WSL2-Linux-Kernel/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pci/pci-iommu.txt

172 строки
3.7 KiB
Plaintext

This document describes the generic device tree binding for describing the
relationship between PCI(e) devices and IOMMU(s).
Each PCI(e) device under a root complex is uniquely identified by its Requester
ID (AKA RID). A Requester ID is a triplet of a Bus number, Device number, and
Function number.
For the purpose of this document, when treated as a numeric value, a RID is
formatted such that:
* Bits [15:8] are the Bus number.
* Bits [7:3] are the Device number.
* Bits [2:0] are the Function number.
* Any other bits required for padding must be zero.
IOMMUs may distinguish PCI devices through sideband data derived from the
Requester ID. While a given PCI device can only master through one IOMMU, a
root complex may split masters across a set of IOMMUs (e.g. with one IOMMU per
bus).
The generic 'iommus' property is insufficient to describe this relationship,
and a mechanism is required to map from a PCI device to its IOMMU and sideband
data.
For generic IOMMU bindings, see
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iommu/iommu.txt.
PCI root complex
================
Optional properties
-------------------
- iommu-map: Maps a Requester ID to an IOMMU and associated IOMMU specifier
data.
The property is an arbitrary number of tuples of
(rid-base,iommu,iommu-base,length).
Any RID r in the interval [rid-base, rid-base + length) is associated with
the listed IOMMU, with the IOMMU specifier (r - rid-base + iommu-base).
- iommu-map-mask: A mask to be applied to each Requester ID prior to being
mapped to an IOMMU specifier per the iommu-map property.
Example (1)
===========
/ {
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <1>;
iommu: iommu@a {
reg = <0xa 0x1>;
compatible = "vendor,some-iommu";
#iommu-cells = <1>;
};
pci: pci@f {
reg = <0xf 0x1>;
compatible = "vendor,pcie-root-complex";
device_type = "pci";
/*
* The sideband data provided to the IOMMU is the RID,
* identity-mapped.
*/
iommu-map = <0x0 &iommu 0x0 0x10000>;
};
};
Example (2)
===========
/ {
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <1>;
iommu: iommu@a {
reg = <0xa 0x1>;
compatible = "vendor,some-iommu";
#iommu-cells = <1>;
};
pci: pci@f {
reg = <0xf 0x1>;
compatible = "vendor,pcie-root-complex";
device_type = "pci";
/*
* The sideband data provided to the IOMMU is the RID with the
* function bits masked out.
*/
iommu-map = <0x0 &iommu 0x0 0x10000>;
iommu-map-mask = <0xfff8>;
};
};
Example (3)
===========
/ {
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <1>;
iommu: iommu@a {
reg = <0xa 0x1>;
compatible = "vendor,some-iommu";
#iommu-cells = <1>;
};
pci: pci@f {
reg = <0xf 0x1>;
compatible = "vendor,pcie-root-complex";
device_type = "pci";
/*
* The sideband data provided to the IOMMU is the RID,
* but the high bits of the bus number are flipped.
*/
iommu-map = <0x0000 &iommu 0x8000 0x8000>,
<0x8000 &iommu 0x0000 0x8000>;
};
};
Example (4)
===========
/ {
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <1>;
iommu_a: iommu@a {
reg = <0xa 0x1>;
compatible = "vendor,some-iommu";
#iommu-cells = <1>;
};
iommu_b: iommu@b {
reg = <0xb 0x1>;
compatible = "vendor,some-iommu";
#iommu-cells = <1>;
};
iommu_c: iommu@c {
reg = <0xc 0x1>;
compatible = "vendor,some-iommu";
#iommu-cells = <1>;
};
pci: pci@f {
reg = <0xf 0x1>;
compatible = "vendor,pcie-root-complex";
device_type = "pci";
/*
* Devices with bus number 0-127 are mastered via IOMMU
* a, with sideband data being RID[14:0].
* Devices with bus number 128-255 are mastered via
* IOMMU b, with sideband data being RID[14:0].
* No devices master via IOMMU c.
*/
iommu-map = <0x0000 &iommu_a 0x0000 0x8000>,
<0x8000 &iommu_b 0x0000 0x8000>;
};
};