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HPCA
1996
IEEE

Protected, User-Level DMA for the SHRIMP Network Interface

14 years 4 months ago
Protected, User-Level DMA for the SHRIMP Network Interface
Traditional DMA requires the operating system to perform many tasks to initiate a transfer, with overhead on the order of hundreds or thousands of CPU instructions. This paper describes a mechanism, called User-level Direct Memory Access (UDMA), for initiating DMA transfers of input/output data, with full protection, at a cost of only two user-level memory references. The UDMA mechanism uses existing virtual memory translation hardware to perform permission checking and address translation without kernel involvement. The implementation of the UDMA mechanism is simple, requiring a small extension to the traditional DMA controller and minimal operating system kernel support. The mechanism can be used with a wide variety of I/O devices including network interfaces, data storage devices such as disks and tape drives, and memory-mapped devices such as graphics frame-buers. As an illustration, we describe how we used UDMA in building network interface hardware for the SHRIMP multicomputer.
Matthias A. Blumrich, Cezary Dubnicki, Edward W. F
Added 07 Aug 2010
Updated 07 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 1996
Where HPCA
Authors Matthias A. Blumrich, Cezary Dubnicki, Edward W. Felten, Kai Li
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