43 lines
1.4 KiB
C
43 lines
1.4 KiB
C
/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only */
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/*
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* Copyright © 2015 Intel Corporation.
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*
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* Authors: David Woodhouse <David.Woodhouse@intel.com>
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*/
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#ifndef __INTEL_SVM_H__
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#define __INTEL_SVM_H__
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/* Values for rxwp in fault_cb callback */
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#define SVM_REQ_READ (1<<3)
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#define SVM_REQ_WRITE (1<<2)
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#define SVM_REQ_EXEC (1<<1)
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#define SVM_REQ_PRIV (1<<0)
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/*
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* The SVM_FLAG_SUPERVISOR_MODE flag requests a PASID which can be used only
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* for access to kernel addresses. No IOTLB flushes are automatically done
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* for kernel mappings; it is valid only for access to the kernel's static
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* 1:1 mapping of physical memory — not to vmalloc or even module mappings.
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* A future API addition may permit the use of such ranges, by means of an
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* explicit IOTLB flush call (akin to the DMA API's unmap method).
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*
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* It is unlikely that we will ever hook into flush_tlb_kernel_range() to
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* do such IOTLB flushes automatically.
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*/
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#define SVM_FLAG_SUPERVISOR_MODE BIT(0)
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/*
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* The SVM_FLAG_GUEST_MODE flag is used when a PASID bind is for guest
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* processes. Compared to the host bind, the primary differences are:
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* 1. mm life cycle management
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* 2. fault reporting
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*/
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#define SVM_FLAG_GUEST_MODE BIT(1)
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/*
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* The SVM_FLAG_GUEST_PASID flag is used when a guest has its own PASID space,
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* which requires guest and host PASID translation at both directions.
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*/
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#define SVM_FLAG_GUEST_PASID BIT(2)
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#endif /* __INTEL_SVM_H__ */
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