[RFC,v2,RESEND] drivers: ata: ahci_sunxi: Increased SATA/AHCI DMA TX/RX FIFOs

Message ID 20190512205954.18435-1-um@mutluit.com
State New
Headers show
Series
  • [RFC,v2,RESEND] drivers: ata: ahci_sunxi: Increased SATA/AHCI DMA TX/RX FIFOs
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Commit Message

Uenal Mutlu May 12, 2019, 8:59 p.m. UTC
Increasing the SATA/AHCI DMA TX/RX FIFOs (P0DMACR.TXTS and .RXTS, ie.
TX_TRANSACTION_SIZE and RX_TRANSACTION_SIZE) from default 0x0 each
to 0x3 each, gives a write performance boost of 120 MiB/s to 132 MiB/s
from lame 36 MiB/s to 45 MiB/s previously.
Read performance is about 200 MiB/s.
[tested on SSD using dd bs=2K/4K/8K/12K/16K/24K/32K: peak-perf at 12K].

Tested on the Banana Pi R1 (aka Lamobo R1) and Banana Pi M1 SBCs
with Allwinner A20 32bit-SoCs (ARMv7-a / arm-linux-gnueabihf).
These devices are RaspberryPi-like small devices.

This problem of slow SATA write-speed with these small devices lasts now
for more than 5 years. Many commentators throughout the years wrongly
assumed the slow write speed was a hardware limitation. This patch finally
solves the problem, which in fact was just a hard-to-fix software problem
(b/c of lack of documentation by the SoC-maker Allwinner Technology).

RFC: Since more than about 25 similar SBC/SoC models do use the
ahci_sunxi driver, users are encouraged to test it on all the
affected boards and give feedback.

Lists of the affected sunxi and other boards and SoCs with SATA using
the ahci_sunxi driver:
  $ grep -i -e "^&ahci" arch/arm/boot/dts/sun*dts
  and http://linux-sunxi.org/SATA#Devices_with_SATA_ports
  See also http://linux-sunxi.org/Category:Devices_with_SATA_port

Patch v2:
  - Commented the patch in-place in ahci_sunxi.c
  - With bs=12K and no conv=... passed to dd, the write performance
    rises further to 132 MiB/s
  - Changed MB/s to MiB/s
  - Posted the story behind the patch:
    http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1905.1/03506.html
  - Posted a dd test script to find optimal bs, and some results:
    https://bit.ly/2YoOzEM

Patch v1:
  - States bs=4K for dd and a write performance of 120 MiB/s

Signed-off-by: Uenal Mutlu <um@mutluit.com>
---
 drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c | 47 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
 1 file changed, 45 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

Comments

Hans de Goede May 13, 2019, 7:44 a.m. UTC | #1
Hi,

On 12-05-19 22:59, Uenal Mutlu wrote:
> Increasing the SATA/AHCI DMA TX/RX FIFOs (P0DMACR.TXTS and .RXTS, ie.
> TX_TRANSACTION_SIZE and RX_TRANSACTION_SIZE) from default 0x0 each
> to 0x3 each, gives a write performance boost of 120 MiB/s to 132 MiB/s
> from lame 36 MiB/s to 45 MiB/s previously.
> Read performance is about 200 MiB/s.
> [tested on SSD using dd bs=2K/4K/8K/12K/16K/24K/32K: peak-perf at 12K].
> 
> Tested on the Banana Pi R1 (aka Lamobo R1) and Banana Pi M1 SBCs
> with Allwinner A20 32bit-SoCs (ARMv7-a / arm-linux-gnueabihf).
> These devices are RaspberryPi-like small devices.
> 
> This problem of slow SATA write-speed with these small devices lasts now
> for more than 5 years. Many commentators throughout the years wrongly
> assumed the slow write speed was a hardware limitation. This patch finally
> solves the problem, which in fact was just a hard-to-fix software problem
> (b/c of lack of documentation by the SoC-maker Allwinner Technology).
> 
> RFC: Since more than about 25 similar SBC/SoC models do use the
> ahci_sunxi driver, users are encouraged to test it on all the
> affected boards and give feedback

The SATA controller on these boards is inside the A10/A20 SoC, the
A10 and A20 use the same controller, so it is the same on all the boards.

IOW I don't see this only being tested on 1 board as a reason for the patch
to be RFC.

> Lists of the affected sunxi and other boards and SoCs with SATA using
> the ahci_sunxi driver:
>    $ grep -i -e "^&ahci" arch/arm/boot/dts/sun*dts
>    and http://linux-sunxi.org/SATA#Devices_with_SATA_ports
>    See also http://linux-sunxi.org/Category:Devices_with_SATA_port
> 
> Patch v2:
>    - Commented the patch in-place in ahci_sunxi.c
>    - With bs=12K and no conv=... passed to dd, the write performance
>      rises further to 132 MiB/s
>    - Changed MB/s to MiB/s
>    - Posted the story behind the patch:
>      http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1905.1/03506.html
>    - Posted a dd test script to find optimal bs, and some results:
>      https://bit.ly/2YoOzEM
> 
> Patch v1:
>    - States bs=4K for dd and a write performance of 120 MiB/s
> 
> Signed-off-by: Uenal Mutlu <um@mutluit.com>
> ---
>   drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c | 47 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
>   1 file changed, 45 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c b/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c
> index 911710643305..ed19f19808c5 100644
> --- a/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c
> +++ b/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c
> @@ -157,8 +157,51 @@ static void ahci_sunxi_start_engine(struct ata_port *ap)
>   	void __iomem *port_mmio = ahci_port_base(ap);
>   	struct ahci_host_priv *hpriv = ap->host->private_data;
>   
> -	/* Setup DMA before DMA start */
> -	sunxi_clrsetbits(hpriv->mmio + AHCI_P0DMACR, 0x0000ff00, 0x00004400);
> +	/* Setup DMA before DMA start
> +	 *
> +	 * NOTE: A similar SoC with SATA/AHCI by Texas Instruments documents
> +	 *   this Vendor Specific Port (P0DMACR, aka PxDMACR) in its
> +	 *   User's Guide document (TMS320C674x/OMAP-L1x Processor
> +	 *   Serial ATA (SATA) Controller, Literature Number: SPRUGJ8C,
> +	 *   March 2011, Chapter 4.33 Port DMA Control Register (P0DMACR),
> +	 *   p.68, https://www.ti.com/lit/ug/sprugj8c/sprugj8c.pdf)
> +	 *   as equivalent to the following struct:
> +	 *
> +	 *   struct AHCI_P0DMACR_t
> +	 *     {
> +	 *       unsigned TXTS     : 4,
> +	 *                RXTS     : 4,
> +	 *                TXABL    : 4,
> +	 *                RXABL    : 4,
> +	 *                Reserved : 16;
> +	 *     };
> +	 *
> +	 *   TXTS: Transmit Transaction Size (TX_TRANSACTION_SIZE).
> +	 *     This field defines the DMA transaction size in DWORDs for
> +	 *     transmit (system bus read, device write) operation. [...]
> +	 *
> +	 *   RXTS: Receive Transaction Size (RX_TRANSACTION_SIZE).
> +	 *     This field defines the Port DMA transaction size in DWORDs
> +	 *     for receive (system bus write, device read) operation. [...]
> +	 *
> +	 *   TXABL: Transmit Burst Limit.
> +	 *     This field allows software to limit the VBUSP master read
> +	 *     burst size. [...]
> +	 *
> +	 *   RXABL: Receive Burst Limit.
> +	 *     Allows software to limit the VBUSP master write burst
> +	 *     size. [...]
> +	 *
> +	 *   Reserved: Reserved.
> +	 *
> +	 *
> +	 * NOTE: According to the above document, the following alternative
> +	 *   to the code below could perhaps be a better option
> +	 *   (or preparation) for possible further improvements later:
> +	 *     sunxi_clrsetbits(hpriv->mmio + AHCI_P0DMACR, 0x0000ffff,
> +	 *		0x00000033);
> +	 */
> +	sunxi_clrsetbits(hpriv->mmio + AHCI_P0DMACR, 0x0000ffff, 0x00004433);

Have you tried / benchmarked the 0x00000033 option?

Regards,

Hans
Maxime Ripard May 13, 2019, 9:59 a.m. UTC | #2
Hi,

On Sun, May 12, 2019 at 10:59:54PM +0200, Uenal Mutlu wrote:
> Increasing the SATA/AHCI DMA TX/RX FIFOs (P0DMACR.TXTS and .RXTS, ie.
> TX_TRANSACTION_SIZE and RX_TRANSACTION_SIZE) from default 0x0 each
> to 0x3 each, gives a write performance boost of 120 MiB/s to 132 MiB/s
> from lame 36 MiB/s to 45 MiB/s previously.
> Read performance is about 200 MiB/s.
> [tested on SSD using dd bs=2K/4K/8K/12K/16K/24K/32K: peak-perf at 12K].
>
> Tested on the Banana Pi R1 (aka Lamobo R1) and Banana Pi M1 SBCs
> with Allwinner A20 32bit-SoCs (ARMv7-a / arm-linux-gnueabihf).
> These devices are RaspberryPi-like small devices.
>
> This problem of slow SATA write-speed with these small devices lasts now
> for more than 5 years. Many commentators throughout the years wrongly
> assumed the slow write speed was a hardware limitation. This patch finally
> solves the problem, which in fact was just a hard-to-fix software problem
> (b/c of lack of documentation by the SoC-maker Allwinner Technology).
>
> RFC: Since more than about 25 similar SBC/SoC models do use the
> ahci_sunxi driver, users are encouraged to test it on all the
> affected boards and give feedback.
>
> Lists of the affected sunxi and other boards and SoCs with SATA using
> the ahci_sunxi driver:
>   $ grep -i -e "^&ahci" arch/arm/boot/dts/sun*dts
>   and http://linux-sunxi.org/SATA#Devices_with_SATA_ports
>   See also http://linux-sunxi.org/Category:Devices_with_SATA_port
>
> Patch v2:
>   - Commented the patch in-place in ahci_sunxi.c
>   - With bs=12K and no conv=... passed to dd, the write performance
>     rises further to 132 MiB/s
>   - Changed MB/s to MiB/s
>   - Posted the story behind the patch:
>     http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1905.1/03506.html
>   - Posted a dd test script to find optimal bs, and some results:
>     https://bit.ly/2YoOzEM
>
> Patch v1:
>   - States bs=4K for dd and a write performance of 120 MiB/s
>
> Signed-off-by: Uenal Mutlu <um@mutluit.com>

Acked-by: Maxime Ripard <maxime.ripard@bootlin.com>

Just a minor nitpick though, the part starting with RFC: and with the
version changelog should be after the --- below so that it doesn't get
applied as part of the commit log.

Maxime

--
Maxime Ripard, Bootlin
Embedded Linux and Kernel engineering
https://bootlin.com
Uenal Mutlu May 13, 2019, 10:34 a.m. UTC | #3
Hans de Goede wrote on 05/13/2019 09:44 AM:
> On 12-05-19 22:59, Uenal Mutlu wrote:
>> Increasing the SATA/AHCI DMA TX/RX FIFOs (P0DMACR.TXTS and .RXTS, ie.
>> TX_TRANSACTION_SIZE and RX_TRANSACTION_SIZE) from default 0x0 each
>> to 0x3 each, gives a write performance boost of 120 MiB/s to 132 MiB/s
>> from lame 36 MiB/s to 45 MiB/s previously.
>> Read performance is about 200 MiB/s.
>> [tested on SSD using dd bs=2K/4K/8K/12K/16K/24K/32K: peak-perf at 12K].
>>
>> Tested on the Banana Pi R1 (aka Lamobo R1) and Banana Pi M1 SBCs
>> with Allwinner A20 32bit-SoCs (ARMv7-a / arm-linux-gnueabihf).
>> These devices are RaspberryPi-like small devices.
>>
>> This problem of slow SATA write-speed with these small devices lasts now
>> for more than 5 years. Many commentators throughout the years wrongly
>> assumed the slow write speed was a hardware limitation. This patch finally
>> solves the problem, which in fact was just a hard-to-fix software problem
>> (b/c of lack of documentation by the SoC-maker Allwinner Technology).
>>
>> RFC: Since more than about 25 similar SBC/SoC models do use the
>> ahci_sunxi driver, users are encouraged to test it on all the
>> affected boards and give feedback
>
> The SATA controller on these boards is inside the A10/A20 SoC, the
> A10 and A20 use the same controller, so it is the same on all the boards.

Ok, thanks for the clarification.
This fact of course simplifies the whole issue.

> IOW I don't see this only being tested on 1 board as a reason for the patch
> to be RFC.

I just wanted to be on the safe side :-) since I personally
have only 2 of the 25+ affected systems here for testing.
But I now understand that if it works on the tested two
A20 systems, then it normally should work on all of the
affected different boards/models as they all are using
the same SATA/AHCI-IP-Core, much like you also stated.

But of course I still wouldn't like it if someone loses data
and possibly blames my patch or even me myself, as the issue
is indeed a sensitive one where data loss (corruption of the
filesystem, partition, or the partition table) can indeed happen.
To be honest, it happened to me during my experiments with
some wrong, too high, values.
But I think the current version is mature and stable.

>> Lists of the affected sunxi and other boards and SoCs with SATA using
>> the ahci_sunxi driver:
>>    $ grep -i -e "^&ahci" arch/arm/boot/dts/sun*dts
>>    and http://linux-sunxi.org/SATA#Devices_with_SATA_ports
>>    See also http://linux-sunxi.org/Category:Devices_with_SATA_port
>>
>> Patch v2:
>>    - Commented the patch in-place in ahci_sunxi.c
>>    - With bs=12K and no conv=... passed to dd, the write performance
>>      rises further to 132 MiB/s
>>    - Changed MB/s to MiB/s
>>    - Posted the story behind the patch:
>>      http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1905.1/03506.html
>>    - Posted a dd test script to find optimal bs, and some results:
>>      https://bit.ly/2YoOzEM
>>
>> Patch v1:
>>    - States bs=4K for dd and a write performance of 120 MiB/s
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Uenal Mutlu <um@mutluit.com>
>> ---
>>   drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c | 47 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
>>   1 file changed, 45 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
>>
>> diff --git a/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c b/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c
>> index 911710643305..ed19f19808c5 100644
>> --- a/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c
>> +++ b/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c
>> @@ -157,8 +157,51 @@ static void ahci_sunxi_start_engine(struct ata_port *ap)
>>       void __iomem *port_mmio = ahci_port_base(ap);
>>       struct ahci_host_priv *hpriv = ap->host->private_data;
>> -    /* Setup DMA before DMA start */
>> -    sunxi_clrsetbits(hpriv->mmio + AHCI_P0DMACR, 0x0000ff00, 0x00004400);
>> +    /* Setup DMA before DMA start
>> +     *
>> +     * NOTE: A similar SoC with SATA/AHCI by Texas Instruments documents
>> +     *   this Vendor Specific Port (P0DMACR, aka PxDMACR) in its
>> +     *   User's Guide document (TMS320C674x/OMAP-L1x Processor
>> +     *   Serial ATA (SATA) Controller, Literature Number: SPRUGJ8C,
>> +     *   March 2011, Chapter 4.33 Port DMA Control Register (P0DMACR),
>> +     *   p.68, https://www.ti.com/lit/ug/sprugj8c/sprugj8c.pdf)
>> +     *   as equivalent to the following struct:
>> +     *
>> +     *   struct AHCI_P0DMACR_t
>> +     *     {
>> +     *       unsigned TXTS     : 4,
>> +     *                RXTS     : 4,
>> +     *                TXABL    : 4,
>> +     *                RXABL    : 4,
>> +     *                Reserved : 16;
>> +     *     };
>> +     *
>> +     *   TXTS: Transmit Transaction Size (TX_TRANSACTION_SIZE).
>> +     *     This field defines the DMA transaction size in DWORDs for
>> +     *     transmit (system bus read, device write) operation. [...]
>> +     *
>> +     *   RXTS: Receive Transaction Size (RX_TRANSACTION_SIZE).
>> +     *     This field defines the Port DMA transaction size in DWORDs
>> +     *     for receive (system bus write, device read) operation. [...]
>> +     *
>> +     *   TXABL: Transmit Burst Limit.
>> +     *     This field allows software to limit the VBUSP master read
>> +     *     burst size. [...]
>> +     *
>> +     *   RXABL: Receive Burst Limit.
>> +     *     Allows software to limit the VBUSP master write burst
>> +     *     size. [...]
>> +     *
>> +     *   Reserved: Reserved.
>> +     *
>> +     *
>> +     * NOTE: According to the above document, the following alternative
>> +     *   to the code below could perhaps be a better option
>> +     *   (or preparation) for possible further improvements later:
>> +     *     sunxi_clrsetbits(hpriv->mmio + AHCI_P0DMACR, 0x0000ffff,
>> +     *        0x00000033);
>> +     */
>> +    sunxi_clrsetbits(hpriv->mmio + AHCI_P0DMACR, 0x0000ffff, 0x00004433);
>
> Have you tried / benchmarked the 0x00000033 option?

Yes, I did, but not that extensively yet. So far I couldn't see any
difference in the outcome.
There is in the TI doc just the following statement regarding this:

"Note that programming a burst size of greater than a transaction size,
while not invalid, is meaningless because the DMA maximizes out at
transaction size." (Ch. 3.4 DMA, p.15 in the TI doc).

I understand this as a neutral statement, ie. it doesn't hurt or make
any difference in practice if one sets TXABL effectively higher than
TXTS and/or RXABL effectively higher than RXTS,
FYI: these value are just some index-values, ie. index-value x means real value y.
0 for TXABL and/or RXABL means "Limit VBUSP burst size to 256 DWORDS",
ie. to the highest possible value for Transmit Burst Limit (TXABL) and
Receive Burst Limit (RXABL), respectively.

I'll test this alternative version now extensively in my test series.

But I could need an advice on what step I should take next in this
issue regarding getting the patch merged into the mainline kernel.
Shall I post a v3 of the patch with RFC removed, some more comments
added, and switching to the above alternative function argument
together with its test results, or shall I do these additions only
after the current version has already been merged into the kernel?
[actually I'm now unsure if patches with "RFC" flag ever get merged :-].

Thx.

> Regards,
>
> Hans
Hans de Goede May 13, 2019, 11:20 a.m. UTC | #4
Hi,

On 13-05-19 12:34, U.Mutlu wrote:
> Hans de Goede wrote on 05/13/2019 09:44 AM:
>> On 12-05-19 22:59, Uenal Mutlu wrote:
>>> Increasing the SATA/AHCI DMA TX/RX FIFOs (P0DMACR.TXTS and .RXTS, ie.
>>> TX_TRANSACTION_SIZE and RX_TRANSACTION_SIZE) from default 0x0 each
>>> to 0x3 each, gives a write performance boost of 120 MiB/s to 132 MiB/s
>>> from lame 36 MiB/s to 45 MiB/s previously.
>>> Read performance is about 200 MiB/s.
>>> [tested on SSD using dd bs=2K/4K/8K/12K/16K/24K/32K: peak-perf at 12K].
>>>
>>> Tested on the Banana Pi R1 (aka Lamobo R1) and Banana Pi M1 SBCs
>>> with Allwinner A20 32bit-SoCs (ARMv7-a / arm-linux-gnueabihf).
>>> These devices are RaspberryPi-like small devices.
>>>
>>> This problem of slow SATA write-speed with these small devices lasts now
>>> for more than 5 years. Many commentators throughout the years wrongly
>>> assumed the slow write speed was a hardware limitation. This patch finally
>>> solves the problem, which in fact was just a hard-to-fix software problem
>>> (b/c of lack of documentation by the SoC-maker Allwinner Technology).
>>>
>>> RFC: Since more than about 25 similar SBC/SoC models do use the
>>> ahci_sunxi driver, users are encouraged to test it on all the
>>> affected boards and give feedback
>>
>> The SATA controller on these boards is inside the A10/A20 SoC, the
>> A10 and A20 use the same controller, so it is the same on all the boards.
> 
> Ok, thanks for the clarification.
> This fact of course simplifies the whole issue.
> 
>> IOW I don't see this only being tested on 1 board as a reason for the patch
>> to be RFC.
> 
> I just wanted to be on the safe side :-) since I personally
> have only 2 of the 25+ affected systems here for testing.
> But I now understand that if it works on the tested two
> A20 systems, then it normally should work on all of the
> affected different boards/models as they all are using
> the same SATA/AHCI-IP-Core, much like you also stated.
> 
> But of course I still wouldn't like it if someone loses data
> and possibly blames my patch or even me myself, as the issue
> is indeed a sensitive one where data loss (corruption of the
> filesystem, partition, or the partition table) can indeed happen.
> To be honest, it happened to me during my experiments with
> some wrong, too high, values.
> But I think the current version is mature and stable.
> 
>>> Lists of the affected sunxi and other boards and SoCs with SATA using
>>> the ahci_sunxi driver:
>>>    $ grep -i -e "^&ahci" arch/arm/boot/dts/sun*dts
>>>    and http://linux-sunxi.org/SATA#Devices_with_SATA_ports
>>>    See also http://linux-sunxi.org/Category:Devices_with_SATA_port
>>>
>>> Patch v2:
>>>    - Commented the patch in-place in ahci_sunxi.c
>>>    - With bs=12K and no conv=... passed to dd, the write performance
>>>      rises further to 132 MiB/s
>>>    - Changed MB/s to MiB/s
>>>    - Posted the story behind the patch:
>>>      http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1905.1/03506.html
>>>    - Posted a dd test script to find optimal bs, and some results:
>>>      https://bit.ly/2YoOzEM
>>>
>>> Patch v1:
>>>    - States bs=4K for dd and a write performance of 120 MiB/s
>>>
>>> Signed-off-by: Uenal Mutlu <um@mutluit.com>
>>> ---
>>>   drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c | 47 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
>>>   1 file changed, 45 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
>>>
>>> diff --git a/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c b/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c
>>> index 911710643305..ed19f19808c5 100644
>>> --- a/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c
>>> +++ b/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c
>>> @@ -157,8 +157,51 @@ static void ahci_sunxi_start_engine(struct ata_port *ap)
>>>       void __iomem *port_mmio = ahci_port_base(ap);
>>>       struct ahci_host_priv *hpriv = ap->host->private_data;
>>> -    /* Setup DMA before DMA start */
>>> -    sunxi_clrsetbits(hpriv->mmio + AHCI_P0DMACR, 0x0000ff00, 0x00004400);
>>> +    /* Setup DMA before DMA start
>>> +     *
>>> +     * NOTE: A similar SoC with SATA/AHCI by Texas Instruments documents
>>> +     *   this Vendor Specific Port (P0DMACR, aka PxDMACR) in its
>>> +     *   User's Guide document (TMS320C674x/OMAP-L1x Processor
>>> +     *   Serial ATA (SATA) Controller, Literature Number: SPRUGJ8C,
>>> +     *   March 2011, Chapter 4.33 Port DMA Control Register (P0DMACR),
>>> +     *   p.68, https://www.ti.com/lit/ug/sprugj8c/sprugj8c.pdf)
>>> +     *   as equivalent to the following struct:
>>> +     *
>>> +     *   struct AHCI_P0DMACR_t
>>> +     *     {
>>> +     *       unsigned TXTS     : 4,
>>> +     *                RXTS     : 4,
>>> +     *                TXABL    : 4,
>>> +     *                RXABL    : 4,
>>> +     *                Reserved : 16;
>>> +     *     };
>>> +     *
>>> +     *   TXTS: Transmit Transaction Size (TX_TRANSACTION_SIZE).
>>> +     *     This field defines the DMA transaction size in DWORDs for
>>> +     *     transmit (system bus read, device write) operation. [...]
>>> +     *
>>> +     *   RXTS: Receive Transaction Size (RX_TRANSACTION_SIZE).
>>> +     *     This field defines the Port DMA transaction size in DWORDs
>>> +     *     for receive (system bus write, device read) operation. [...]
>>> +     *
>>> +     *   TXABL: Transmit Burst Limit.
>>> +     *     This field allows software to limit the VBUSP master read
>>> +     *     burst size. [...]
>>> +     *
>>> +     *   RXABL: Receive Burst Limit.
>>> +     *     Allows software to limit the VBUSP master write burst
>>> +     *     size. [...]
>>> +     *
>>> +     *   Reserved: Reserved.
>>> +     *
>>> +     *
>>> +     * NOTE: According to the above document, the following alternative
>>> +     *   to the code below could perhaps be a better option
>>> +     *   (or preparation) for possible further improvements later:
>>> +     *     sunxi_clrsetbits(hpriv->mmio + AHCI_P0DMACR, 0x0000ffff,
>>> +     *        0x00000033);
>>> +     */
>>> +    sunxi_clrsetbits(hpriv->mmio + AHCI_P0DMACR, 0x0000ffff, 0x00004433);
>>
>> Have you tried / benchmarked the 0x00000033 option?
> 
> Yes, I did, but not that extensively yet. So far I couldn't see any
> difference in the outcome.
> There is in the TI doc just the following statement regarding this:
> 
> "Note that programming a burst size of greater than a transaction size,
> while not invalid, is meaningless because the DMA maximizes out at
> transaction size." (Ch. 3.4 DMA, p.15 in the TI doc).
> 
> I understand this as a neutral statement, ie. it doesn't hurt or make
> any difference in practice if one sets TXABL effectively higher than
> TXTS and/or RXABL effectively higher than RXTS,
> FYI: these value are just some index-values, ie. index-value x means real value y.
> 0 for TXABL and/or RXABL means "Limit VBUSP burst size to 256 DWORDS",
> ie. to the highest possible value for Transmit Burst Limit (TXABL) and
> Receive Burst Limit (RXABL), respectively.
> 
> I'll test this alternative version now extensively in my test series.

If you're not seeing much difference in performance and all your
current testing has been done with 0x00004433, then it is fine to just
stick with that version, the original 0x00004400 values comes from
Allwinner's own SDK, presumably they had a reason for this.

> But I could need an advice on what step I should take next in this
> issue regarding getting the patch merged into the mainline kernel.
> Shall I post a v3 of the patch with RFC removed, some more comments
> added, and switching to the above alternative function argument
> together with its test results, or shall I do these additions only
> after the current version has already been merged into the kernel?
> [actually I'm now unsure if patches with "RFC" flag ever get merged :-].

The next step would be sending a non RFC version, with Maxime's Acked-by
added above your Signed-off-by, you may also add my:

Reviewed-by: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com>, above your S-o-b
line.

Regards,

Hans
Uenal Mutlu May 13, 2019, 11:20 a.m. UTC | #5
Maxime Ripard wrote on 05/13/2019 11:59 AM:
> On Sun, May 12, 2019 at 10:59:54PM +0200, Uenal Mutlu wrote:
>> Increasing the SATA/AHCI DMA TX/RX FIFOs (P0DMACR.TXTS and .RXTS, ie.
>> TX_TRANSACTION_SIZE and RX_TRANSACTION_SIZE) from default 0x0 each
>> to 0x3 each, gives a write performance boost of 120 MiB/s to 132 MiB/s
>> from lame 36 MiB/s to 45 MiB/s previously.
>> Read performance is about 200 MiB/s.
>> [tested on SSD using dd bs=2K/4K/8K/12K/16K/24K/32K: peak-perf at 12K].
>>
>> Tested on the Banana Pi R1 (aka Lamobo R1) and Banana Pi M1 SBCs
>> with Allwinner A20 32bit-SoCs (ARMv7-a / arm-linux-gnueabihf).
>> These devices are RaspberryPi-like small devices.
>>
>> This problem of slow SATA write-speed with these small devices lasts now
>> for more than 5 years. Many commentators throughout the years wrongly
>> assumed the slow write speed was a hardware limitation. This patch finally
>> solves the problem, which in fact was just a hard-to-fix software problem
>> (b/c of lack of documentation by the SoC-maker Allwinner Technology).
>>
>> RFC: Since more than about 25 similar SBC/SoC models do use the
>> ahci_sunxi driver, users are encouraged to test it on all the
>> affected boards and give feedback.
>>
>> Lists of the affected sunxi and other boards and SoCs with SATA using
>> the ahci_sunxi driver:
>>    $ grep -i -e "^&ahci" arch/arm/boot/dts/sun*dts
>>    and http://linux-sunxi.org/SATA#Devices_with_SATA_ports
>>    See also http://linux-sunxi.org/Category:Devices_with_SATA_port
>>
>> Patch v2:
>>    - Commented the patch in-place in ahci_sunxi.c
>>    - With bs=12K and no conv=... passed to dd, the write performance
>>      rises further to 132 MiB/s
>>    - Changed MB/s to MiB/s
>>    - Posted the story behind the patch:
>>      http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1905.1/03506.html
>>    - Posted a dd test script to find optimal bs, and some results:
>>      https://bit.ly/2YoOzEM
>>
>> Patch v1:
>>    - States bs=4K for dd and a write performance of 120 MiB/s
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Uenal Mutlu <um@mutluit.com>
>
> Acked-by: Maxime Ripard <maxime.ripard@bootlin.com>

Thx!

> Just a minor nitpick though, the part starting with RFC: and with the
> version changelog should be after the --- below so that it doesn't get
> applied as part of the commit log.

Ok, I'll do it better in the future.
Thx again.


> Maxime
>
> --
> Maxime Ripard, Bootlin
> Embedded Linux and Kernel engineering
> https://bootlin.com

Patch

diff --git a/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c b/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c
index 911710643305..ed19f19808c5 100644
--- a/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c
+++ b/drivers/ata/ahci_sunxi.c
@@ -157,8 +157,51 @@  static void ahci_sunxi_start_engine(struct ata_port *ap)
 	void __iomem *port_mmio = ahci_port_base(ap);
 	struct ahci_host_priv *hpriv = ap->host->private_data;
 
-	/* Setup DMA before DMA start */
-	sunxi_clrsetbits(hpriv->mmio + AHCI_P0DMACR, 0x0000ff00, 0x00004400);
+	/* Setup DMA before DMA start
+	 *
+	 * NOTE: A similar SoC with SATA/AHCI by Texas Instruments documents
+	 *   this Vendor Specific Port (P0DMACR, aka PxDMACR) in its
+	 *   User's Guide document (TMS320C674x/OMAP-L1x Processor
+	 *   Serial ATA (SATA) Controller, Literature Number: SPRUGJ8C,
+	 *   March 2011, Chapter 4.33 Port DMA Control Register (P0DMACR),
+	 *   p.68, https://www.ti.com/lit/ug/sprugj8c/sprugj8c.pdf)
+	 *   as equivalent to the following struct:
+	 *
+	 *   struct AHCI_P0DMACR_t
+	 *     {
+	 *       unsigned TXTS     : 4,
+	 *                RXTS     : 4,
+	 *                TXABL    : 4,
+	 *                RXABL    : 4,
+	 *                Reserved : 16;
+	 *     };
+	 *
+	 *   TXTS: Transmit Transaction Size (TX_TRANSACTION_SIZE).
+	 *     This field defines the DMA transaction size in DWORDs for
+	 *     transmit (system bus read, device write) operation. [...]
+	 *
+	 *   RXTS: Receive Transaction Size (RX_TRANSACTION_SIZE).
+	 *     This field defines the Port DMA transaction size in DWORDs
+	 *     for receive (system bus write, device read) operation. [...]
+	 *
+	 *   TXABL: Transmit Burst Limit.
+	 *     This field allows software to limit the VBUSP master read
+	 *     burst size. [...]
+	 *
+	 *   RXABL: Receive Burst Limit.
+	 *     Allows software to limit the VBUSP master write burst
+	 *     size. [...]
+	 *
+	 *   Reserved: Reserved.
+	 *
+	 *
+	 * NOTE: According to the above document, the following alternative
+	 *   to the code below could perhaps be a better option
+	 *   (or preparation) for possible further improvements later:
+	 *     sunxi_clrsetbits(hpriv->mmio + AHCI_P0DMACR, 0x0000ffff,
+	 *		0x00000033);
+	 */
+	sunxi_clrsetbits(hpriv->mmio + AHCI_P0DMACR, 0x0000ffff, 0x00004433);
 
 	/* Start DMA */
 	sunxi_setbits(port_mmio + PORT_CMD, PORT_CMD_START);