In order to call the calc_map_type_and_dist_warn() function from a dma_map
operation, the function must not sleep. The only reason it sleeps is to
allocate memory for the seq_buf to print a verbose warning telling the user
how to disable ACS for that path.
Instead of allocating the memory with kmalloc(), allocate a smaller buffer
on the stack. A 128 byte buffer is enough to print 10 PCI device names. A
system with 10 bridge ports between two devices that have ACS enabled would
be unusually large, so this should still be a reasonable limit.
This also cleans up the awkward (and broken) return with -ENOMEM which
contradicts the return type and the caller was not prepared for.
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210610160609.28447-3-logang@deltatee.com
Signed-off-by: Logan Gunthorpe <logang@deltatee.com>
Signed-off-by: Bjorn Helgaas <bhelgaas@google.com>
{
struct seq_buf acs_list;
bool acs_redirects;
+ char buf[128];
int ret;
- seq_buf_init(&acs_list, kmalloc(PAGE_SIZE, GFP_KERNEL), PAGE_SIZE);
- if (!acs_list.buffer)
- return -ENOMEM;
+ seq_buf_init(&acs_list, buf, sizeof(buf));
ret = calc_map_type_and_dist(provider, client, dist, &acs_redirects,
&acs_list);
pci_name(provider));
}
- kfree(acs_list.buffer);
-
return ret;
}