docs: net: page_pool: document PP_FLAG_DMA_SYNC_DEV parameters

Using PP_FLAG_DMA_SYNC_DEV is a bit confusing. It was perhaps
more obvious when it was introduced but the page pool use
has grown beyond XDP and beyond packet-per-page so now
making the heads and tails out of this feature is not
trivial.

Obviously making the API more user friendly would be
a better fix, but until someone steps up to do that
let's at least document what the parameters are.

Relevant discussion in the first Link.

Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230731114427.0da1f73b@kernel.org/
Reviewed-by: Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@infradead.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Chan <michael.chan@broadcom.com>
Acked-by: Jesper Dangaard Brouer <hawk@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Somnath Kotur <somnath.kotur@broadcom.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230802161821.3621985-2-kuba@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
This commit is contained in:
Jakub Kicinski 2023-08-02 09:18:20 -07:00
parent 3986892646
commit e70380650a
1 changed files with 34 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -109,6 +109,40 @@ a page will cause no race conditions is enough.
caller can then report those stats to the user (perhaps via ethtool,
debugfs, etc.). See below for an example usage of this API.
DMA sync
--------
Driver is always responsible for syncing the pages for the CPU.
Drivers may choose to take care of syncing for the device as well
or set the ``PP_FLAG_DMA_SYNC_DEV`` flag to request that pages
allocated from the page pool are already synced for the device.
If ``PP_FLAG_DMA_SYNC_DEV`` is set, the driver must inform the core what portion
of the buffer has to be synced. This allows the core to avoid syncing the entire
page when the drivers knows that the device only accessed a portion of the page.
Most drivers will reserve headroom in front of the frame. This part
of the buffer is not touched by the device, so to avoid syncing
it drivers can set the ``offset`` field in struct page_pool_params
appropriately.
For pages recycled on the XDP xmit and skb paths the page pool will
use the ``max_len`` member of struct page_pool_params to decide how
much of the page needs to be synced (starting at ``offset``).
When directly freeing pages in the driver (page_pool_put_page())
the ``dma_sync_size`` argument specifies how much of the buffer needs
to be synced.
If in doubt set ``offset`` to 0, ``max_len`` to ``PAGE_SIZE`` and
pass -1 as ``dma_sync_size``. That combination of arguments is always
correct.
Note that the syncing parameters are for the entire page.
This is important to remember when using fragments (``PP_FLAG_PAGE_FRAG``),
where allocated buffers may be smaller than a full page.
Unless the driver author really understands page pool internals
it's recommended to always use ``offset = 0``, ``max_len = PAGE_SIZE``
with fragmented page pools.
Stats API and structures
------------------------
If the kernel is configured with ``CONFIG_PAGE_POOL_STATS=y``, the API