Buffer Sharing and Synchronization ================================== The dma-buf subsystem provides the framework for sharing buffers for hardware (DMA) access across multiple device drivers and subsystems, and for synchronizing asynchronous hardware access. This is used, for example, by drm "prime" multi-GPU support, but is of course not limited to GPU use cases. The three main components of this are: (1) dma-buf, representing a sg_table and exposed to userspace as a file descriptor to allow passing between devices, (2) fence, which provides a mechanism to signal when one device has finished access, and (3) reservation, which manages the shared or exclusive fence(s) associated with the buffer. Shared DMA Buffers ------------------ This document serves as a guide to device-driver writers on what is the dma-buf buffer sharing API, how to use it for exporting and using shared buffers. Any device driver which wishes to be a part of DMA buffer sharing, can do so as either the 'exporter' of buffers, or the 'user' or 'importer' of buffers. Say a driver A wants to use buffers created by driver B, then we call B as the exporter, and A as buffer-user/importer. The exporter - implements and manages operations in :c:type:`struct dma_buf_ops ` for the buffer, - allows other users to share the buffer by using dma_buf sharing APIs, - manages the details of buffer allocation, wrapped in a :c:type:`struct dma_buf `, - decides about the actual backing storage where this allocation happens, - and takes care of any migration of scatterlist - for all (shared) users of this buffer. The buffer-user - is one of (many) sharing users of the buffer. - doesn't need to worry about how the buffer is allocated, or where. - and needs a mechanism to get access to the scatterlist that makes up this buffer in memory, mapped into its own address space, so it can access the same area of memory. This interface is provided by :c:type:`struct dma_buf_attachment `. Any exporters or users of the dma-buf buffer sharing framework must have a 'select DMA_SHARED_BUFFER' in their respective Kconfigs. Userspace Interface Notes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mostly a DMA buffer file descriptor is simply an opaque object for userspace, and hence the generic interface exposed is very minimal. There's a few things to consider though: - Since kernel 3.12 the dma-buf FD supports the llseek system call, but only with offset=0 and whence=SEEK_END|SEEK_SET. SEEK_SET is supported to allow the usual size discover pattern size = SEEK_END(0); SEEK_SET(0). Every other llseek operation will report -EINVAL. If llseek on dma-buf FDs isn't support the kernel will report -ESPIPE for all cases. Userspace can use this to detect support for discovering the dma-buf size using llseek. - In order to avoid fd leaks on exec, the FD_CLOEXEC flag must be set on the file descriptor. This is not just a resource leak, but a potential security hole. It could give the newly exec'd application access to buffers, via the leaked fd, to which it should otherwise not be permitted access. The problem with doing this via a separate fcntl() call, versus doing it atomically when the fd is created, is that this is inherently racy in a multi-threaded app[3]. The issue is made worse when it is library code opening/creating the file descriptor, as the application may not even be aware of the fd's. To avoid this problem, userspace must have a way to request O_CLOEXEC flag be set when the dma-buf fd is created. So any API provided by the exporting driver to create a dmabuf fd must provide a way to let userspace control setting of O_CLOEXEC flag passed in to dma_buf_fd(). - Memory mapping the contents of the DMA buffer is also supported. See the discussion below on `CPU Access to DMA Buffer Objects`_ for the full details. - The DMA buffer FD is also pollable, see `Fence Poll Support`_ below for details. Basic Operation and Device DMA Access ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c :doc: dma buf device access CPU Access to DMA Buffer Objects ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c :doc: cpu access Implicit Fence Poll Support ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c :doc: implicit fence polling Kernel Functions and Structures Reference ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c :export: .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-buf.h :internal: Reservation Objects ------------------- .. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-resv.c :doc: Reservation Object Overview .. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-resv.c :export: .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-resv.h :internal: DMA Fences ---------- .. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c :doc: DMA fences overview DMA Fences Functions Reference ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c :export: .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-fence.h :internal: Seqno Hardware Fences ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/seqno-fence.h :internal: DMA Fence Array ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence-array.c :export: .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-fence-array.h :internal: DMA Fence uABI/Sync File ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/sync_file.c :export: .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/sync_file.h :internal: