[Patch v3 2/6] cifs: Allocate validate negotiation request through kmalloc

Tom Talpey tom at talpey.com
Wed Apr 18 17:40:16 UTC 2018


On 4/18/2018 1:11 PM, Long Li wrote:
>> Subject: Re: [Patch v3 2/6] cifs: Allocate validate negotiation request through
>> kmalloc
>>
>> On 4/18/2018 9:08 AM, David Laight wrote:
>>> From: Tom Talpey
>>>> Sent: 18 April 2018 12:32
>>> ...
>>>> On 4/17/2018 8:33 PM, Long Li wrote:
>>>>> From: Long Li <longli at microsoft.com>
>>>>>
>>>>> The data buffer allocated on the stack can't be DMA'ed, and hence
>>>>> can't send through RDMA via SMB Direct.
>>>>
>>>> This comment is confusing. Any registered memory can be DMA'd, need
>>>> to state the reason for the choice here more clearly.
>>>
>>> The stack could be allocated with vmalloc().
>>> In which case the pages might not be physically contiguous and there
>>> is no
>>> (sensible) call to get the physical address required by the dma
>>> controller (or other bus master).
>>
>> Memory registration does not requires pages to be physically contiguous.
>> RDMA Regions can and do support very large physical page scatter/gather,
>> and the adapter DMA's them readily. Is this the only reason?
> 
> ib_dma_map_page will return an invalid DMA address for a buffer on stack. Even worse, this incorrect address can't be detected by ib_dma_mapping_error. Sending data from this address to hardware will not fail, but the remote peer will get junk data.
> 
> I think it makes sense as stack is dynamic and can shrink as I/O proceeds, so the buffer is gone. Other kernel code use only data on the heap for DMA, e.g. BLK/SCSI layer never use buffer on the stack to send data.

I totally agree that registering the stack is a bad idea. I mainly
suggest that you capture these fundamental ib_dma* reasons in the
commit. There's no other practical reason why the original approach
would not work.

Tom.



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