edu> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Just to give an idea on the performance boost with the vendor extension: Running fio [1], a stock NVMe driver I get about 200K read IOPs with my vendor patch I get about 1000K read IOPs. This was running with a null device i.e. the backing device simply returned success on every read IO request. [1] Running on a 4 core machine: fio --time_based --name=benchmark --runtime=30 --filename=/dev/nvme0n1 --nrfiles=1 --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=32 --direct=1 --invalidate=1 --verify=0 --verify_fatal=0 --numjobs=4 --rw=randread --blocksize=4k --randrepeat=false Signed-off-by: Rob Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> [mlin: port for upstream] Signed-off-by: Ming Lin <mlin@kernel.org> [koike: updated for upstream] Signed-off-by: Helen Koike <helen.koike@collabora.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2017-04-10 09:51:07 -06:00
if (nvme_dbbuf_update_and_check_event(tail, nvmeq->dbbuf_sq_db,
nvmeq->dbbuf_sq_ei))
writel(tail, nvmeq->q_db);
nvmeq->sq_tail = tail;
}
static __le64 **iod_list(struct request *req)
{
struct nvme_iod *iod = blk_mq_rq_to_pdu(req);
return (__le64 **)(iod->sg + blk_rq_nr_phys_segments(req));
}
static blk_status_t nvme_init_iod(struct request *rq, struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
struct nvme_iod *iod = blk_mq_rq_to_pdu(rq);
int nseg = blk_rq_nr_phys_segments(rq);
unsigned int size = blk_rq_payload_bytes(rq);
if (nseg > NVME_INT_PAGES || size > NVME_INT_BYTES(dev)) {
iod->sg = kmalloc(nvme_iod_alloc_size(dev, size, nseg), GFP_ATOMIC);
if (!iod->sg)
return BLK_STS_RESOURCE;
} else {
iod->sg = iod->inline_sg;
}
iod->aborted = 0;
iod->npages = -1;
iod->nents = 0;
iod->length = size;
return BLK_STS_OK;
}
static void nvme_free_iod(struct nvme_dev *dev, struct request *req)
{
struct nvme_iod *iod = blk_mq_rq_to_pdu(req);
const int last_prp = dev->ctrl.page_size / 8 - 1;
int i;
__le64 **list = iod_list(req);
dma_addr_t prp_dma = iod->first_dma;
if (iod->npages == 0)
dma_pool_free(dev->prp_small_pool, list[0], prp_dma);
for (i = 0; i < iod->npages; i++) {
__le64 *prp_list = list[i];
dma_addr_t next_prp_dma = le64_to_cpu(prp_list[last_prp]);
dma_pool_free(dev->prp_page_pool, prp_list, prp_dma);
prp_dma = next_prp_dma;
}
if (iod->sg != iod->inline_sg)
kfree(iod->sg);
}
#ifdef CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INTEGRITY
NVMe: Metadata format support Adds support for NVMe metadata formats and exposes block devices for all namespaces regardless of their format. Namespace formats that are unusable will have disk capacity set to 0, but a handle to the block device is created to simplify device management. A namespace is not usable when the format requires host interleave block and metadata in single buffer, has no provisioned storage, or has better data but failed to register with blk integrity. The namespace has to be scanned in two phases to support separate metadata formats. The first establishes the sector size and capacity prior to invoking add_disk. If metadata is required, the capacity will be temporarilly set to 0 until it can be revalidated and registered with the integrity extenstions after add_disk completes. The driver relies on the integrity extensions to provide the metadata buffer. NVMe requires this be a single physically contiguous region, so only one integrity segment is allowed per command. If the metadata is used for T10 PI, the driver provides mappings to save and restore the reftag physical block translation. The driver provides no-op functions for generate and verify if metadata is not used for protection information. This way the setup is always provided by the block layer. If a request does not supply a required metadata buffer, the command is failed with bad address. This could only happen if a user manually disables verify/generate on such a disk. The only exception to where this is okay is if the controller is capable of stripping/generating the metadata, which is possible on some types of formats. The metadata scatter gather list now occupies the spot in the nvme_iod that used to be used to link retryable IOD's, but we don't do that anymore, so the field was unused. Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2015-02-19 13:39:03 -07:00
static void nvme_dif_prep(u32 p, u32 v, struct t10_pi_tuple *pi)
{
if (be32_to_cpu(pi->ref_tag) == v)
pi->ref_tag = cpu_to_be32(p);
}
static void nvme_dif_complete(u32 p, u32 v, struct t10_pi_tuple *pi)
{
if (be32_to_cpu(pi->ref_tag) == p)
pi->ref_tag = cpu_to_be32(v);
}
/**
* nvme_dif_remap - remaps ref tags to bip seed and physical lba
*
* The virtual start sector is the one that was originally submitted by the
* block layer. Due to partitioning, MD/DM cloning, etc. the actual physical
* start sector may be different. Remap protection information to match the
* physical LBA on writes, and back to the original seed on reads.
*
* Type 0 and 3 do not have a ref tag, so no remapping required.
*/
static void nvme_dif_remap(struct request *req,
void (*dif_swap)(u32 p, u32 v, struct t10_pi_tuple *pi))
{
struct nvme_ns *ns = req->rq_disk->private_data;
struct bio_integrity_payload *bip;
struct t10_pi_tuple *pi;
void *p, *pmap;
u32 i, nlb, ts, phys, virt;
if (!ns->pi_type || ns->pi_type == NVME_NS_DPS_PI_TYPE3)
return;
bip = bio_integrity(req->bio);
if (!bip)
return;
pmap = kmap_atomic(bip->bip_vec->bv_page) + bip->bip_vec->bv_offset;
p = pmap;
virt = bip_get_seed(bip);
phys = nvme_block_nr(ns, blk_rq_pos(req));
nlb = (blk_rq_bytes(req) >> ns->lba_shift);
ts = ns->disk->queue->integrity.tuple_size;
NVMe: Metadata format support Adds support for NVMe metadata formats and exposes block devices for all namespaces regardless of their format. Namespace formats that are unusable will have disk capacity set to 0, but a handle to the block device is created to simplify device management. A namespace is not usable when the format requires host interleave block and metadata in single buffer, has no provisioned storage, or has better data but failed to register with blk integrity. The namespace has to be scanned in two phases to support separate metadata formats. The first establishes the sector size and capacity prior to invoking add_disk. If metadata is required, the capacity will be temporarilly set to 0 until it can be revalidated and registered with the integrity extenstions after add_disk completes. The driver relies on the integrity extensions to provide the metadata buffer. NVMe requires this be a single physically contiguous region, so only one integrity segment is allowed per command. If the metadata is used for T10 PI, the driver provides mappings to save and restore the reftag physical block translation. The driver provides no-op functions for generate and verify if metadata is not used for protection information. This way the setup is always provided by the block layer. If a request does not supply a required metadata buffer, the command is failed with bad address. This could only happen if a user manually disables verify/generate on such a disk. The only exception to where this is okay is if the controller is capable of stripping/generating the metadata, which is possible on some types of formats. The metadata scatter gather list now occupies the spot in the nvme_iod that used to be used to link retryable IOD's, but we don't do that anymore, so the field was unused. Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2015-02-19 13:39:03 -07:00
for (i = 0; i < nlb; i++, virt++, phys++) {
pi = (struct t10_pi_tuple *)p;
dif_swap(phys, virt, pi);
p += ts;
}
kunmap_atomic(pmap);
}
#else /* CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INTEGRITY */
static void nvme_dif_remap(struct request *req,
void (*dif_swap)(u32 p, u32 v, struct t10_pi_tuple *pi))
{
}
static void nvme_dif_prep(u32 p, u32 v, struct t10_pi_tuple *pi)
{
}
static void nvme_dif_complete(u32 p, u32 v, struct t10_pi_tuple *pi)
{
}
#endif
static bool nvme_setup_prps(struct nvme_dev *dev, struct request *req)
{
struct nvme_iod *iod = blk_mq_rq_to_pdu(req);
struct dma_pool *pool;
int length = blk_rq_payload_bytes(req);
struct scatterlist *sg = iod->sg;
int dma_len = sg_dma_len(sg);
u64 dma_addr = sg_dma_address(sg);
u32 page_size = dev->ctrl.page_size;
int offset = dma_addr & (page_size - 1);
__le64 *prp_list;
__le64 **list = iod_list(req);
dma_addr_t prp_dma;
int nprps, i;
length -= (page_size - offset);
if (length <= 0)
return true;
dma_len -= (page_size - offset);
if (dma_len) {
dma_addr += (page_size - offset);
} else {
sg = sg_next(sg);
dma_addr = sg_dma_address(sg);
dma_len = sg_dma_len(sg);
}
if (length <= page_size) {
iod->first_dma = dma_addr;
return true;
}
nprps = DIV_ROUND_UP(length, page_size);
if (nprps <= (256 / 8)) {
pool = dev->prp_small_pool;
iod->npages = 0;
} else {
pool = dev->prp_page_pool;
iod->npages = 1;
}
prp_list = dma_pool_alloc(pool, GFP_ATOMIC, &prp_dma);
if (!prp_list) {
iod->first_dma = dma_addr;
iod->npages = -1;
return false;
}
list[0] = prp_list;
iod->first_dma = prp_dma;
i = 0;
for (;;) {
if (i == page_size >> 3) {
__le64 *old_prp_list = prp_list;
prp_list = dma_pool_alloc(pool, GFP_ATOMIC, &prp_dma);
if (!prp_list)
return false;
list[iod->npages++] = prp_list;
prp_list[0] = old_prp_list[i - 1];
old_prp_list[i - 1] = cpu_to_le64(prp_dma);
i = 1;
}
prp_list[i++] = cpu_to_le64(dma_addr);
dma_len -= page_size;
dma_addr += page_size;
length -= page_size;
if (length <= 0)
break;
if (dma_len > 0)
continue;
BUG_ON(dma_len < 0);
sg = sg_next(sg);
dma_addr = sg_dma_address(sg);
dma_len = sg_dma_len(sg);
}
return true;
}
static blk_status_t nvme_map_data(struct nvme_dev *dev, struct request *req,
struct nvme_command *cmnd)
{
struct nvme_iod *iod = blk_mq_rq_to_pdu(req);
struct request_queue *q = req->q;
enum dma_data_direction dma_dir = rq_data_dir(req) ?
DMA_TO_DEVICE : DMA_FROM_DEVICE;
blk_status_t ret = BLK_STS_IOERR;
sg_init_table(iod->sg, blk_rq_nr_phys_segments(req));
iod->nents = blk_rq_map_sg(q, req, iod->sg);
if (!iod->nents)
goto out;
ret = BLK_STS_RESOURCE;
if (!dma_map_sg_attrs(dev->dev, iod->sg, iod->nents, dma_dir,
DMA_ATTR_NO_WARN))
goto out;
if (!nvme_setup_prps(dev, req))
goto out_unmap;
ret = BLK_STS_IOERR;
if (blk_integrity_rq(req)) {
if (blk_rq_count_integrity_sg(q, req->bio) != 1)
goto out_unmap;
sg_init_table(&iod->meta_sg, 1);
if (blk_rq_map_integrity_sg(q, req->bio, &iod->meta_sg) != 1)
goto out_unmap;
if (rq_data_dir(req))
nvme_dif_remap(req, nvme_dif_prep);
if (!dma_map_sg(dev->dev, &iod->meta_sg, 1, dma_dir))
goto out_unmap;
}
cmnd->rw.dptr.prp1 = cpu_to_le64(sg_dma_address(iod->sg));
cmnd->rw.dptr.prp2 = cpu_to_le64(iod->first_dma);
if (blk_integrity_rq(req))
cmnd->rw.metadata = cpu_to_le64(sg_dma_address(&iod->meta_sg));
return BLK_STS_OK;
out_unmap:
dma_unmap_sg(dev->dev, iod->sg, iod->nents, dma_dir);
out:
return ret;
}
static void nvme_unmap_data(struct nvme_dev *dev, struct request *req)
{
struct nvme_iod *iod = blk_mq_rq_to_pdu(req);
enum dma_data_direction dma_dir = rq_data_dir(req) ?
DMA_TO_DEVICE : DMA_FROM_DEVICE;
if (iod->nents) {
dma_unmap_sg(dev->dev, iod->sg, iod->nents, dma_dir);
if (blk_integrity_rq(req)) {
if (!rq_data_dir(req))
nvme_dif_remap(req, nvme_dif_complete);
dma_unmap_sg(dev->dev, &iod->meta_sg, 1, dma_dir);
NVMe: Metadata format support Adds support for NVMe metadata formats and exposes block devices for all namespaces regardless of their format. Namespace formats that are unusable will have disk capacity set to 0, but a handle to the block device is created to simplify device management. A namespace is not usable when the format requires host interleave block and metadata in single buffer, has no provisioned storage, or has better data but failed to register with blk integrity. The namespace has to be scanned in two phases to support separate metadata formats. The first establishes the sector size and capacity prior to invoking add_disk. If metadata is required, the capacity will be temporarilly set to 0 until it can be revalidated and registered with the integrity extenstions after add_disk completes. The driver relies on the integrity extensions to provide the metadata buffer. NVMe requires this be a single physically contiguous region, so only one integrity segment is allowed per command. If the metadata is used for T10 PI, the driver provides mappings to save and restore the reftag physical block translation. The driver provides no-op functions for generate and verify if metadata is not used for protection information. This way the setup is always provided by the block layer. If a request does not supply a required metadata buffer, the command is failed with bad address. This could only happen if a user manually disables verify/generate on such a disk. The only exception to where this is okay is if the controller is capable of stripping/generating the metadata, which is possible on some types of formats. The metadata scatter gather list now occupies the spot in the nvme_iod that used to be used to link retryable IOD's, but we don't do that anymore, so the field was unused. Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2015-02-19 13:39:03 -07:00
}
}
NVMe: Metadata format support Adds support for NVMe metadata formats and exposes block devices for all namespaces regardless of their format. Namespace formats that are unusable will have disk capacity set to 0, but a handle to the block device is created to simplify device management. A namespace is not usable when the format requires host interleave block and metadata in single buffer, has no provisioned storage, or has better data but failed to register with blk integrity. The namespace has to be scanned in two phases to support separate metadata formats. The first establishes the sector size and capacity prior to invoking add_disk. If metadata is required, the capacity will be temporarilly set to 0 until it can be revalidated and registered with the integrity extenstions after add_disk completes. The driver relies on the integrity extensions to provide the metadata buffer. NVMe requires this be a single physically contiguous region, so only one integrity segment is allowed per command. If the metadata is used for T10 PI, the driver provides mappings to save and restore the reftag physical block translation. The driver provides no-op functions for generate and verify if metadata is not used for protection information. This way the setup is always provided by the block layer. If a request does not supply a required metadata buffer, the command is failed with bad address. This could only happen if a user manually disables verify/generate on such a disk. The only exception to where this is okay is if the controller is capable of stripping/generating the metadata, which is possible on some types of formats. The metadata scatter gather list now occupies the spot in the nvme_iod that used to be used to link retryable IOD's, but we don't do that anymore, so the field was unused. Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2015-02-19 13:39:03 -07:00
nvme_cleanup_cmd(req);
nvme_free_iod(dev, req);
}
/*
* NOTE: ns is NULL when called on the admin queue.
*/
static blk_status_t nvme_queue_rq(struct blk_mq_hw_ctx *hctx,
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
const struct blk_mq_queue_data *bd)
{
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
struct nvme_ns *ns = hctx->queue->queuedata;
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = hctx->driver_data;
struct nvme_dev *dev = nvmeq->dev;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
struct request *req = bd->rq;
struct nvme_command cmnd;
blk_status_t ret;
NVMe: Metadata format support Adds support for NVMe metadata formats and exposes block devices for all namespaces regardless of their format. Namespace formats that are unusable will have disk capacity set to 0, but a handle to the block device is created to simplify device management. A namespace is not usable when the format requires host interleave block and metadata in single buffer, has no provisioned storage, or has better data but failed to register with blk integrity. The namespace has to be scanned in two phases to support separate metadata formats. The first establishes the sector size and capacity prior to invoking add_disk. If metadata is required, the capacity will be temporarilly set to 0 until it can be revalidated and registered with the integrity extenstions after add_disk completes. The driver relies on the integrity extensions to provide the metadata buffer. NVMe requires this be a single physically contiguous region, so only one integrity segment is allowed per command. If the metadata is used for T10 PI, the driver provides mappings to save and restore the reftag physical block translation. The driver provides no-op functions for generate and verify if metadata is not used for protection information. This way the setup is always provided by the block layer. If a request does not supply a required metadata buffer, the command is failed with bad address. This could only happen if a user manually disables verify/generate on such a disk. The only exception to where this is okay is if the controller is capable of stripping/generating the metadata, which is possible on some types of formats. The metadata scatter gather list now occupies the spot in the nvme_iod that used to be used to link retryable IOD's, but we don't do that anymore, so the field was unused. Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2015-02-19 13:39:03 -07:00
ret = nvme_setup_cmd(ns, req, &cmnd);
if (ret)
return ret;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
ret = nvme_init_iod(req, dev);
if (ret)
goto out_free_cmd;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
if (blk_rq_nr_phys_segments(req)) {
ret = nvme_map_data(dev, req, &cmnd);
if (ret)
goto out_cleanup_iod;
}
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
blk_mq_start_request(req);
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
spin_lock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
if (unlikely(nvmeq->cq_vector < 0)) {
ret = BLK_STS_IOERR;
spin_unlock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
goto out_cleanup_iod;
}
__nvme_submit_cmd(nvmeq, &cmnd);
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
nvme_process_cq(nvmeq);
spin_unlock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
return BLK_STS_OK;
out_cleanup_iod:
nvme_free_iod(dev, req);
out_free_cmd:
nvme_cleanup_cmd(req);
return ret;
}
NVMe: Metadata format support Adds support for NVMe metadata formats and exposes block devices for all namespaces regardless of their format. Namespace formats that are unusable will have disk capacity set to 0, but a handle to the block device is created to simplify device management. A namespace is not usable when the format requires host interleave block and metadata in single buffer, has no provisioned storage, or has better data but failed to register with blk integrity. The namespace has to be scanned in two phases to support separate metadata formats. The first establishes the sector size and capacity prior to invoking add_disk. If metadata is required, the capacity will be temporarilly set to 0 until it can be revalidated and registered with the integrity extenstions after add_disk completes. The driver relies on the integrity extensions to provide the metadata buffer. NVMe requires this be a single physically contiguous region, so only one integrity segment is allowed per command. If the metadata is used for T10 PI, the driver provides mappings to save and restore the reftag physical block translation. The driver provides no-op functions for generate and verify if metadata is not used for protection information. This way the setup is always provided by the block layer. If a request does not supply a required metadata buffer, the command is failed with bad address. This could only happen if a user manually disables verify/generate on such a disk. The only exception to where this is okay is if the controller is capable of stripping/generating the metadata, which is possible on some types of formats. The metadata scatter gather list now occupies the spot in the nvme_iod that used to be used to link retryable IOD's, but we don't do that anymore, so the field was unused. Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2015-02-19 13:39:03 -07:00
static void nvme_pci_complete_rq(struct request *req)
{
struct nvme_iod *iod = blk_mq_rq_to_pdu(req);
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
nvme_unmap_data(iod->nvmeq->dev, req);
nvme_complete_rq(req);
}
/* We read the CQE phase first to check if the rest of the entry is valid */
static inline bool nvme_cqe_valid(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq, u16 head,
u16 phase)
{
return (le16_to_cpu(nvmeq->cqes[head].status) & 1) == phase;
}
static inline void nvme_ring_cq_doorbell(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq)
{
u16 head = nvmeq->cq_head;
if (likely(nvmeq->cq_vector >= 0)) {
if (nvme_dbbuf_update_and_check_event(head, nvmeq->dbbuf_cq_db,
nvmeq->dbbuf_cq_ei))
writel(head, nvmeq->q_db + nvmeq->dev->db_stride);
}
}
static inline void nvme_handle_cqe(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq,
struct nvme_completion *cqe)
{
struct request *req;
if (unlikely(cqe->command_id >= nvmeq->q_depth)) {
dev_warn(nvmeq->dev->ctrl.device,
"invalid id %d completed on queue %d\n",
cqe->command_id, le16_to_cpu(cqe->sq_id));
return;
}
/*
* AEN requests are special as they don't time out and can
* survive any kind of queue freeze and often don't respond to
* aborts. We don't even bother to allocate a struct request
* for them but rather special case them here.
*/
if (unlikely(nvmeq->qid == 0 &&
cqe->command_id >= NVME_AQ_BLKMQ_DEPTH)) {
nvme_complete_async_event(&nvmeq->dev->ctrl,
cqe->status, &cqe->result);
return;
}
req = blk_mq_tag_to_rq(*nvmeq->tags, cqe->command_id);
nvme_end_request(req, cqe->status, cqe->result);
}
static inline bool nvme_read_cqe(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq,
struct nvme_completion *cqe)
{
if (nvme_cqe_valid(nvmeq, nvmeq->cq_head, nvmeq->cq_phase)) {
*cqe = nvmeq->cqes[nvmeq->cq_head];
if (++nvmeq->cq_head == nvmeq->q_depth) {
nvmeq->cq_head = 0;
nvmeq->cq_phase = !nvmeq->cq_phase;
}
return true;
}
return false;
}
static void nvme_process_cq(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq)
{
struct nvme_completion cqe;
int consumed = 0;
while (nvme_read_cqe(nvmeq, &cqe)) {
nvme_handle_cqe(nvmeq, &cqe);
consumed++;
}
if (consumed) {
nvme_ring_cq_doorbell(nvmeq);
nvmeq->cqe_seen = 1;
}
}
static irqreturn_t nvme_irq(int irq, void *data)
{
irqreturn_t result;
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = data;
spin_lock(&nvmeq->q_lock);
nvme_process_cq(nvmeq);
result = nvmeq->cqe_seen ? IRQ_HANDLED : IRQ_NONE;
nvmeq->cqe_seen = 0;
spin_unlock(&nvmeq->q_lock);
return result;
}
static irqreturn_t nvme_irq_check(int irq, void *data)
{
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = data;
if (nvme_cqe_valid(nvmeq, nvmeq->cq_head, nvmeq->cq_phase))
return IRQ_WAKE_THREAD;
return IRQ_NONE;
}
static int __nvme_poll(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq, unsigned int tag)
{
struct nvme_completion cqe;
int found = 0, consumed = 0;
if (!nvme_cqe_valid(nvmeq, nvmeq->cq_head, nvmeq->cq_phase))
return 0;
spin_lock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
while (nvme_read_cqe(nvmeq, &cqe)) {
nvme_handle_cqe(nvmeq, &cqe);
consumed++;
if (tag == cqe.command_id) {
found = 1;
break;
}
}
if (consumed)
nvme_ring_cq_doorbell(nvmeq);
spin_unlock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
return found;
}
static int nvme_poll(struct blk_mq_hw_ctx *hctx, unsigned int tag)
{
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = hctx->driver_data;
return __nvme_poll(nvmeq, tag);
}
static void nvme_pci_submit_async_event(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl, int aer_idx)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev = to_nvme_dev(ctrl);
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = dev->queues[0];
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
struct nvme_command c;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
memset(&c, 0, sizeof(c));
c.common.opcode = nvme_admin_async_event;
c.common.command_id = NVME_AQ_BLKMQ_DEPTH + aer_idx;
spin_lock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
__nvme_submit_cmd(nvmeq, &c);
spin_unlock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
}
static int adapter_delete_queue(struct nvme_dev *dev, u8 opcode, u16 id)
{
struct nvme_command c;
memset(&c, 0, sizeof(c));
c.delete_queue.opcode = opcode;
c.delete_queue.qid = cpu_to_le16(id);
return nvme_submit_sync_cmd(dev->ctrl.admin_q, &c, NULL, 0);
}
static int adapter_alloc_cq(struct nvme_dev *dev, u16 qid,
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq)
{
struct nvme_command c;
int flags = NVME_QUEUE_PHYS_CONTIG | NVME_CQ_IRQ_ENABLED;
/*
* Note: we (ab)use the fact the the prp fields survive if no data
* is attached to the request.
*/
memset(&c, 0, sizeof(c));
c.create_cq.opcode = nvme_admin_create_cq;
c.create_cq.prp1 = cpu_to_le64(nvmeq->cq_dma_addr);
c.create_cq.cqid = cpu_to_le16(qid);
c.create_cq.qsize = cpu_to_le16(nvmeq->q_depth - 1);
c.create_cq.cq_flags = cpu_to_le16(flags);
c.create_cq.irq_vector = cpu_to_le16(nvmeq->cq_vector);
return nvme_submit_sync_cmd(dev->ctrl.admin_q, &c, NULL, 0);
}
static int adapter_alloc_sq(struct nvme_dev *dev, u16 qid,
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq)
{
struct nvme_command c;
int flags = NVME_QUEUE_PHYS_CONTIG;
/*
* Note: we (ab)use the fact the the prp fields survive if no data
* is attached to the request.
*/
memset(&c, 0, sizeof(c));
c.create_sq.opcode = nvme_admin_create_sq;
c.create_sq.prp1 = cpu_to_le64(nvmeq->sq_dma_addr);
c.create_sq.sqid = cpu_to_le16(qid);
c.create_sq.qsize = cpu_to_le16(nvmeq->q_depth - 1);
c.create_sq.sq_flags = cpu_to_le16(flags);
c.create_sq.cqid = cpu_to_le16(qid);
return nvme_submit_sync_cmd(dev->ctrl.admin_q, &c, NULL, 0);
}
static int adapter_delete_cq(struct nvme_dev *dev, u16 cqid)
{
return adapter_delete_queue(dev, nvme_admin_delete_cq, cqid);
}
static int adapter_delete_sq(struct nvme_dev *dev, u16 sqid)
{
return adapter_delete_queue(dev, nvme_admin_delete_sq, sqid);
}
static void abort_endio(struct request *req, blk_status_t error)
{
struct nvme_iod *iod = blk_mq_rq_to_pdu(req);
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = iod->nvmeq;
dev_warn(nvmeq->dev->ctrl.device,
"Abort status: 0x%x", nvme_req(req)->status);
atomic_inc(&nvmeq->dev->ctrl.abort_limit);
blk_mq_free_request(req);
}
static bool nvme_should_reset(struct nvme_dev *dev, u32 csts)
{
/* If true, indicates loss of adapter communication, possibly by a
* NVMe Subsystem reset.
*/
bool nssro = dev->subsystem && (csts & NVME_CSTS_NSSRO);
/* If there is a reset ongoing, we shouldn't reset again. */
if (dev->ctrl.state == NVME_CTRL_RESETTING)
return false;
/* We shouldn't reset unless the controller is on fatal error state
* _or_ if we lost the communication with it.
*/
if (!(csts & NVME_CSTS_CFS) && !nssro)
return false;
/* If PCI error recovery process is happening, we cannot reset or
* the recovery mechanism will surely fail.
*/
if (pci_channel_offline(to_pci_dev(dev->dev)))
return false;
return true;
}
static void nvme_warn_reset(struct nvme_dev *dev, u32 csts)
{
/* Read a config register to help see what died. */
u16 pci_status;
int result;
result = pci_read_config_word(to_pci_dev(dev->dev), PCI_STATUS,
&pci_status);
if (result == PCIBIOS_SUCCESSFUL)
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device,
"controller is down; will reset: CSTS=0x%x, PCI_STATUS=0x%hx\n",
csts, pci_status);
else
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device,
"controller is down; will reset: CSTS=0x%x, PCI_STATUS read failed (%d)\n",
csts, result);
}
static enum blk_eh_timer_return nvme_timeout(struct request *req, bool reserved)
{
struct nvme_iod *iod = blk_mq_rq_to_pdu(req);
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = iod->nvmeq;
struct nvme_dev *dev = nvmeq->dev;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
struct request *abort_req;
struct nvme_command cmd;
u32 csts = readl(dev->bar + NVME_REG_CSTS);
/*
* Reset immediately if the controller is failed
*/
if (nvme_should_reset(dev, csts)) {
nvme_warn_reset(dev, csts);
nvme_dev_disable(dev, false);
nvme_reset_ctrl(&dev->ctrl);
return BLK_EH_HANDLED;
}
/*
* Did we miss an interrupt?
*/
if (__nvme_poll(nvmeq, req->tag)) {
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device,
"I/O %d QID %d timeout, completion polled\n",
req->tag, nvmeq->qid);
return BLK_EH_HANDLED;
}
/*
* Shutdown immediately if controller times out while starting. The
* reset work will see the pci device disabled when it gets the forced
* cancellation error. All outstanding requests are completed on
* shutdown, so we return BLK_EH_HANDLED.
*/
if (dev->ctrl.state == NVME_CTRL_RESETTING) {
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device,
"I/O %d QID %d timeout, disable controller\n",
req->tag, nvmeq->qid);
nvme_dev_disable(dev, false);
nvme_req(req)->flags |= NVME_REQ_CANCELLED;
return BLK_EH_HANDLED;
}
/*
* Shutdown the controller immediately and schedule a reset if the
* command was already aborted once before and still hasn't been
* returned to the driver, or if this is the admin queue.
*/
if (!nvmeq->qid || iod->aborted) {
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device,
"I/O %d QID %d timeout, reset controller\n",
req->tag, nvmeq->qid);
nvme_dev_disable(dev, false);
nvme_reset_ctrl(&dev->ctrl);
/*
* Mark the request as handled, since the inline shutdown
* forces all outstanding requests to complete.
*/
nvme_req(req)->flags |= NVME_REQ_CANCELLED;
return BLK_EH_HANDLED;
}
if (atomic_dec_return(&dev->ctrl.abort_limit) < 0) {
atomic_inc(&dev->ctrl.abort_limit);
return BLK_EH_RESET_TIMER;
}
iod->aborted = 1;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
memset(&cmd, 0, sizeof(cmd));
cmd.abort.opcode = nvme_admin_abort_cmd;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
cmd.abort.cid = req->tag;
cmd.abort.sqid = cpu_to_le16(nvmeq->qid);
dev_warn(nvmeq->dev->ctrl.device,
"I/O %d QID %d timeout, aborting\n",
req->tag, nvmeq->qid);
abort_req = nvme_alloc_request(dev->ctrl.admin_q, &cmd,
BLK_MQ_REQ_NOWAIT, NVME_QID_ANY);
if (IS_ERR(abort_req)) {
atomic_inc(&dev->ctrl.abort_limit);
return BLK_EH_RESET_TIMER;
}
abort_req->timeout = ADMIN_TIMEOUT;
abort_req->end_io_data = NULL;
blk_execute_rq_nowait(abort_req->q, NULL, abort_req, 0, abort_endio);
/*
* The aborted req will be completed on receiving the abort req.
* We enable the timer again. If hit twice, it'll cause a device reset,
* as the device then is in a faulty state.
*/
return BLK_EH_RESET_TIMER;
}
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
static void nvme_free_queue(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq)
{
dma_free_coherent(nvmeq->q_dmadev, CQ_SIZE(nvmeq->q_depth),
(void *)nvmeq->cqes, nvmeq->cq_dma_addr);
if (nvmeq->sq_cmds)
dma_free_coherent(nvmeq->q_dmadev, SQ_SIZE(nvmeq->q_depth),
nvmeq->sq_cmds, nvmeq->sq_dma_addr);
kfree(nvmeq);
}
static void nvme_free_queues(struct nvme_dev *dev, int lowest)
{
int i;
for (i = dev->ctrl.queue_count - 1; i >= lowest; i--) {
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = dev->queues[i];
dev->ctrl.queue_count--;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
dev->queues[i] = NULL;
nvme_free_queue(nvmeq);
}
}
/**
* nvme_suspend_queue - put queue into suspended state
* @nvmeq - queue to suspend
*/
static int nvme_suspend_queue(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq)
{
int vector;
spin_lock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
if (nvmeq->cq_vector == -1) {
spin_unlock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
return 1;
}
vector = nvmeq->cq_vector;
nvmeq->dev->online_queues--;
nvmeq->cq_vector = -1;
spin_unlock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
if (!nvmeq->qid && nvmeq->dev->ctrl.admin_q)
blk_mq_stop_hw_queues(nvmeq->dev->ctrl.admin_q);
pci_free_irq(to_pci_dev(nvmeq->dev->dev), vector, nvmeq);
return 0;
}
static void nvme_disable_admin_queue(struct nvme_dev *dev, bool shutdown)
{
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = dev->queues[0];
if (!nvmeq)
return;
if (nvme_suspend_queue(nvmeq))
return;
if (shutdown)
nvme_shutdown_ctrl(&dev->ctrl);
else
nvme_disable_ctrl(&dev->ctrl, lo_hi_readq(
dev->bar + NVME_REG_CAP));
spin_lock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
nvme_process_cq(nvmeq);
spin_unlock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
}
static int nvme_cmb_qdepth(struct nvme_dev *dev, int nr_io_queues,
int entry_size)
{
int q_depth = dev->q_depth;
unsigned q_size_aligned = roundup(q_depth * entry_size,
dev->ctrl.page_size);
if (q_size_aligned * nr_io_queues > dev->cmb_size) {
u64 mem_per_q = div_u64(dev->cmb_size, nr_io_queues);
mem_per_q = round_down(mem_per_q, dev->ctrl.page_size);
q_depth = div_u64(mem_per_q, entry_size);
/*
* Ensure the reduced q_depth is above some threshold where it
* would be better to map queues in system memory with the
* original depth
*/
if (q_depth < 64)
return -ENOMEM;
}
return q_depth;
}
static int nvme_alloc_sq_cmds(struct nvme_dev *dev, struct nvme_queue *nvmeq,
int qid, int depth)
{
if (qid && dev->cmb && use_cmb_sqes && NVME_CMB_SQS(dev->cmbsz)) {
unsigned offset = (qid - 1) * roundup(SQ_SIZE(depth),
dev->ctrl.page_size);
nvmeq->sq_dma_addr = dev->cmb_dma_addr + offset;
nvmeq->sq_cmds_io = dev->cmb + offset;
} else {
nvmeq->sq_cmds = dma_alloc_coherent(dev->dev, SQ_SIZE(depth),
&nvmeq->sq_dma_addr, GFP_KERNEL);
if (!nvmeq->sq_cmds)
return -ENOMEM;
}
return 0;
}
static struct nvme_queue *nvme_alloc_queue(struct nvme_dev *dev, int qid,
int depth, int node)
{
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = kzalloc_node(sizeof(*nvmeq), GFP_KERNEL,
node);
if (!nvmeq)
return NULL;
nvmeq->cqes = dma_zalloc_coherent(dev->dev, CQ_SIZE(depth),
&nvmeq->cq_dma_addr, GFP_KERNEL);
if (!nvmeq->cqes)
goto free_nvmeq;
if (nvme_alloc_sq_cmds(dev, nvmeq, qid, depth))
goto free_cqdma;
nvmeq->q_dmadev = dev->dev;
nvmeq->dev = dev;
spin_lock_init(&nvmeq->q_lock);
nvmeq->cq_head = 0;
nvmeq->cq_phase = 1;
nvmeq->q_db = &dev->dbs[qid * 2 * dev->db_stride];
nvmeq->q_depth = depth;
nvmeq->qid = qid;
nvmeq->cq_vector = -1;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
dev->queues[qid] = nvmeq;
dev->ctrl.queue_count++;
return nvmeq;
free_cqdma:
dma_free_coherent(dev->dev, CQ_SIZE(depth), (void *)nvmeq->cqes,
nvmeq->cq_dma_addr);
free_nvmeq:
kfree(nvmeq);
return NULL;
}
static int queue_request_irq(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq)
{
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(nvmeq->dev->dev);
int nr = nvmeq->dev->ctrl.instance;
if (use_threaded_interrupts) {
return pci_request_irq(pdev, nvmeq->cq_vector, nvme_irq_check,
nvme_irq, nvmeq, "nvme%dq%d", nr, nvmeq->qid);
} else {
return pci_request_irq(pdev, nvmeq->cq_vector, nvme_irq,
NULL, nvmeq, "nvme%dq%d", nr, nvmeq->qid);
}
}
static void nvme_init_queue(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq, u16 qid)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev = nvmeq->dev;
spin_lock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
nvmeq->sq_tail = 0;
nvmeq->cq_head = 0;
nvmeq->cq_phase = 1;
nvmeq->q_db = &dev->dbs[qid * 2 * dev->db_stride];
memset((void *)nvmeq->cqes, 0, CQ_SIZE(nvmeq->q_depth));
nvme: improve performance for virtual NVMe devices This change provides a mechanism to reduce the number of MMIO doorbell writes for the NVMe driver. When running in a virtualized environment like QEMU, the cost of an MMIO is quite hefy here. The main idea for the patch is provide the device two memory location locations: 1) to store the doorbell values so they can be lookup without the doorbell MMIO write 2) to store an event index. I believe the doorbell value is obvious, the event index not so much. Similar to the virtio specification, the virtual device can tell the driver (guest OS) not to write MMIO unless you are writing past this value. FYI: doorbell values are written by the nvme driver (guest OS) and the event index is written by the virtual device (host OS). The patch implements a new admin command that will communicate where these two memory locations reside. If the command fails, the nvme driver will work as before without any optimizations. Contributions: Eric Northup <digitaleric@google.com> Frank Swiderski <fes@google.com> Ted Tso <tytso@mit.edu> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Just to give an idea on the performance boost with the vendor extension: Running fio [1], a stock NVMe driver I get about 200K read IOPs with my vendor patch I get about 1000K read IOPs. This was running with a null device i.e. the backing device simply returned success on every read IO request. [1] Running on a 4 core machine: fio --time_based --name=benchmark --runtime=30 --filename=/dev/nvme0n1 --nrfiles=1 --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=32 --direct=1 --invalidate=1 --verify=0 --verify_fatal=0 --numjobs=4 --rw=randread --blocksize=4k --randrepeat=false Signed-off-by: Rob Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> [mlin: port for upstream] Signed-off-by: Ming Lin <mlin@kernel.org> [koike: updated for upstream] Signed-off-by: Helen Koike <helen.koike@collabora.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2017-04-10 09:51:07 -06:00
nvme_dbbuf_init(dev, nvmeq, qid);
dev->online_queues++;
spin_unlock_irq(&nvmeq->q_lock);
}
static int nvme_create_queue(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq, int qid)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev = nvmeq->dev;
int result;
nvmeq->cq_vector = qid - 1;
result = adapter_alloc_cq(dev, qid, nvmeq);
if (result < 0)
return result;
result = adapter_alloc_sq(dev, qid, nvmeq);
if (result < 0)
goto release_cq;
result = queue_request_irq(nvmeq);
if (result < 0)
goto release_sq;
nvme_init_queue(nvmeq, qid);
return result;
release_sq:
adapter_delete_sq(dev, qid);
release_cq:
adapter_delete_cq(dev, qid);
return result;
}
static const struct blk_mq_ops nvme_mq_admin_ops = {
.queue_rq = nvme_queue_rq,
.complete = nvme_pci_complete_rq,
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
.init_hctx = nvme_admin_init_hctx,
.exit_hctx = nvme_admin_exit_hctx,
.init_request = nvme_init_request,
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
.timeout = nvme_timeout,
};
static const struct blk_mq_ops nvme_mq_ops = {
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
.queue_rq = nvme_queue_rq,
.complete = nvme_pci_complete_rq,
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
.init_hctx = nvme_init_hctx,
.init_request = nvme_init_request,
.map_queues = nvme_pci_map_queues,
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
.timeout = nvme_timeout,
.poll = nvme_poll,
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
};
static void nvme_dev_remove_admin(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
if (dev->ctrl.admin_q && !blk_queue_dying(dev->ctrl.admin_q)) {
/*
* If the controller was reset during removal, it's possible
* user requests may be waiting on a stopped queue. Start the
* queue to flush these to completion.
*/
blk_mq_start_stopped_hw_queues(dev->ctrl.admin_q, true);
blk_cleanup_queue(dev->ctrl.admin_q);
blk_mq_free_tag_set(&dev->admin_tagset);
}
}
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
static int nvme_alloc_admin_tags(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
if (!dev->ctrl.admin_q) {
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
dev->admin_tagset.ops = &nvme_mq_admin_ops;
dev->admin_tagset.nr_hw_queues = 1;
/*
* Subtract one to leave an empty queue entry for 'Full Queue'
* condition. See NVM-Express 1.2 specification, section 4.1.2.
*/
dev->admin_tagset.queue_depth = NVME_AQ_BLKMQ_DEPTH - 1;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
dev->admin_tagset.timeout = ADMIN_TIMEOUT;
dev->admin_tagset.numa_node = dev_to_node(dev->dev);
dev->admin_tagset.cmd_size = nvme_cmd_size(dev);
dev->admin_tagset.flags = BLK_MQ_F_NO_SCHED;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
dev->admin_tagset.driver_data = dev;
if (blk_mq_alloc_tag_set(&dev->admin_tagset))
return -ENOMEM;
dev->ctrl.admin_q = blk_mq_init_queue(&dev->admin_tagset);
if (IS_ERR(dev->ctrl.admin_q)) {
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
blk_mq_free_tag_set(&dev->admin_tagset);
return -ENOMEM;
}
if (!blk_get_queue(dev->ctrl.admin_q)) {
nvme_dev_remove_admin(dev);
dev->ctrl.admin_q = NULL;
return -ENODEV;
}
} else
blk_mq_start_stopped_hw_queues(dev->ctrl.admin_q, true);
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
return 0;
}
static unsigned long db_bar_size(struct nvme_dev *dev, unsigned nr_io_queues)
{
return NVME_REG_DBS + ((nr_io_queues + 1) * 8 * dev->db_stride);
}
static int nvme_remap_bar(struct nvme_dev *dev, unsigned long size)
{
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(dev->dev);
if (size <= dev->bar_mapped_size)
return 0;
if (size > pci_resource_len(pdev, 0))
return -ENOMEM;
if (dev->bar)
iounmap(dev->bar);
dev->bar = ioremap(pci_resource_start(pdev, 0), size);
if (!dev->bar) {
dev->bar_mapped_size = 0;
return -ENOMEM;
}
dev->bar_mapped_size = size;
dev->dbs = dev->bar + NVME_REG_DBS;
return 0;
}
static int nvme_configure_admin_queue(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
int result;
u32 aqa;
u64 cap = lo_hi_readq(dev->bar + NVME_REG_CAP);
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq;
result = nvme_remap_bar(dev, db_bar_size(dev, 0));
if (result < 0)
return result;
dev->subsystem = readl(dev->bar + NVME_REG_VS) >= NVME_VS(1, 1, 0) ?
NVME_CAP_NSSRC(cap) : 0;
if (dev->subsystem &&
(readl(dev->bar + NVME_REG_CSTS) & NVME_CSTS_NSSRO))
writel(NVME_CSTS_NSSRO, dev->bar + NVME_REG_CSTS);
result = nvme_disable_ctrl(&dev->ctrl, cap);
if (result < 0)
return result;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
nvmeq = dev->queues[0];
if (!nvmeq) {
nvmeq = nvme_alloc_queue(dev, 0, NVME_AQ_DEPTH,
dev_to_node(dev->dev));
if (!nvmeq)
return -ENOMEM;
}
aqa = nvmeq->q_depth - 1;
aqa |= aqa << 16;
writel(aqa, dev->bar + NVME_REG_AQA);
lo_hi_writeq(nvmeq->sq_dma_addr, dev->bar + NVME_REG_ASQ);
lo_hi_writeq(nvmeq->cq_dma_addr, dev->bar + NVME_REG_ACQ);
result = nvme_enable_ctrl(&dev->ctrl, cap);
if (result)
return result;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
nvmeq->cq_vector = 0;
result = queue_request_irq(nvmeq);
if (result) {
nvmeq->cq_vector = -1;
return result;
}
return result;
}
static int nvme_create_io_queues(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
unsigned i, max;
int ret = 0;
for (i = dev->ctrl.queue_count; i <= dev->max_qid; i++) {
/* vector == qid - 1, match nvme_create_queue */
if (!nvme_alloc_queue(dev, i, dev->q_depth,
pci_irq_get_node(to_pci_dev(dev->dev), i - 1))) {
ret = -ENOMEM;
break;
}
}
max = min(dev->max_qid, dev->ctrl.queue_count - 1);
for (i = dev->online_queues; i <= max; i++) {
ret = nvme_create_queue(dev->queues[i], i);
if (ret)
break;
}
/*
* Ignore failing Create SQ/CQ commands, we can continue with less
* than the desired aount of queues, and even a controller without
* I/O queues an still be used to issue admin commands. This might
* be useful to upgrade a buggy firmware for example.
*/
return ret >= 0 ? 0 : ret;
}
static ssize_t nvme_cmb_show(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
struct nvme_dev *ndev = to_nvme_dev(dev_get_drvdata(dev));
return scnprintf(buf, PAGE_SIZE, "cmbloc : x%08x\ncmbsz : x%08x\n",
ndev->cmbloc, ndev->cmbsz);
}
static DEVICE_ATTR(cmb, S_IRUGO, nvme_cmb_show, NULL);
static void __iomem *nvme_map_cmb(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
u64 szu, size, offset;
resource_size_t bar_size;
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(dev->dev);
void __iomem *cmb;
dma_addr_t dma_addr;
dev->cmbsz = readl(dev->bar + NVME_REG_CMBSZ);
if (!(NVME_CMB_SZ(dev->cmbsz)))
return NULL;
dev->cmbloc = readl(dev->bar + NVME_REG_CMBLOC);
if (!use_cmb_sqes)
return NULL;
szu = (u64)1 << (12 + 4 * NVME_CMB_SZU(dev->cmbsz));
size = szu * NVME_CMB_SZ(dev->cmbsz);
offset = szu * NVME_CMB_OFST(dev->cmbloc);
bar_size = pci_resource_len(pdev, NVME_CMB_BIR(dev->cmbloc));
if (offset > bar_size)
return NULL;
/*
* Controllers may support a CMB size larger than their BAR,
* for example, due to being behind a bridge. Reduce the CMB to
* the reported size of the BAR
*/
if (size > bar_size - offset)
size = bar_size - offset;
dma_addr = pci_resource_start(pdev, NVME_CMB_BIR(dev->cmbloc)) + offset;
cmb = ioremap_wc(dma_addr, size);
if (!cmb)
return NULL;
dev->cmb_dma_addr = dma_addr;
dev->cmb_size = size;
return cmb;
}
static inline void nvme_release_cmb(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
if (dev->cmb) {
iounmap(dev->cmb);
dev->cmb = NULL;
if (dev->cmbsz) {
sysfs_remove_file_from_group(&dev->ctrl.device->kobj,
&dev_attr_cmb.attr, NULL);
dev->cmbsz = 0;
}
}
}
static int nvme_set_host_mem(struct nvme_dev *dev, u32 bits)
{
size_t len = dev->nr_host_mem_descs * sizeof(*dev->host_mem_descs);
struct nvme_command c;
u64 dma_addr;
int ret;
dma_addr = dma_map_single(dev->dev, dev->host_mem_descs, len,
DMA_TO_DEVICE);
if (dma_mapping_error(dev->dev, dma_addr))
return -ENOMEM;
memset(&c, 0, sizeof(c));
c.features.opcode = nvme_admin_set_features;
c.features.fid = cpu_to_le32(NVME_FEAT_HOST_MEM_BUF);
c.features.dword11 = cpu_to_le32(bits);
c.features.dword12 = cpu_to_le32(dev->host_mem_size >>
ilog2(dev->ctrl.page_size));
c.features.dword13 = cpu_to_le32(lower_32_bits(dma_addr));
c.features.dword14 = cpu_to_le32(upper_32_bits(dma_addr));
c.features.dword15 = cpu_to_le32(dev->nr_host_mem_descs);
ret = nvme_submit_sync_cmd(dev->ctrl.admin_q, &c, NULL, 0);
if (ret) {
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device,
"failed to set host mem (err %d, flags %#x).\n",
ret, bits);
}
dma_unmap_single(dev->dev, dma_addr, len, DMA_TO_DEVICE);
return ret;
}
static void nvme_free_host_mem(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < dev->nr_host_mem_descs; i++) {
struct nvme_host_mem_buf_desc *desc = &dev->host_mem_descs[i];
size_t size = le32_to_cpu(desc->size) * dev->ctrl.page_size;
dma_free_coherent(dev->dev, size, dev->host_mem_desc_bufs[i],
le64_to_cpu(desc->addr));
}
kfree(dev->host_mem_desc_bufs);
dev->host_mem_desc_bufs = NULL;
kfree(dev->host_mem_descs);
dev->host_mem_descs = NULL;
}
static int nvme_alloc_host_mem(struct nvme_dev *dev, u64 min, u64 preferred)
{
struct nvme_host_mem_buf_desc *descs;
u32 chunk_size, max_entries, i = 0;
void **bufs;
u64 size, tmp;
/* start big and work our way down */
chunk_size = min(preferred, (u64)PAGE_SIZE << MAX_ORDER);
retry:
tmp = (preferred + chunk_size - 1);
do_div(tmp, chunk_size);
max_entries = tmp;
descs = kcalloc(max_entries, sizeof(*descs), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!descs)
goto out;
bufs = kcalloc(max_entries, sizeof(*bufs), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!bufs)
goto out_free_descs;
for (size = 0; size < preferred; size += chunk_size) {
u32 len = min_t(u64, chunk_size, preferred - size);
dma_addr_t dma_addr;
bufs[i] = dma_alloc_attrs(dev->dev, len, &dma_addr, GFP_KERNEL,
DMA_ATTR_NO_KERNEL_MAPPING | DMA_ATTR_NO_WARN);
if (!bufs[i])
break;
descs[i].addr = cpu_to_le64(dma_addr);
descs[i].size = cpu_to_le32(len / dev->ctrl.page_size);
i++;
}
if (!size || (min && size < min)) {
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device,
"failed to allocate host memory buffer.\n");
goto out_free_bufs;
}
dev_info(dev->ctrl.device,
"allocated %lld MiB host memory buffer.\n",
size >> ilog2(SZ_1M));
dev->nr_host_mem_descs = i;
dev->host_mem_size = size;
dev->host_mem_descs = descs;
dev->host_mem_desc_bufs = bufs;
return 0;
out_free_bufs:
while (--i >= 0) {
size_t size = le32_to_cpu(descs[i].size) * dev->ctrl.page_size;
dma_free_coherent(dev->dev, size, bufs[i],
le64_to_cpu(descs[i].addr));
}
kfree(bufs);
out_free_descs:
kfree(descs);
out:
/* try a smaller chunk size if we failed early */
if (chunk_size >= PAGE_SIZE * 2 && (i == 0 || size < min)) {
chunk_size /= 2;
goto retry;
}
dev->host_mem_descs = NULL;
return -ENOMEM;
}
static void nvme_setup_host_mem(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
u64 max = (u64)max_host_mem_size_mb * SZ_1M;
u64 preferred = (u64)dev->ctrl.hmpre * 4096;
u64 min = (u64)dev->ctrl.hmmin * 4096;
u32 enable_bits = NVME_HOST_MEM_ENABLE;
preferred = min(preferred, max);
if (min > max) {
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device,
"min host memory (%lld MiB) above limit (%d MiB).\n",
min >> ilog2(SZ_1M), max_host_mem_size_mb);
nvme_free_host_mem(dev);
return;
}
/*
* If we already have a buffer allocated check if we can reuse it.
*/
if (dev->host_mem_descs) {
if (dev->host_mem_size >= min)
enable_bits |= NVME_HOST_MEM_RETURN;
else
nvme_free_host_mem(dev);
}
if (!dev->host_mem_descs) {
if (nvme_alloc_host_mem(dev, min, preferred))
return;
}
if (nvme_set_host_mem(dev, enable_bits))
nvme_free_host_mem(dev);
}
static int nvme_setup_io_queues(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
struct nvme_queue *adminq = dev->queues[0];
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(dev->dev);
int result, nr_io_queues;
unsigned long size;
nr_io_queues = num_online_cpus();
result = nvme_set_queue_count(&dev->ctrl, &nr_io_queues);
if (result < 0)
return result;
if (nr_io_queues == 0)
return 0;
if (dev->cmb && NVME_CMB_SQS(dev->cmbsz)) {
result = nvme_cmb_qdepth(dev, nr_io_queues,
sizeof(struct nvme_command));
if (result > 0)
dev->q_depth = result;
else
nvme_release_cmb(dev);
}
do {
size = db_bar_size(dev, nr_io_queues);
result = nvme_remap_bar(dev, size);
if (!result)
break;
if (!--nr_io_queues)
return -ENOMEM;
} while (1);
adminq->q_db = dev->dbs;
/* Deregister the admin queue's interrupt */
pci_free_irq(pdev, 0, adminq);
/*
* If we enable msix early due to not intx, disable it again before
* setting up the full range we need.
*/
pci_free_irq_vectors(pdev);
nr_io_queues = pci_alloc_irq_vectors(pdev, 1, nr_io_queues,
PCI_IRQ_ALL_TYPES | PCI_IRQ_AFFINITY);
if (nr_io_queues <= 0)
return -EIO;
dev->max_qid = nr_io_queues;
/*
* Should investigate if there's a performance win from allocating
* more queues than interrupt vectors; it might allow the submission
* path to scale better, even if the receive path is limited by the
* number of interrupts.
*/
result = queue_request_irq(adminq);
if (result) {
adminq->cq_vector = -1;
return result;
}
return nvme_create_io_queues(dev);
}
static void nvme_del_queue_end(struct request *req, blk_status_t error)
{
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = req->end_io_data;
blk_mq_free_request(req);
complete(&nvmeq->dev->ioq_wait);
}
static void nvme_del_cq_end(struct request *req, blk_status_t error)
{
struct nvme_queue *nvmeq = req->end_io_data;
if (!error) {
unsigned long flags;
nvme: add missing lock nesting notation When unloading driver, nvme_disable_io_queues() calls nvme_delete_queue() that sends nvme_admin_delete_cq command to admin sq. So when the command completed, the lock acquired by nvme_irq() actually belongs to admin queue. While the lock that nvme_del_cq_end() trying to acquire belongs to io queue. So it will not deadlock. This patch adds lock nesting notation to fix following report. [ 109.840952] ============================================= [ 109.846379] [ INFO: possible recursive locking detected ] [ 109.851806] 4.5.0+ #180 Tainted: G E [ 109.856533] --------------------------------------------- [ 109.861958] swapper/0/0 is trying to acquire lock: [ 109.866771] (&(&nvmeq->q_lock)->rlock){-.....}, at: [<ffffffffc0820bc6>] nvme_del_cq_end+0x26/0x70 [nvme] [ 109.876535] [ 109.876535] but task is already holding lock: [ 109.882398] (&(&nvmeq->q_lock)->rlock){-.....}, at: [<ffffffffc0820c2b>] nvme_irq+0x1b/0x50 [nvme] [ 109.891547] [ 109.891547] other info that might help us debug this: [ 109.898107] Possible unsafe locking scenario: [ 109.898107] [ 109.904056] CPU0 [ 109.906515] ---- [ 109.908974] lock(&(&nvmeq->q_lock)->rlock); [ 109.913381] lock(&(&nvmeq->q_lock)->rlock); [ 109.917787] [ 109.917787] *** DEADLOCK *** [ 109.917787] [ 109.923738] May be due to missing lock nesting notation [ 109.923738] [ 109.930558] 1 lock held by swapper/0/0: [ 109.934413] #0: (&(&nvmeq->q_lock)->rlock){-.....}, at: [<ffffffffc0820c2b>] nvme_irq+0x1b/0x50 [nvme] [ 109.944010] [ 109.944010] stack backtrace: [ 109.948389] CPU: 0 PID: 0 Comm: swapper/0 Tainted: G E 4.5.0+ #180 [ 109.955734] Hardware name: Dell Inc. OptiPlex 7010/0YXT71, BIOS A15 08/12/2013 [ 109.962989] 0000000000000000 ffff88011e203c38 ffffffff81383d9c ffffffff81c13540 [ 109.970478] ffffffff826711d0 ffff88011e203ce8 ffffffff810bb429 0000000000000046 [ 109.977964] 0000000000000046 0000000000000000 0000000000b2e597 ffffffff81f4cb00 [ 109.985453] Call Trace: [ 109.987911] <IRQ> [<ffffffff81383d9c>] dump_stack+0x85/0xc9 [ 109.993711] [<ffffffff810bb429>] __lock_acquire+0x19b9/0x1c60 [ 109.999575] [<ffffffff810b6d1d>] ? trace_hardirqs_off+0xd/0x10 [ 110.005524] [<ffffffff810b386d>] ? complete+0x3d/0x50 [ 110.010688] [<ffffffff810bb760>] lock_acquire+0x90/0xf0 [ 110.016029] [<ffffffffc0820bc6>] ? nvme_del_cq_end+0x26/0x70 [nvme] [ 110.022418] [<ffffffff81772afb>] _raw_spin_lock_irqsave+0x4b/0x60 [ 110.028632] [<ffffffffc0820bc6>] ? nvme_del_cq_end+0x26/0x70 [nvme] [ 110.035019] [<ffffffffc0820bc6>] nvme_del_cq_end+0x26/0x70 [nvme] [ 110.041232] [<ffffffff8135b485>] blk_mq_end_request+0x35/0x60 [ 110.047095] [<ffffffffc0821ad8>] nvme_complete_rq+0x68/0x190 [nvme] [ 110.053481] [<ffffffff8135b53f>] __blk_mq_complete_request+0x8f/0x130 [ 110.060043] [<ffffffff8135b611>] blk_mq_complete_request+0x31/0x40 [ 110.066343] [<ffffffffc08209e3>] __nvme_process_cq+0x83/0x240 [nvme] [ 110.072818] [<ffffffffc0820c35>] nvme_irq+0x25/0x50 [nvme] [ 110.078419] [<ffffffff810cdb66>] handle_irq_event_percpu+0x36/0x110 [ 110.084804] [<ffffffff810cdc77>] handle_irq_event+0x37/0x60 [ 110.090491] [<ffffffff810d0ea3>] handle_edge_irq+0x93/0x150 [ 110.096180] [<ffffffff81012306>] handle_irq+0xa6/0x130 [ 110.101431] [<ffffffff81011abe>] do_IRQ+0x5e/0x120 [ 110.106333] [<ffffffff8177384c>] common_interrupt+0x8c/0x8c Reviewed-by: Johannes Thumshirn <jthumshirn@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Ming Lin <ming.l@ssi.samsung.com> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Reviewed-by: Sagi Grimberg <sagi@grimberg.me> Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2016-04-05 11:32:04 -06:00
/*
* We might be called with the AQ q_lock held
* and the I/O queue q_lock should always
* nest inside the AQ one.
*/
spin_lock_irqsave_nested(&nvmeq->q_lock, flags,
SINGLE_DEPTH_NESTING);
nvme_process_cq(nvmeq);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&nvmeq->q_lock, flags);
}
nvme_del_queue_end(req, error);
}
static int nvme_delete_queue(struct nvme_queue *nvmeq, u8 opcode)
{
struct request_queue *q = nvmeq->dev->ctrl.admin_q;
struct request *req;
struct nvme_command cmd;
memset(&cmd, 0, sizeof(cmd));
cmd.delete_queue.opcode = opcode;
cmd.delete_queue.qid = cpu_to_le16(nvmeq->qid);
req = nvme_alloc_request(q, &cmd, BLK_MQ_REQ_NOWAIT, NVME_QID_ANY);
if (IS_ERR(req))
return PTR_ERR(req);
req->timeout = ADMIN_TIMEOUT;
req->end_io_data = nvmeq;
blk_execute_rq_nowait(q, NULL, req, false,
opcode == nvme_admin_delete_cq ?
nvme_del_cq_end : nvme_del_queue_end);
return 0;
}
static void nvme_disable_io_queues(struct nvme_dev *dev, int queues)
{
int pass;
unsigned long timeout;
u8 opcode = nvme_admin_delete_sq;
for (pass = 0; pass < 2; pass++) {
int sent = 0, i = queues;
reinit_completion(&dev->ioq_wait);
retry:
timeout = ADMIN_TIMEOUT;
nvme: Suspend all queues before deletion When nvme_delete_queue fails in the first pass of the nvme_disable_io_queues() loop, we return early, failing to suspend all of the IO queues. Later, on the nvme_pci_disable path, this causes us to disable MSI without actually having freed all the IRQs, which triggers the BUG_ON in free_msi_irqs(), as show below. This patch refactors nvme_disable_io_queues to suspend all queues before start submitting delete queue commands. This way, we ensure that we have at least returned every IRQ before continuing with the removal path. [ 487.529200] kernel BUG at ../drivers/pci/msi.c:368! cpu 0x46: Vector: 700 (Program Check) at [c0000078c5b83650] pc: c000000000627a50: free_msi_irqs+0x90/0x200 lr: c000000000627a40: free_msi_irqs+0x80/0x200 sp: c0000078c5b838d0 msr: 9000000100029033 current = 0xc0000078c5b40000 paca = 0xc000000002bd7600 softe: 0 irq_happened: 0x01 pid = 1376, comm = kworker/70:1H kernel BUG at ../drivers/pci/msi.c:368! Linux version 4.7.0.mainline+ (root@iod76) (gcc version 5.3.1 20160413 (Ubuntu/IBM 5.3.1-14ubuntu2.1) ) #104 SMP Fri Jul 29 09:20:17 CDT 2016 enter ? for help [c0000078c5b83920] d0000000363b0cd8 nvme_dev_disable+0x208/0x4f0 [nvme] [c0000078c5b83a10] d0000000363b12a4 nvme_timeout+0xe4/0x250 [nvme] [c0000078c5b83ad0] c0000000005690e4 blk_mq_rq_timed_out+0x64/0x110 [c0000078c5b83b40] c00000000056c930 bt_for_each+0x160/0x170 [c0000078c5b83bb0] c00000000056d928 blk_mq_queue_tag_busy_iter+0x78/0x110 [c0000078c5b83c00] c0000000005675d8 blk_mq_timeout_work+0xd8/0x1b0 [c0000078c5b83c50] c0000000000e8cf0 process_one_work+0x1e0/0x590 [c0000078c5b83ce0] c0000000000e9148 worker_thread+0xa8/0x660 [c0000078c5b83d80] c0000000000f2090 kthread+0x110/0x130 [c0000078c5b83e30] c0000000000095f0 ret_from_kernel_thread+0x5c/0x6c Signed-off-by: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Cc: Brian King <brking@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Cc: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Cc: linux-nvme@lists.infradead.org Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2016-08-11 09:35:57 -06:00
for (; i > 0; i--, sent++)
if (nvme_delete_queue(dev->queues[i], opcode))
break;
nvme: Suspend all queues before deletion When nvme_delete_queue fails in the first pass of the nvme_disable_io_queues() loop, we return early, failing to suspend all of the IO queues. Later, on the nvme_pci_disable path, this causes us to disable MSI without actually having freed all the IRQs, which triggers the BUG_ON in free_msi_irqs(), as show below. This patch refactors nvme_disable_io_queues to suspend all queues before start submitting delete queue commands. This way, we ensure that we have at least returned every IRQ before continuing with the removal path. [ 487.529200] kernel BUG at ../drivers/pci/msi.c:368! cpu 0x46: Vector: 700 (Program Check) at [c0000078c5b83650] pc: c000000000627a50: free_msi_irqs+0x90/0x200 lr: c000000000627a40: free_msi_irqs+0x80/0x200 sp: c0000078c5b838d0 msr: 9000000100029033 current = 0xc0000078c5b40000 paca = 0xc000000002bd7600 softe: 0 irq_happened: 0x01 pid = 1376, comm = kworker/70:1H kernel BUG at ../drivers/pci/msi.c:368! Linux version 4.7.0.mainline+ (root@iod76) (gcc version 5.3.1 20160413 (Ubuntu/IBM 5.3.1-14ubuntu2.1) ) #104 SMP Fri Jul 29 09:20:17 CDT 2016 enter ? for help [c0000078c5b83920] d0000000363b0cd8 nvme_dev_disable+0x208/0x4f0 [nvme] [c0000078c5b83a10] d0000000363b12a4 nvme_timeout+0xe4/0x250 [nvme] [c0000078c5b83ad0] c0000000005690e4 blk_mq_rq_timed_out+0x64/0x110 [c0000078c5b83b40] c00000000056c930 bt_for_each+0x160/0x170 [c0000078c5b83bb0] c00000000056d928 blk_mq_queue_tag_busy_iter+0x78/0x110 [c0000078c5b83c00] c0000000005675d8 blk_mq_timeout_work+0xd8/0x1b0 [c0000078c5b83c50] c0000000000e8cf0 process_one_work+0x1e0/0x590 [c0000078c5b83ce0] c0000000000e9148 worker_thread+0xa8/0x660 [c0000078c5b83d80] c0000000000f2090 kthread+0x110/0x130 [c0000078c5b83e30] c0000000000095f0 ret_from_kernel_thread+0x5c/0x6c Signed-off-by: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Cc: Brian King <brking@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Cc: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Cc: linux-nvme@lists.infradead.org Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2016-08-11 09:35:57 -06:00
while (sent--) {
timeout = wait_for_completion_io_timeout(&dev->ioq_wait, timeout);
if (timeout == 0)
return;
if (i)
goto retry;
}
opcode = nvme_admin_delete_cq;
}
}
/*
* Return: error value if an error occurred setting up the queues or calling
* Identify Device. 0 if these succeeded, even if adding some of the
* namespaces failed. At the moment, these failures are silent. TBD which
* failures should be reported.
*/
static int nvme_dev_add(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
if (!dev->ctrl.tagset) {
dev->tagset.ops = &nvme_mq_ops;
dev->tagset.nr_hw_queues = dev->online_queues - 1;
dev->tagset.timeout = NVME_IO_TIMEOUT;
dev->tagset.numa_node = dev_to_node(dev->dev);
dev->tagset.queue_depth =
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
min_t(int, dev->q_depth, BLK_MQ_MAX_DEPTH) - 1;
dev->tagset.cmd_size = nvme_cmd_size(dev);
dev->tagset.flags = BLK_MQ_F_SHOULD_MERGE;
dev->tagset.driver_data = dev;
if (blk_mq_alloc_tag_set(&dev->tagset))
return 0;
dev->ctrl.tagset = &dev->tagset;
nvme: improve performance for virtual NVMe devices This change provides a mechanism to reduce the number of MMIO doorbell writes for the NVMe driver. When running in a virtualized environment like QEMU, the cost of an MMIO is quite hefy here. The main idea for the patch is provide the device two memory location locations: 1) to store the doorbell values so they can be lookup without the doorbell MMIO write 2) to store an event index. I believe the doorbell value is obvious, the event index not so much. Similar to the virtio specification, the virtual device can tell the driver (guest OS) not to write MMIO unless you are writing past this value. FYI: doorbell values are written by the nvme driver (guest OS) and the event index is written by the virtual device (host OS). The patch implements a new admin command that will communicate where these two memory locations reside. If the command fails, the nvme driver will work as before without any optimizations. Contributions: Eric Northup <digitaleric@google.com> Frank Swiderski <fes@google.com> Ted Tso <tytso@mit.edu> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Just to give an idea on the performance boost with the vendor extension: Running fio [1], a stock NVMe driver I get about 200K read IOPs with my vendor patch I get about 1000K read IOPs. This was running with a null device i.e. the backing device simply returned success on every read IO request. [1] Running on a 4 core machine: fio --time_based --name=benchmark --runtime=30 --filename=/dev/nvme0n1 --nrfiles=1 --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=32 --direct=1 --invalidate=1 --verify=0 --verify_fatal=0 --numjobs=4 --rw=randread --blocksize=4k --randrepeat=false Signed-off-by: Rob Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> [mlin: port for upstream] Signed-off-by: Ming Lin <mlin@kernel.org> [koike: updated for upstream] Signed-off-by: Helen Koike <helen.koike@collabora.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2017-04-10 09:51:07 -06:00
nvme_dbbuf_set(dev);
} else {
blk_mq_update_nr_hw_queues(&dev->tagset, dev->online_queues - 1);
/* Free previously allocated queues that are no longer usable */
nvme_free_queues(dev, dev->online_queues);
}
NVMe: Metadata format support Adds support for NVMe metadata formats and exposes block devices for all namespaces regardless of their format. Namespace formats that are unusable will have disk capacity set to 0, but a handle to the block device is created to simplify device management. A namespace is not usable when the format requires host interleave block and metadata in single buffer, has no provisioned storage, or has better data but failed to register with blk integrity. The namespace has to be scanned in two phases to support separate metadata formats. The first establishes the sector size and capacity prior to invoking add_disk. If metadata is required, the capacity will be temporarilly set to 0 until it can be revalidated and registered with the integrity extenstions after add_disk completes. The driver relies on the integrity extensions to provide the metadata buffer. NVMe requires this be a single physically contiguous region, so only one integrity segment is allowed per command. If the metadata is used for T10 PI, the driver provides mappings to save and restore the reftag physical block translation. The driver provides no-op functions for generate and verify if metadata is not used for protection information. This way the setup is always provided by the block layer. If a request does not supply a required metadata buffer, the command is failed with bad address. This could only happen if a user manually disables verify/generate on such a disk. The only exception to where this is okay is if the controller is capable of stripping/generating the metadata, which is possible on some types of formats. The metadata scatter gather list now occupies the spot in the nvme_iod that used to be used to link retryable IOD's, but we don't do that anymore, so the field was unused. Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2015-02-19 13:39:03 -07:00
return 0;
}
static int nvme_pci_enable(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
u64 cap;
int result = -ENOMEM;
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(dev->dev);
if (pci_enable_device_mem(pdev))
return result;
pci_set_master(pdev);
if (dma_set_mask_and_coherent(dev->dev, DMA_BIT_MASK(64)) &&
dma_set_mask_and_coherent(dev->dev, DMA_BIT_MASK(32)))
goto disable;
if (readl(dev->bar + NVME_REG_CSTS) == -1) {
result = -ENODEV;
goto disable;
}
/*
* Some devices and/or platforms don't advertise or work with INTx
* interrupts. Pre-enable a single MSIX or MSI vec for setup. We'll
* adjust this later.
*/
result = pci_alloc_irq_vectors(pdev, 1, 1, PCI_IRQ_ALL_TYPES);
if (result < 0)
return result;
cap = lo_hi_readq(dev->bar + NVME_REG_CAP);
dev->q_depth = min_t(int, NVME_CAP_MQES(cap) + 1, NVME_Q_DEPTH);
dev->db_stride = 1 << NVME_CAP_STRIDE(cap);
dev->dbs = dev->bar + 4096;
/*
* Temporary fix for the Apple controller found in the MacBook8,1 and
* some MacBook7,1 to avoid controller resets and data loss.
*/
if (pdev->vendor == PCI_VENDOR_ID_APPLE && pdev->device == 0x2001) {
dev->q_depth = 2;
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device, "detected Apple NVMe controller, "
"set queue depth=%u to work around controller resets\n",
dev->q_depth);
} else if (pdev->vendor == PCI_VENDOR_ID_SAMSUNG &&
(pdev->device == 0xa821 || pdev->device == 0xa822) &&
NVME_CAP_MQES(cap) == 0) {
dev->q_depth = 64;
dev_err(dev->ctrl.device, "detected PM1725 NVMe controller, "
"set queue depth=%u\n", dev->q_depth);
}
/*
* CMBs can currently only exist on >=1.2 PCIe devices. We only
* populate sysfs if a CMB is implemented. Note that we add the
* CMB attribute to the nvme_ctrl kobj which removes the need to remove
* it on exit. Since nvme_dev_attrs_group has no name we can pass
* NULL as final argument to sysfs_add_file_to_group.
*/
if (readl(dev->bar + NVME_REG_VS) >= NVME_VS(1, 2, 0)) {
dev->cmb = nvme_map_cmb(dev);
if (dev->cmbsz) {
if (sysfs_add_file_to_group(&dev->ctrl.device->kobj,
&dev_attr_cmb.attr, NULL))
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device,
"failed to add sysfs attribute for CMB\n");
}
}
pci_enable_pcie_error_reporting(pdev);
pci_save_state(pdev);
return 0;
disable:
pci_disable_device(pdev);
return result;
}
static void nvme_dev_unmap(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
if (dev->bar)
iounmap(dev->bar);
pci_release_mem_regions(to_pci_dev(dev->dev));
}
static void nvme_pci_disable(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(dev->dev);
nvme_release_cmb(dev);
pci_free_irq_vectors(pdev);
if (pci_is_enabled(pdev)) {
pci_disable_pcie_error_reporting(pdev);
pci_disable_device(pdev);
}
}
static void nvme_dev_disable(struct nvme_dev *dev, bool shutdown)
{
int i, queues;
bool dead = true;
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(dev->dev);
mutex_lock(&dev->shutdown_lock);
if (pci_is_enabled(pdev)) {
u32 csts = readl(dev->bar + NVME_REG_CSTS);
if (dev->ctrl.state == NVME_CTRL_LIVE)
nvme_start_freeze(&dev->ctrl);
dead = !!((csts & NVME_CSTS_CFS) || !(csts & NVME_CSTS_RDY) ||
pdev->error_state != pci_channel_io_normal);
}
nvme: Suspend all queues before deletion When nvme_delete_queue fails in the first pass of the nvme_disable_io_queues() loop, we return early, failing to suspend all of the IO queues. Later, on the nvme_pci_disable path, this causes us to disable MSI without actually having freed all the IRQs, which triggers the BUG_ON in free_msi_irqs(), as show below. This patch refactors nvme_disable_io_queues to suspend all queues before start submitting delete queue commands. This way, we ensure that we have at least returned every IRQ before continuing with the removal path. [ 487.529200] kernel BUG at ../drivers/pci/msi.c:368! cpu 0x46: Vector: 700 (Program Check) at [c0000078c5b83650] pc: c000000000627a50: free_msi_irqs+0x90/0x200 lr: c000000000627a40: free_msi_irqs+0x80/0x200 sp: c0000078c5b838d0 msr: 9000000100029033 current = 0xc0000078c5b40000 paca = 0xc000000002bd7600 softe: 0 irq_happened: 0x01 pid = 1376, comm = kworker/70:1H kernel BUG at ../drivers/pci/msi.c:368! Linux version 4.7.0.mainline+ (root@iod76) (gcc version 5.3.1 20160413 (Ubuntu/IBM 5.3.1-14ubuntu2.1) ) #104 SMP Fri Jul 29 09:20:17 CDT 2016 enter ? for help [c0000078c5b83920] d0000000363b0cd8 nvme_dev_disable+0x208/0x4f0 [nvme] [c0000078c5b83a10] d0000000363b12a4 nvme_timeout+0xe4/0x250 [nvme] [c0000078c5b83ad0] c0000000005690e4 blk_mq_rq_timed_out+0x64/0x110 [c0000078c5b83b40] c00000000056c930 bt_for_each+0x160/0x170 [c0000078c5b83bb0] c00000000056d928 blk_mq_queue_tag_busy_iter+0x78/0x110 [c0000078c5b83c00] c0000000005675d8 blk_mq_timeout_work+0xd8/0x1b0 [c0000078c5b83c50] c0000000000e8cf0 process_one_work+0x1e0/0x590 [c0000078c5b83ce0] c0000000000e9148 worker_thread+0xa8/0x660 [c0000078c5b83d80] c0000000000f2090 kthread+0x110/0x130 [c0000078c5b83e30] c0000000000095f0 ret_from_kernel_thread+0x5c/0x6c Signed-off-by: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Cc: Brian King <brking@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Cc: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Cc: linux-nvme@lists.infradead.org Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2016-08-11 09:35:57 -06:00
/*
* Give the controller a chance to complete all entered requests if
* doing a safe shutdown.
*/
if (!dead) {
if (shutdown)
nvme_wait_freeze_timeout(&dev->ctrl, NVME_IO_TIMEOUT);
/*
* If the controller is still alive tell it to stop using the
* host memory buffer. In theory the shutdown / reset should
* make sure that it doesn't access the host memoery anymore,
* but I'd rather be safe than sorry..
*/
if (dev->host_mem_descs)
nvme_set_host_mem(dev, 0);
}
nvme_stop_queues(&dev->ctrl);
queues = dev->online_queues - 1;
for (i = dev->ctrl.queue_count - 1; i > 0; i--)
nvme: Suspend all queues before deletion When nvme_delete_queue fails in the first pass of the nvme_disable_io_queues() loop, we return early, failing to suspend all of the IO queues. Later, on the nvme_pci_disable path, this causes us to disable MSI without actually having freed all the IRQs, which triggers the BUG_ON in free_msi_irqs(), as show below. This patch refactors nvme_disable_io_queues to suspend all queues before start submitting delete queue commands. This way, we ensure that we have at least returned every IRQ before continuing with the removal path. [ 487.529200] kernel BUG at ../drivers/pci/msi.c:368! cpu 0x46: Vector: 700 (Program Check) at [c0000078c5b83650] pc: c000000000627a50: free_msi_irqs+0x90/0x200 lr: c000000000627a40: free_msi_irqs+0x80/0x200 sp: c0000078c5b838d0 msr: 9000000100029033 current = 0xc0000078c5b40000 paca = 0xc000000002bd7600 softe: 0 irq_happened: 0x01 pid = 1376, comm = kworker/70:1H kernel BUG at ../drivers/pci/msi.c:368! Linux version 4.7.0.mainline+ (root@iod76) (gcc version 5.3.1 20160413 (Ubuntu/IBM 5.3.1-14ubuntu2.1) ) #104 SMP Fri Jul 29 09:20:17 CDT 2016 enter ? for help [c0000078c5b83920] d0000000363b0cd8 nvme_dev_disable+0x208/0x4f0 [nvme] [c0000078c5b83a10] d0000000363b12a4 nvme_timeout+0xe4/0x250 [nvme] [c0000078c5b83ad0] c0000000005690e4 blk_mq_rq_timed_out+0x64/0x110 [c0000078c5b83b40] c00000000056c930 bt_for_each+0x160/0x170 [c0000078c5b83bb0] c00000000056d928 blk_mq_queue_tag_busy_iter+0x78/0x110 [c0000078c5b83c00] c0000000005675d8 blk_mq_timeout_work+0xd8/0x1b0 [c0000078c5b83c50] c0000000000e8cf0 process_one_work+0x1e0/0x590 [c0000078c5b83ce0] c0000000000e9148 worker_thread+0xa8/0x660 [c0000078c5b83d80] c0000000000f2090 kthread+0x110/0x130 [c0000078c5b83e30] c0000000000095f0 ret_from_kernel_thread+0x5c/0x6c Signed-off-by: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Cc: Brian King <brking@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Cc: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Cc: linux-nvme@lists.infradead.org Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2016-08-11 09:35:57 -06:00
nvme_suspend_queue(dev->queues[i]);
if (dead) {
/* A device might become IO incapable very soon during
* probe, before the admin queue is configured. Thus,
* queue_count can be 0 here.
*/
if (dev->ctrl.queue_count)
nvme_suspend_queue(dev->queues[0]);
} else {
nvme_disable_io_queues(dev, queues);
nvme_disable_admin_queue(dev, shutdown);
}
nvme_pci_disable(dev);
blk_mq_tagset_busy_iter(&dev->tagset, nvme_cancel_request, &dev->ctrl);
blk_mq_tagset_busy_iter(&dev->admin_tagset, nvme_cancel_request, &dev->ctrl);
/*
* The driver will not be starting up queues again if shutting down so
* must flush all entered requests to their failed completion to avoid
* deadlocking blk-mq hot-cpu notifier.
*/
if (shutdown)
nvme_start_queues(&dev->ctrl);
mutex_unlock(&dev->shutdown_lock);
}
static int nvme_setup_prp_pools(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
dev->prp_page_pool = dma_pool_create("prp list page", dev->dev,
PAGE_SIZE, PAGE_SIZE, 0);
if (!dev->prp_page_pool)
return -ENOMEM;
/* Optimisation for I/Os between 4k and 128k */
dev->prp_small_pool = dma_pool_create("prp list 256", dev->dev,
256, 256, 0);
if (!dev->prp_small_pool) {
dma_pool_destroy(dev->prp_page_pool);
return -ENOMEM;
}
return 0;
}
static void nvme_release_prp_pools(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
dma_pool_destroy(dev->prp_page_pool);
dma_pool_destroy(dev->prp_small_pool);
}
static void nvme_pci_free_ctrl(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev = to_nvme_dev(ctrl);
nvme: improve performance for virtual NVMe devices This change provides a mechanism to reduce the number of MMIO doorbell writes for the NVMe driver. When running in a virtualized environment like QEMU, the cost of an MMIO is quite hefy here. The main idea for the patch is provide the device two memory location locations: 1) to store the doorbell values so they can be lookup without the doorbell MMIO write 2) to store an event index. I believe the doorbell value is obvious, the event index not so much. Similar to the virtio specification, the virtual device can tell the driver (guest OS) not to write MMIO unless you are writing past this value. FYI: doorbell values are written by the nvme driver (guest OS) and the event index is written by the virtual device (host OS). The patch implements a new admin command that will communicate where these two memory locations reside. If the command fails, the nvme driver will work as before without any optimizations. Contributions: Eric Northup <digitaleric@google.com> Frank Swiderski <fes@google.com> Ted Tso <tytso@mit.edu> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Just to give an idea on the performance boost with the vendor extension: Running fio [1], a stock NVMe driver I get about 200K read IOPs with my vendor patch I get about 1000K read IOPs. This was running with a null device i.e. the backing device simply returned success on every read IO request. [1] Running on a 4 core machine: fio --time_based --name=benchmark --runtime=30 --filename=/dev/nvme0n1 --nrfiles=1 --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=32 --direct=1 --invalidate=1 --verify=0 --verify_fatal=0 --numjobs=4 --rw=randread --blocksize=4k --randrepeat=false Signed-off-by: Rob Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> [mlin: port for upstream] Signed-off-by: Ming Lin <mlin@kernel.org> [koike: updated for upstream] Signed-off-by: Helen Koike <helen.koike@collabora.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2017-04-10 09:51:07 -06:00
nvme_dbbuf_dma_free(dev);
put_device(dev->dev);
if (dev->tagset.tags)
blk_mq_free_tag_set(&dev->tagset);
if (dev->ctrl.admin_q)
blk_put_queue(dev->ctrl.admin_q);
kfree(dev->queues);
free_opal_dev(dev->ctrl.opal_dev);
kfree(dev);
}
static void nvme_remove_dead_ctrl(struct nvme_dev *dev, int status)
{
Merge branch 'for-4.6/drivers' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux-block Pull block driver updates from Jens Axboe: "This is the block driver pull request for this merge window. It sits on top of for-4.6/core, that was just sent out. This contains: - A set of fixes for lightnvm. One from Alan, fixing an overflow, and the rest from the usual suspects, Javier and Matias. - A set of fixes for nbd from Markus and Dan, and a fixup from Arnd for correct usage of the signed 64-bit divider. - A set of bug fixes for the Micron mtip32xx, from Asai. - A fix for the brd discard handling from Bart. - Update the maintainers entry for cciss, since that hardware has transferred ownership. - Three bug fixes for bcache from Eric Wheeler. - Set of fixes for xen-blk{back,front} from Jan and Konrad. - Removal of the cpqarray driver. It has been disabled in Kconfig since 2013, and we were initially scheduled to remove it in 3.15. - Various updates and fixes for NVMe, with the most important being: - Removal of the per-device NVMe thread, replacing that with a watchdog timer instead. From Christoph. - Exposing the namespace WWID through sysfs, from Keith. - Set of cleanups from Ming Lin. - Logging the controller device name instead of the underlying PCI device name, from Sagi. - And a bunch of fixes and optimizations from the usual suspects in this area" * 'for-4.6/drivers' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux-block: (49 commits) NVMe: Expose ns wwid through single sysfs entry drivers:block: cpqarray clean up brd: Fix discard request processing cpqarray: remove it from the kernel cciss: update MAINTAINERS NVMe: Remove unused sq_head read in completion path bcache: fix cache_set_flush() NULL pointer dereference on OOM bcache: cleaned up error handling around register_cache() bcache: fix race of writeback thread starting before complete initialization NVMe: Create discard zero quirk white list nbd: use correct div_s64 helper mtip32xx: remove unneeded variable in mtip_cmd_timeout() lightnvm: generalize rrpc ppa calculations lightnvm: remove struct nvm_dev->total_blocks lightnvm: rename ->nr_pages to ->nr_sects lightnvm: update closed list outside of intr context xen/blback: Fit the important information of the thread in 17 characters lightnvm: fold get bb tbl when using dual/quad plane mode lightnvm: fix up nonsensical configure overrun checking xen-blkback: advertise indirect segment support earlier ...
2016-03-18 18:13:31 -06:00
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device, "Removing after probe failure status: %d\n", status);
kref_get(&dev->ctrl.kref);
nvme_dev_disable(dev, false);
if (!schedule_work(&dev->remove_work))
nvme_put_ctrl(&dev->ctrl);
}
static void nvme_reset_work(struct work_struct *work)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev =
container_of(work, struct nvme_dev, ctrl.reset_work);
bool was_suspend = !!(dev->ctrl.ctrl_config & NVME_CC_SHN_NORMAL);
int result = -ENODEV;
nvme-pci: fix multiple ctrl removal scheduling Commit c5f6ce97c1210 tries to address multiple resets but fails as work_busy doesn't involve any synchronization and can fail. This is reproducible easily as can be seen by WARNING below which is triggered with line: WARN_ON(dev->ctrl.state == NVME_CTRL_RESETTING) Allowing multiple resets can result in multiple controller removal as well if different conditions inside nvme_reset_work fail and which might deadlock on device_release_driver. [ 480.327007] WARNING: CPU: 3 PID: 150 at drivers/nvme/host/pci.c:1900 nvme_reset_work+0x36c/0xec0 [ 480.327008] Modules linked in: rfcomm fuse nf_conntrack_netbios_ns nf_conntrack_broadcast... [ 480.327044] btusb videobuf2_core ghash_clmulni_intel snd_hwdep cfg80211 acer_wmi hci_uart.. [ 480.327065] CPU: 3 PID: 150 Comm: kworker/u16:2 Not tainted 4.12.0-rc1+ #13 [ 480.327065] Hardware name: Acer Predator G9-591/Mustang_SLS, BIOS V1.10 03/03/2016 [ 480.327066] Workqueue: nvme nvme_reset_work [ 480.327067] task: ffff880498ad8000 task.stack: ffffc90002218000 [ 480.327068] RIP: 0010:nvme_reset_work+0x36c/0xec0 [ 480.327069] RSP: 0018:ffffc9000221bdb8 EFLAGS: 00010246 [ 480.327070] RAX: 0000000000460000 RBX: ffff880498a98128 RCX: dead000000000200 [ 480.327070] RDX: 0000000000000001 RSI: ffff8804b1028020 RDI: ffff880498a98128 [ 480.327071] RBP: ffffc9000221be50 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000 [ 480.327071] R10: ffffc90001963ce8 R11: 000000000000020d R12: ffff880498a98000 [ 480.327072] R13: ffff880498a53500 R14: ffff880498a98130 R15: ffff880498a98128 [ 480.327072] FS: 0000000000000000(0000) GS:ffff8804c1cc0000(0000) knlGS:0000000000000000 [ 480.327073] CS: 0010 DS: 0000 ES: 0000 CR0: 0000000080050033 [ 480.327074] CR2: 00007ffcf3c37f78 CR3: 0000000001e09000 CR4: 00000000003406e0 [ 480.327074] DR0: 0000000000000000 DR1: 0000000000000000 DR2: 0000000000000000 [ 480.327075] DR3: 0000000000000000 DR6: 00000000fffe0ff0 DR7: 0000000000000400 [ 480.327075] Call Trace: [ 480.327079] ? __switch_to+0x227/0x400 [ 480.327081] process_one_work+0x18c/0x3a0 [ 480.327082] worker_thread+0x4e/0x3b0 [ 480.327084] kthread+0x109/0x140 [ 480.327085] ? process_one_work+0x3a0/0x3a0 [ 480.327087] ? kthread_park+0x60/0x60 [ 480.327102] ret_from_fork+0x2c/0x40 [ 480.327103] Code: e8 5a dc ff ff 85 c0 41 89 c1 0f..... This patch addresses the problem by using state of controller to decide whether reset should be queued or not as state change is synchronizated using controller spinlock. Also cancel_work_sync is used to make sure remove cancels the reset_work and waits for it to finish. This patch also changes return value from -ENODEV to more appropriate -EBUSY if nvme_reset fails to change state. Fixes: c5f6ce97c1210 ("nvme: don't schedule multiple resets") Signed-off-by: Rakesh Pandit <rakesh@tuxera.com> Reviewed-by: Sagi Grimberg <sagi@grimberg.me> Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
2017-06-05 05:43:11 -06:00
if (WARN_ON(dev->ctrl.state != NVME_CTRL_RESETTING))
goto out;
/*
* If we're called to reset a live controller first shut it down before
* moving on.
*/
if (dev->ctrl.ctrl_config & NVME_CC_ENABLE)
nvme_dev_disable(dev, false);
result = nvme_pci_enable(dev);
if (result)
goto out;
result = nvme_configure_admin_queue(dev);
if (result)
goto out;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
nvme_init_queue(dev->queues[0], 0);
result = nvme_alloc_admin_tags(dev);
if (result)
goto out;
result = nvme_init_identify(&dev->ctrl);
if (result)
goto out;
if (dev->ctrl.oacs & NVME_CTRL_OACS_SEC_SUPP) {
if (!dev->ctrl.opal_dev)
dev->ctrl.opal_dev =
init_opal_dev(&dev->ctrl, &nvme_sec_submit);
else if (was_suspend)
opal_unlock_from_suspend(dev->ctrl.opal_dev);
} else {
free_opal_dev(dev->ctrl.opal_dev);
dev->ctrl.opal_dev = NULL;
}
nvme: improve performance for virtual NVMe devices This change provides a mechanism to reduce the number of MMIO doorbell writes for the NVMe driver. When running in a virtualized environment like QEMU, the cost of an MMIO is quite hefy here. The main idea for the patch is provide the device two memory location locations: 1) to store the doorbell values so they can be lookup without the doorbell MMIO write 2) to store an event index. I believe the doorbell value is obvious, the event index not so much. Similar to the virtio specification, the virtual device can tell the driver (guest OS) not to write MMIO unless you are writing past this value. FYI: doorbell values are written by the nvme driver (guest OS) and the event index is written by the virtual device (host OS). The patch implements a new admin command that will communicate where these two memory locations reside. If the command fails, the nvme driver will work as before without any optimizations. Contributions: Eric Northup <digitaleric@google.com> Frank Swiderski <fes@google.com> Ted Tso <tytso@mit.edu> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Just to give an idea on the performance boost with the vendor extension: Running fio [1], a stock NVMe driver I get about 200K read IOPs with my vendor patch I get about 1000K read IOPs. This was running with a null device i.e. the backing device simply returned success on every read IO request. [1] Running on a 4 core machine: fio --time_based --name=benchmark --runtime=30 --filename=/dev/nvme0n1 --nrfiles=1 --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=32 --direct=1 --invalidate=1 --verify=0 --verify_fatal=0 --numjobs=4 --rw=randread --blocksize=4k --randrepeat=false Signed-off-by: Rob Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> [mlin: port for upstream] Signed-off-by: Ming Lin <mlin@kernel.org> [koike: updated for upstream] Signed-off-by: Helen Koike <helen.koike@collabora.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com>
2017-04-10 09:51:07 -06:00
if (dev->ctrl.oacs & NVME_CTRL_OACS_DBBUF_SUPP) {
result = nvme_dbbuf_dma_alloc(dev);
if (result)
dev_warn(dev->dev,
"unable to allocate dma for dbbuf\n");
}
if (dev->ctrl.hmpre)
nvme_setup_host_mem(dev);
result = nvme_setup_io_queues(dev);
if (result)
goto out;
/*
* A controller that can not execute IO typically requires user
* intervention to correct. For such degraded controllers, the driver
* should not submit commands the user did not request, so skip
* registering for asynchronous event notification on this condition.
*/
if (dev->online_queues > 1)
nvme_queue_async_events(&dev->ctrl);
/*
* Keep the controller around but remove all namespaces if we don't have
* any working I/O queue.
*/
if (dev->online_queues < 2) {
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device, "IO queues not created\n");
nvme_kill_queues(&dev->ctrl);
nvme_remove_namespaces(&dev->ctrl);
} else {
nvme_start_queues(&dev->ctrl);
nvme_wait_freeze(&dev->ctrl);
nvme_dev_add(dev);
nvme_unfreeze(&dev->ctrl);
}
if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(&dev->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_LIVE)) {
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device, "failed to mark controller live\n");
goto out;
}
if (dev->online_queues > 1)
nvme_queue_scan(&dev->ctrl);
return;
out:
nvme_remove_dead_ctrl(dev, result);
}
static void nvme_remove_dead_ctrl_work(struct work_struct *work)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev = container_of(work, struct nvme_dev, remove_work);
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(dev->dev);
nvme_kill_queues(&dev->ctrl);
if (pci_get_drvdata(pdev))
device_release_driver(&pdev->dev);
nvme_put_ctrl(&dev->ctrl);
}
static int nvme_pci_reg_read32(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl, u32 off, u32 *val)
{
*val = readl(to_nvme_dev(ctrl)->bar + off);
return 0;
}
static int nvme_pci_reg_write32(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl, u32 off, u32 val)
{
writel(val, to_nvme_dev(ctrl)->bar + off);
return 0;
}
static int nvme_pci_reg_read64(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl, u32 off, u64 *val)
{
*val = readq(to_nvme_dev(ctrl)->bar + off);
return 0;
}
static const struct nvme_ctrl_ops nvme_pci_ctrl_ops = {
.name = "pcie",
.module = THIS_MODULE,
.flags = NVME_F_METADATA_SUPPORTED,
.reg_read32 = nvme_pci_reg_read32,
.reg_write32 = nvme_pci_reg_write32,
.reg_read64 = nvme_pci_reg_read64,
.free_ctrl = nvme_pci_free_ctrl,
.submit_async_event = nvme_pci_submit_async_event,
};
static int nvme_dev_map(struct nvme_dev *dev)
{
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(dev->dev);
if (pci_request_mem_regions(pdev, "nvme"))
return -ENODEV;
if (nvme_remap_bar(dev, NVME_REG_DBS + 4096))
goto release;
return 0;
release:
pci_release_mem_regions(pdev);
return -ENODEV;
}
static unsigned long check_dell_samsung_bug(struct pci_dev *pdev)
{
if (pdev->vendor == 0x144d && pdev->device == 0xa802) {
/*
* Several Samsung devices seem to drop off the PCIe bus
* randomly when APST is on and uses the deepest sleep state.
* This has been observed on a Samsung "SM951 NVMe SAMSUNG
* 256GB", a "PM951 NVMe SAMSUNG 512GB", and a "Samsung SSD
* 950 PRO 256GB", but it seems to be restricted to two Dell
* laptops.
*/
if (dmi_match(DMI_SYS_VENDOR, "Dell Inc.") &&
(dmi_match(DMI_PRODUCT_NAME, "XPS 15 9550") ||
dmi_match(DMI_PRODUCT_NAME, "Precision 5510")))
return NVME_QUIRK_NO_DEEPEST_PS;
}
return 0;
}
static int nvme_probe(struct pci_dev *pdev, const struct pci_device_id *id)
{
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
int node, result = -ENOMEM;
struct nvme_dev *dev;
unsigned long quirks = id->driver_data;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
node = dev_to_node(&pdev->dev);
if (node == NUMA_NO_NODE)
set_dev_node(&pdev->dev, first_memory_node);
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
dev = kzalloc_node(sizeof(*dev), GFP_KERNEL, node);
if (!dev)
return -ENOMEM;
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
dev->queues = kzalloc_node((num_possible_cpus() + 1) * sizeof(void *),
GFP_KERNEL, node);
if (!dev->queues)
goto free;
dev->dev = get_device(&pdev->dev);
pci_set_drvdata(pdev, dev);
result = nvme_dev_map(dev);
if (result)
goto free;
INIT_WORK(&dev->ctrl.reset_work, nvme_reset_work);
INIT_WORK(&dev->remove_work, nvme_remove_dead_ctrl_work);
mutex_init(&dev->shutdown_lock);
init_completion(&dev->ioq_wait);
result = nvme_setup_prp_pools(dev);
if (result)
goto put_pci;
quirks |= check_dell_samsung_bug(pdev);
result = nvme_init_ctrl(&dev->ctrl, &pdev->dev, &nvme_pci_ctrl_ops,
quirks);
if (result)
goto release_pools;
nvme-pci: fix multiple ctrl removal scheduling Commit c5f6ce97c1210 tries to address multiple resets but fails as work_busy doesn't involve any synchronization and can fail. This is reproducible easily as can be seen by WARNING below which is triggered with line: WARN_ON(dev->ctrl.state == NVME_CTRL_RESETTING) Allowing multiple resets can result in multiple controller removal as well if different conditions inside nvme_reset_work fail and which might deadlock on device_release_driver. [ 480.327007] WARNING: CPU: 3 PID: 150 at drivers/nvme/host/pci.c:1900 nvme_reset_work+0x36c/0xec0 [ 480.327008] Modules linked in: rfcomm fuse nf_conntrack_netbios_ns nf_conntrack_broadcast... [ 480.327044] btusb videobuf2_core ghash_clmulni_intel snd_hwdep cfg80211 acer_wmi hci_uart.. [ 480.327065] CPU: 3 PID: 150 Comm: kworker/u16:2 Not tainted 4.12.0-rc1+ #13 [ 480.327065] Hardware name: Acer Predator G9-591/Mustang_SLS, BIOS V1.10 03/03/2016 [ 480.327066] Workqueue: nvme nvme_reset_work [ 480.327067] task: ffff880498ad8000 task.stack: ffffc90002218000 [ 480.327068] RIP: 0010:nvme_reset_work+0x36c/0xec0 [ 480.327069] RSP: 0018:ffffc9000221bdb8 EFLAGS: 00010246 [ 480.327070] RAX: 0000000000460000 RBX: ffff880498a98128 RCX: dead000000000200 [ 480.327070] RDX: 0000000000000001 RSI: ffff8804b1028020 RDI: ffff880498a98128 [ 480.327071] RBP: ffffc9000221be50 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000 [ 480.327071] R10: ffffc90001963ce8 R11: 000000000000020d R12: ffff880498a98000 [ 480.327072] R13: ffff880498a53500 R14: ffff880498a98130 R15: ffff880498a98128 [ 480.327072] FS: 0000000000000000(0000) GS:ffff8804c1cc0000(0000) knlGS:0000000000000000 [ 480.327073] CS: 0010 DS: 0000 ES: 0000 CR0: 0000000080050033 [ 480.327074] CR2: 00007ffcf3c37f78 CR3: 0000000001e09000 CR4: 00000000003406e0 [ 480.327074] DR0: 0000000000000000 DR1: 0000000000000000 DR2: 0000000000000000 [ 480.327075] DR3: 0000000000000000 DR6: 00000000fffe0ff0 DR7: 0000000000000400 [ 480.327075] Call Trace: [ 480.327079] ? __switch_to+0x227/0x400 [ 480.327081] process_one_work+0x18c/0x3a0 [ 480.327082] worker_thread+0x4e/0x3b0 [ 480.327084] kthread+0x109/0x140 [ 480.327085] ? process_one_work+0x3a0/0x3a0 [ 480.327087] ? kthread_park+0x60/0x60 [ 480.327102] ret_from_fork+0x2c/0x40 [ 480.327103] Code: e8 5a dc ff ff 85 c0 41 89 c1 0f..... This patch addresses the problem by using state of controller to decide whether reset should be queued or not as state change is synchronizated using controller spinlock. Also cancel_work_sync is used to make sure remove cancels the reset_work and waits for it to finish. This patch also changes return value from -ENODEV to more appropriate -EBUSY if nvme_reset fails to change state. Fixes: c5f6ce97c1210 ("nvme: don't schedule multiple resets") Signed-off-by: Rakesh Pandit <rakesh@tuxera.com> Reviewed-by: Sagi Grimberg <sagi@grimberg.me> Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
2017-06-05 05:43:11 -06:00
nvme_change_ctrl_state(&dev->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESETTING);
dev_info(dev->ctrl.device, "pci function %s\n", dev_name(&pdev->dev));
queue_work(nvme_wq, &dev->ctrl.reset_work);
return 0;
release_pools:
nvme_release_prp_pools(dev);
put_pci:
put_device(dev->dev);
nvme_dev_unmap(dev);
free:
kfree(dev->queues);
kfree(dev);
return result;
}
static void nvme_reset_notify(struct pci_dev *pdev, bool prepare)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev = pci_get_drvdata(pdev);
if (prepare)
nvme_dev_disable(dev, false);
else
nvme_reset_ctrl(&dev->ctrl);
}
static void nvme_shutdown(struct pci_dev *pdev)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev = pci_get_drvdata(pdev);
nvme_dev_disable(dev, true);
}
/*
* The driver's remove may be called on a device in a partially initialized
* state. This function must not have any dependencies on the device state in
* order to proceed.
*/
static void nvme_remove(struct pci_dev *pdev)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev = pci_get_drvdata(pdev);
nvme_change_ctrl_state(&dev->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_DELETING);
cancel_work_sync(&dev->ctrl.reset_work);
pci_set_drvdata(pdev, NULL);
if (!pci_device_is_present(pdev)) {
nvme_change_ctrl_state(&dev->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_DEAD);
nvme_dev_disable(dev, false);
}
flush_work(&dev->ctrl.reset_work);
nvme_uninit_ctrl(&dev->ctrl);
nvme_dev_disable(dev, true);
nvme_free_host_mem(dev);
NVMe: Convert to blk-mq This converts the NVMe driver to a blk-mq request-based driver. The NVMe driver is currently bio-based and implements queue logic within itself. By using blk-mq, a lot of these responsibilities can be moved and simplified. The patch is divided into the following blocks: * Per-command data and cmdid have been moved into the struct request field. The cmdid_data can be retrieved using blk_mq_rq_to_pdu() and id maintenance are now handled by blk-mq through the rq->tag field. * The logic for splitting bio's has been moved into the blk-mq layer. The driver instead notifies the block layer about limited gap support in SG lists. * blk-mq handles timeouts and is reimplemented within nvme_timeout(). This both includes abort handling and command cancelation. * Assignment of nvme queues to CPUs are replaced with the blk-mq version. The current blk-mq strategy is to assign the number of mapped queues and CPUs to provide synergy, while the nvme driver assign as many nvme hw queues as possible. This can be implemented in blk-mq if needed. * NVMe queues are merged with the tags structure of blk-mq. * blk-mq takes care of setup/teardown of nvme queues and guards invalid accesses. Therefore, RCU-usage for nvme queues can be removed. * IO tracing and accounting are handled by blk-mq and therefore removed. * Queue suspension logic is replaced with the logic from the block layer. Contributions in this patch from: Sam Bradshaw <sbradshaw@micron.com> Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Robert Nelson <rlnelson@google.com> Acked-by: Keith Busch <keith.busch@intel.com> Acked-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com> Updated for new ->queue_rq() prototype. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2014-11-04 08:20:14 -07:00
nvme_dev_remove_admin(dev);
nvme_free_queues(dev, 0);
nvme_release_prp_pools(dev);
nvme_dev_unmap(dev);
nvme_put_ctrl(&dev->ctrl);
}
static int nvme_pci_sriov_configure(struct pci_dev *pdev, int numvfs)
{
int ret = 0;
if (numvfs == 0) {
if (pci_vfs_assigned(pdev)) {
dev_warn(&pdev->dev,
"Cannot disable SR-IOV VFs while assigned\n");
return -EPERM;
}
pci_disable_sriov(pdev);
return 0;
}
ret = pci_enable_sriov(pdev, numvfs);
return ret ? ret : numvfs;
}
#ifdef CONFIG_PM_SLEEP
static int nvme_suspend(struct device *dev)
{
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(dev);
struct nvme_dev *ndev = pci_get_drvdata(pdev);
nvme_dev_disable(ndev, true);
return 0;
}
static int nvme_resume(struct device *dev)
{
struct pci_dev *pdev = to_pci_dev(dev);
struct nvme_dev *ndev = pci_get_drvdata(pdev);
nvme_reset_ctrl(&ndev->ctrl);
return 0;
}
#endif
static SIMPLE_DEV_PM_OPS(nvme_dev_pm_ops, nvme_suspend, nvme_resume);
static pci_ers_result_t nvme_error_detected(struct pci_dev *pdev,
pci_channel_state_t state)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev = pci_get_drvdata(pdev);
/*
* A frozen channel requires a reset. When detected, this method will
* shutdown the controller to quiesce. The controller will be restarted
* after the slot reset through driver's slot_reset callback.
*/
switch (state) {
case pci_channel_io_normal:
return PCI_ERS_RESULT_CAN_RECOVER;
case pci_channel_io_frozen:
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device,
"frozen state error detected, reset controller\n");
nvme_dev_disable(dev, false);
return PCI_ERS_RESULT_NEED_RESET;
case pci_channel_io_perm_failure:
dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device,
"failure state error detected, request disconnect\n");
return PCI_ERS_RESULT_DISCONNECT;
}
return PCI_ERS_RESULT_NEED_RESET;
}
static pci_ers_result_t nvme_slot_reset(struct pci_dev *pdev)
{
struct nvme_dev *dev = pci_get_drvdata(pdev);
dev_info(dev->ctrl.device, "restart after slot reset\n");
pci_restore_state(pdev);
nvme_reset_ctrl(&dev->ctrl);
return PCI_ERS_RESULT_RECOVERED;
}
static void nvme_error_resume(struct pci_dev *pdev)
{
pci_cleanup_aer_uncorrect_error_status(pdev);
}
static const struct pci_error_handlers nvme_err_handler = {
.error_detected = nvme_error_detected,
.slot_reset = nvme_slot_reset,
.resume = nvme_error_resume,
.reset_notify = nvme_reset_notify,
};
static const struct pci_device_id nvme_id_table[] = {
{ PCI_VDEVICE(INTEL, 0x0953),
.driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_STRIPE_SIZE |
NVME_QUIRK_DEALLOCATE_ZEROES, },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(INTEL, 0x0a53),
.driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_STRIPE_SIZE |
NVME_QUIRK_DEALLOCATE_ZEROES, },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(INTEL, 0x0a54),
.driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_STRIPE_SIZE |
NVME_QUIRK_DEALLOCATE_ZEROES, },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(INTEL, 0xf1a5), /* Intel 600P/P3100 */
.driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_NO_DEEPEST_PS },
{ PCI_VDEVICE(INTEL, 0x5845), /* Qemu emulated controller */
.driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_IDENTIFY_CNS, },
{ PCI_DEVICE(0x1c58, 0x0003), /* HGST adapter */
.driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_DELAY_BEFORE_CHK_RDY, },
{ PCI_DEVICE(0x1c5f, 0x0540), /* Memblaze Pblaze4 adapter */
.driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_DELAY_BEFORE_CHK_RDY, },
{ PCI_DEVICE(0x144d, 0xa821), /* Samsung PM1725 */
.driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_DELAY_BEFORE_CHK_RDY, },
{ PCI_DEVICE(0x144d, 0xa822), /* Samsung PM1725a */
.driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_DELAY_BEFORE_CHK_RDY, },
{ PCI_DEVICE_CLASS(PCI_CLASS_STORAGE_EXPRESS, 0xffffff) },
{ PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_APPLE, 0x2001) },
{ PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_APPLE, 0x2003) },
{ 0, }
};
MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(pci, nvme_id_table);
static struct pci_driver nvme_driver = {
.name = "nvme",
.id_table = nvme_id_table,
.probe = nvme_probe,
.remove = nvme_remove,
.shutdown = nvme_shutdown,
.driver = {
.pm = &nvme_dev_pm_ops,
},
.sriov_configure = nvme_pci_sriov_configure,
.err_handler = &nvme_err_handler,
};
static int __init nvme_init(void)
{
return pci_register_driver(&nvme_driver);
}
static void __exit nvme_exit(void)
{
pci_unregister_driver(&nvme_driver);
_nvme_check_size();
}
MODULE_AUTHOR("Matthew Wilcox <willy@linux.intel.com>");
MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
MODULE_VERSION("1.0");
module_init(nvme_init);
module_exit(nvme_exit);