Commit 9a8ddb35 authored by Xiaochen Shen's avatar Xiaochen Shen Committed by Vinod Koul

dmaengine: idxd: Make read buffer sysfs attributes invisible for Intel IAA

In current code, the following sysfs attributes are exposed to user to
show or update the values:
  max_read_buffers (max_tokens)
  read_buffer_limit (token_limit)
  group/read_buffers_allowed (group/tokens_allowed)
  group/read_buffers_reserved (group/tokens_reserved)
  group/use_read_buffer_limit (group/use_token_limit)

>From Intel IAA spec [1], Intel IAA does not support Read Buffer
allocation control. So these sysfs attributes should not be supported on
IAA device.

Fix this issue by making these sysfs attributes invisible through
is_visible() filter when the device is IAA.

Add description in the ABI documentation to mention that these
attributes are not visible when the device does not support Read Buffer
allocation control.

[1]: https://cdrdv2.intel.com/v1/dl/getContent/721858

Fixes: fde212e4 ("dmaengine: idxd: deprecate token sysfs attributes for read buffers")
Fixes: c52ca478 ("dmaengine: idxd: add configuration component of driver")
Signed-off-by: default avatarXiaochen Shen <xiaochen.shen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: default avatarDave Jiang <dave.jiang@intel.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20221022074949.11719-1-xiaochen.shen@intel.comSigned-off-by: default avatarVinod Koul <vkoul@kernel.org>
parent 3e98b9bd
......@@ -50,6 +50,8 @@ Description: The total number of read buffers supported by this device.
The read buffers represent resources within the DSA
implementation, and these resources are allocated by engines to
support operations. See DSA spec v1.2 9.2.4 Total Read Buffers.
It's not visible when the device does not support Read Buffer
allocation control.
What: /sys/bus/dsa/devices/dsa<m>/max_transfer_size
Date: Oct 25, 2019
......@@ -123,6 +125,8 @@ Contact: dmaengine@vger.kernel.org
Description: The maximum number of read buffers that may be in use at
one time by operations that access low bandwidth memory in the
device. See DSA spec v1.2 9.2.8 GENCFG on Global Read Buffer Limit.
It's not visible when the device does not support Read Buffer
allocation control.
What: /sys/bus/dsa/devices/dsa<m>/cmd_status
Date: Aug 28, 2020
......@@ -252,6 +256,8 @@ KernelVersion: 5.17.0
Contact: dmaengine@vger.kernel.org
Description: Enable the use of global read buffer limit for the group. See DSA
spec v1.2 9.2.18 GRPCFG Use Global Read Buffer Limit.
It's not visible when the device does not support Read Buffer
allocation control.
What: /sys/bus/dsa/devices/group<m>.<n>/read_buffers_allowed
Date: Dec 10, 2021
......@@ -260,6 +266,8 @@ Contact: dmaengine@vger.kernel.org
Description: Indicates max number of read buffers that may be in use at one time
by all engines in the group. See DSA spec v1.2 9.2.18 GRPCFG Read
Buffers Allowed.
It's not visible when the device does not support Read Buffer
allocation control.
What: /sys/bus/dsa/devices/group<m>.<n>/read_buffers_reserved
Date: Dec 10, 2021
......@@ -268,6 +276,8 @@ Contact: dmaengine@vger.kernel.org
Description: Indicates the number of Read Buffers reserved for the use of
engines in the group. See DSA spec v1.2 9.2.18 GRPCFG Read Buffers
Reserved.
It's not visible when the device does not support Read Buffer
allocation control.
What: /sys/bus/dsa/devices/group<m>.<n>/desc_progress_limit
Date: Sept 14, 2022
......
......@@ -528,6 +528,22 @@ static bool idxd_group_attr_progress_limit_invisible(struct attribute *attr,
!idxd->hw.group_cap.progress_limit;
}
static bool idxd_group_attr_read_buffers_invisible(struct attribute *attr,
struct idxd_device *idxd)
{
/*
* Intel IAA does not support Read Buffer allocation control,
* make these attributes invisible.
*/
return (attr == &dev_attr_group_use_token_limit.attr ||
attr == &dev_attr_group_use_read_buffer_limit.attr ||
attr == &dev_attr_group_tokens_allowed.attr ||
attr == &dev_attr_group_read_buffers_allowed.attr ||
attr == &dev_attr_group_tokens_reserved.attr ||
attr == &dev_attr_group_read_buffers_reserved.attr) &&
idxd->data->type == IDXD_TYPE_IAX;
}
static umode_t idxd_group_attr_visible(struct kobject *kobj,
struct attribute *attr, int n)
{
......@@ -538,6 +554,9 @@ static umode_t idxd_group_attr_visible(struct kobject *kobj,
if (idxd_group_attr_progress_limit_invisible(attr, idxd))
return 0;
if (idxd_group_attr_read_buffers_invisible(attr, idxd))
return 0;
return attr->mode;
}
......@@ -1552,6 +1571,20 @@ static bool idxd_device_attr_max_batch_size_invisible(struct attribute *attr,
idxd->data->type == IDXD_TYPE_IAX;
}
static bool idxd_device_attr_read_buffers_invisible(struct attribute *attr,
struct idxd_device *idxd)
{
/*
* Intel IAA does not support Read Buffer allocation control,
* make these attributes invisible.
*/
return (attr == &dev_attr_max_tokens.attr ||
attr == &dev_attr_max_read_buffers.attr ||
attr == &dev_attr_token_limit.attr ||
attr == &dev_attr_read_buffer_limit.attr) &&
idxd->data->type == IDXD_TYPE_IAX;
}
static umode_t idxd_device_attr_visible(struct kobject *kobj,
struct attribute *attr, int n)
{
......@@ -1561,6 +1594,9 @@ static umode_t idxd_device_attr_visible(struct kobject *kobj,
if (idxd_device_attr_max_batch_size_invisible(attr, idxd))
return 0;
if (idxd_device_attr_read_buffers_invisible(attr, idxd))
return 0;
return attr->mode;
}
......
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