scsi: hisi_sas: Pre-allocate slot DMA buffers
Currently the driver spends much time allocating and freeing the slot DMA buffer for command delivery/completion. To boost the performance, pre-allocate the buffers for all IPTT. The downside of this approach is that we are reallocating all buffer memory upfront, so hog memory which we may not need. However, the current method - DMA buffer pool - also caches all buffers and does not free them until the pool is destroyed, so is not exactly efficient either. On top of this, since the slot DMA buffer is slightly bigger than a 4K page, we need to allocate 2x4K pages per buffer (for 4K page kernel), which is quite wasteful. For 64K page size this is not such an issue. So, for the 4K page case, in order to make memory usage more efficient, pre-allocating larger blocks of DMA memory for the buffers can be more efficient. To make DMA memory usage most efficient, we would choose a single contiguous DMA memory block, but this could use up all the DMA memory in the system (when CMA enabled and no IOMMU), or we may just not be able to allocate a DMA buffer large enough when no CMA or IOMMU. To decide the block size we use the LCM (least common multiple) of the buffer size and the page size. We roundup(64) to ensure the LCM is not too large, even though a little memory may be wasted per block. So, with this, the total memory requirement is about is about 17MB for 4096 max IPTT. Previously (for 4K pages case), it would be 32MB (for all slots allocated). With this change, the relative increase of IOPS for bs=4K read when PAGE_SIZE=4K and PAGE_SIZE=64K is as follows: IODEPTH 4K PAGE_SIZE 64K PAGE_SIZE 32 56% 47% 64 53% 44% 128 64% 43% 256 67% 45% Signed-off-by: Xiang Chen <chenxiang66@hisilicon.com> Signed-off-by: John Garry <john.garry@huawei.com> Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com>
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