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1Buffer Sharing and Synchronization (dma-buf)
2============================================
3
4The dma-buf subsystem provides the framework for sharing buffers for
5hardware (DMA) access across multiple device drivers and subsystems, and
6for synchronizing asynchronous hardware access.
7
8As an example, it is used extensively by the DRM subsystem to exchange
9buffers between processes, contexts, library APIs within the same
10process, and also to exchange buffers with other subsystems such as
11V4L2.
12
13This document describes the way in which kernel subsystems can use and
14interact with the three main primitives offered by dma-buf:
15
16 - dma-buf, representing a sg_table and exposed to userspace as a file
17 descriptor to allow passing between processes, subsystems, devices,
18 etc;
19 - dma-fence, providing a mechanism to signal when an asynchronous
20 hardware operation has completed; and
21 - dma-resv, which manages a set of dma-fences for a particular dma-buf
22 allowing implicit (kernel-ordered) synchronization of work to
23 preserve the illusion of coherent access
24
25
26Userspace API principles and use
27--------------------------------
28
29For more details on how to design your subsystem's API for dma-buf use, please
30see Documentation/userspace-api/dma-buf-alloc-exchange.rst.
31
32
33Shared DMA Buffers
34------------------
35
36This document serves as a guide to device-driver writers on what is the dma-buf
37buffer sharing API, how to use it for exporting and using shared buffers.
38
39Any device driver which wishes to be a part of DMA buffer sharing, can do so as
40either the 'exporter' of buffers, or the 'user' or 'importer' of buffers.
41
42Say a driver A wants to use buffers created by driver B, then we call B as the
43exporter, and A as buffer-user/importer.
44
45The exporter
46
47 - implements and manages operations in :c:type:`struct dma_buf_ops
48 <dma_buf_ops>` for the buffer,
49 - allows other users to share the buffer by using dma_buf sharing APIs,
50 - manages the details of buffer allocation, wrapped in a :c:type:`struct
51 dma_buf <dma_buf>`,
52 - decides about the actual backing storage where this allocation happens,
53 - and takes care of any migration of scatterlist - for all (shared) users of
54 this buffer.
55
56The buffer-user
57
58 - is one of (many) sharing users of the buffer.
59 - doesn't need to worry about how the buffer is allocated, or where.
60 - and needs a mechanism to get access to the scatterlist that makes up this
61 buffer in memory, mapped into its own address space, so it can access the
62 same area of memory. This interface is provided by :c:type:`struct
63 dma_buf_attachment <dma_buf_attachment>`.
64
65Any exporters or users of the dma-buf buffer sharing framework must have a
66'select DMA_SHARED_BUFFER' in their respective Kconfigs.
67
68Userspace Interface Notes
69~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
70
71Mostly a DMA buffer file descriptor is simply an opaque object for userspace,
72and hence the generic interface exposed is very minimal. There's a few things to
73consider though:
74
75- Since kernel 3.12 the dma-buf FD supports the llseek system call, but only
76 with offset=0 and whence=SEEK_END|SEEK_SET. SEEK_SET is supported to allow
77 the usual size discover pattern size = SEEK_END(0); SEEK_SET(0). Every other
78 llseek operation will report -EINVAL.
79
80 If llseek on dma-buf FDs isn't supported the kernel will report -ESPIPE for all
81 cases. Userspace can use this to detect support for discovering the dma-buf
82 size using llseek.
83
84- In order to avoid fd leaks on exec, the FD_CLOEXEC flag must be set
85 on the file descriptor. This is not just a resource leak, but a
86 potential security hole. It could give the newly exec'd application
87 access to buffers, via the leaked fd, to which it should otherwise
88 not be permitted access.
89
90 The problem with doing this via a separate fcntl() call, versus doing it
91 atomically when the fd is created, is that this is inherently racy in a
92 multi-threaded app[3]. The issue is made worse when it is library code
93 opening/creating the file descriptor, as the application may not even be
94 aware of the fd's.
95
96 To avoid this problem, userspace must have a way to request O_CLOEXEC
97 flag be set when the dma-buf fd is created. So any API provided by
98 the exporting driver to create a dmabuf fd must provide a way to let
99 userspace control setting of O_CLOEXEC flag passed in to dma_buf_fd().
100
101- Memory mapping the contents of the DMA buffer is also supported. See the
102 discussion below on `CPU Access to DMA Buffer Objects`_ for the full details.
103
104- The DMA buffer FD is also pollable, see `Implicit Fence Poll Support`_ below for
105 details.
106
107- The DMA buffer FD also supports a few dma-buf-specific ioctls, see
108 `DMA Buffer ioctls`_ below for details.
109
110Basic Operation and Device DMA Access
111~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
112
113.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c
114 :doc: dma buf device access
115
116CPU Access to DMA Buffer Objects
117~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
118
119.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c
120 :doc: cpu access
121
122Implicit Fence Poll Support
123~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
124
125.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c
126 :doc: implicit fence polling
127
128DMA-BUF statistics
129~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
130.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf-sysfs-stats.c
131 :doc: overview
132
133DMA Buffer ioctls
134~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
135
136.. kernel-doc:: include/uapi/linux/dma-buf.h
137
138DMA-BUF locking convention
139~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
140
141.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c
142 :doc: locking convention
143
144Kernel Functions and Structures Reference
145~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
146
147.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c
148 :export:
149
150.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-buf.h
151 :internal:
152
153Reservation Objects
154-------------------
155
156.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-resv.c
157 :doc: Reservation Object Overview
158
159.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-resv.c
160 :export:
161
162.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-resv.h
163 :internal:
164
165DMA Fences
166----------
167
168.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c
169 :doc: DMA fences overview
170
171DMA Fence Cross-Driver Contract
172~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
173
174.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c
175 :doc: fence cross-driver contract
176
177DMA Fence Signalling Annotations
178~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
179
180.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c
181 :doc: fence signalling annotation
182
183DMA Fence Deadline Hints
184~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
185
186.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c
187 :doc: deadline hints
188
189DMA Fences Functions Reference
190~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
191
192.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c
193 :export:
194
195.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-fence.h
196 :internal:
197
198DMA Fence Array
199~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
200
201.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence-array.c
202 :export:
203
204.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-fence-array.h
205 :internal:
206
207DMA Fence Chain
208~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
209
210.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence-chain.c
211 :export:
212
213.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-fence-chain.h
214 :internal:
215
216DMA Fence unwrap
217~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
218
219.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-fence-unwrap.h
220 :internal:
221
222DMA Fence Sync File
223~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
224
225.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/sync_file.c
226 :export:
227
228.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/sync_file.h
229 :internal:
230
231DMA Fence Sync File uABI
232~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
233
234.. kernel-doc:: include/uapi/linux/sync_file.h
235 :internal:
236
237Indefinite DMA Fences
238~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
239
240At various times struct dma_fence with an indefinite time until dma_fence_wait()
241finishes have been proposed. Examples include:
242
243* Future fences, used in HWC1 to signal when a buffer isn't used by the display
244 any longer, and created with the screen update that makes the buffer visible.
245 The time this fence completes is entirely under userspace's control.
246
247* Proxy fences, proposed to handle &drm_syncobj for which the fence has not yet
248 been set. Used to asynchronously delay command submission.
249
250* Userspace fences or gpu futexes, fine-grained locking within a command buffer
251 that userspace uses for synchronization across engines or with the CPU, which
252 are then imported as a DMA fence for integration into existing winsys
253 protocols.
254
255* Long-running compute command buffers, while still using traditional end of
256 batch DMA fences for memory management instead of context preemption DMA
257 fences which get reattached when the compute job is rescheduled.
258
259Common to all these schemes is that userspace controls the dependencies of these
260fences and controls when they fire. Mixing indefinite fences with normal
261in-kernel DMA fences does not work, even when a fallback timeout is included to
262protect against malicious userspace:
263
264* Only the kernel knows about all DMA fence dependencies, userspace is not aware
265 of dependencies injected due to memory management or scheduler decisions.
266
267* Only userspace knows about all dependencies in indefinite fences and when
268 exactly they will complete, the kernel has no visibility.
269
270Furthermore the kernel has to be able to hold up userspace command submission
271for memory management needs, which means we must support indefinite fences being
272dependent upon DMA fences. If the kernel also support indefinite fences in the
273kernel like a DMA fence, like any of the above proposal would, there is the
274potential for deadlocks.
275
276.. kernel-render:: DOT
277 :alt: Indefinite Fencing Dependency Cycle
278 :caption: Indefinite Fencing Dependency Cycle
279
280 digraph "Fencing Cycle" {
281 node [shape=box bgcolor=grey style=filled]
282 kernel [label="Kernel DMA Fences"]
283 userspace [label="userspace controlled fences"]
284 kernel -> userspace [label="memory management"]
285 userspace -> kernel [label="Future fence, fence proxy, ..."]
286
287 { rank=same; kernel userspace }
288 }
289
290This means that the kernel might accidentally create deadlocks
291through memory management dependencies which userspace is unaware of, which
292randomly hangs workloads until the timeout kicks in. Workloads, which from
293userspace's perspective, do not contain a deadlock. In such a mixed fencing
294architecture there is no single entity with knowledge of all dependencies.
295Therefore preventing such deadlocks from within the kernel is not possible.
296
297The only solution to avoid dependencies loops is by not allowing indefinite
298fences in the kernel. This means:
299
300* No future fences, proxy fences or userspace fences imported as DMA fences,
301 with or without a timeout.
302
303* No DMA fences that signal end of batchbuffer for command submission where
304 userspace is allowed to use userspace fencing or long running compute
305 workloads. This also means no implicit fencing for shared buffers in these
306 cases.
307
308Recoverable Hardware Page Faults Implications
309~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
310
311Modern hardware supports recoverable page faults, which has a lot of
312implications for DMA fences.
313
314First, a pending page fault obviously holds up the work that's running on the
315accelerator and a memory allocation is usually required to resolve the fault.
316But memory allocations are not allowed to gate completion of DMA fences, which
317means any workload using recoverable page faults cannot use DMA fences for
318synchronization. Synchronization fences controlled by userspace must be used
319instead.
320
321On GPUs this poses a problem, because current desktop compositor protocols on
322Linux rely on DMA fences, which means without an entirely new userspace stack
323built on top of userspace fences, they cannot benefit from recoverable page
324faults. Specifically this means implicit synchronization will not be possible.
325The exception is when page faults are only used as migration hints and never to
326on-demand fill a memory request. For now this means recoverable page
327faults on GPUs are limited to pure compute workloads.
328
329Furthermore GPUs usually have shared resources between the 3D rendering and
330compute side, like compute units or command submission engines. If both a 3D
331job with a DMA fence and a compute workload using recoverable page faults are
332pending they could deadlock:
333
334- The 3D workload might need to wait for the compute job to finish and release
335 hardware resources first.
336
337- The compute workload might be stuck in a page fault, because the memory
338 allocation is waiting for the DMA fence of the 3D workload to complete.
339
340There are a few options to prevent this problem, one of which drivers need to
341ensure:
342
343- Compute workloads can always be preempted, even when a page fault is pending
344 and not yet repaired. Not all hardware supports this.
345
346- DMA fence workloads and workloads which need page fault handling have
347 independent hardware resources to guarantee forward progress. This could be
348 achieved through e.g. through dedicated engines and minimal compute unit
349 reservations for DMA fence workloads.
350
351- The reservation approach could be further refined by only reserving the
352 hardware resources for DMA fence workloads when they are in-flight. This must
353 cover the time from when the DMA fence is visible to other threads up to
354 moment when fence is completed through dma_fence_signal().
355
356- As a last resort, if the hardware provides no useful reservation mechanics,
357 all workloads must be flushed from the GPU when switching between jobs
358 requiring DMA fences or jobs requiring page fault handling: This means all DMA
359 fences must complete before a compute job with page fault handling can be
360 inserted into the scheduler queue. And vice versa, before a DMA fence can be
361 made visible anywhere in the system, all compute workloads must be preempted
362 to guarantee all pending GPU page faults are flushed.
363
364- Only a fairly theoretical option would be to untangle these dependencies when
365 allocating memory to repair hardware page faults, either through separate
366 memory blocks or runtime tracking of the full dependency graph of all DMA
367 fences. This results very wide impact on the kernel, since resolving the page
368 on the CPU side can itself involve a page fault. It is much more feasible and
369 robust to limit the impact of handling hardware page faults to the specific
370 driver.
371
372Note that workloads that run on independent hardware like copy engines or other
373GPUs do not have any impact. This allows us to keep using DMA fences internally
374in the kernel even for resolving hardware page faults, e.g. by using copy
375engines to clear or copy memory needed to resolve the page fault.
376
377In some ways this page fault problem is a special case of the `Infinite DMA
378Fences` discussions: Infinite fences from compute workloads are allowed to
379depend on DMA fences, but not the other way around. And not even the page fault
380problem is new, because some other CPU thread in userspace might
381hit a page fault which holds up a userspace fence - supporting page faults on
382GPUs doesn't anything fundamentally new.
1Buffer Sharing and Synchronization
2==================================
3
4The dma-buf subsystem provides the framework for sharing buffers for
5hardware (DMA) access across multiple device drivers and subsystems, and
6for synchronizing asynchronous hardware access.
7
8This is used, for example, by drm "prime" multi-GPU support, but is of
9course not limited to GPU use cases.
10
11The three main components of this are: (1) dma-buf, representing a
12sg_table and exposed to userspace as a file descriptor to allow passing
13between devices, (2) fence, which provides a mechanism to signal when
14one device has finished access, and (3) reservation, which manages the
15shared or exclusive fence(s) associated with the buffer.
16
17Shared DMA Buffers
18------------------
19
20This document serves as a guide to device-driver writers on what is the dma-buf
21buffer sharing API, how to use it for exporting and using shared buffers.
22
23Any device driver which wishes to be a part of DMA buffer sharing, can do so as
24either the 'exporter' of buffers, or the 'user' or 'importer' of buffers.
25
26Say a driver A wants to use buffers created by driver B, then we call B as the
27exporter, and A as buffer-user/importer.
28
29The exporter
30
31 - implements and manages operations in :c:type:`struct dma_buf_ops
32 <dma_buf_ops>` for the buffer,
33 - allows other users to share the buffer by using dma_buf sharing APIs,
34 - manages the details of buffer allocation, wrapped in a :c:type:`struct
35 dma_buf <dma_buf>`,
36 - decides about the actual backing storage where this allocation happens,
37 - and takes care of any migration of scatterlist - for all (shared) users of
38 this buffer.
39
40The buffer-user
41
42 - is one of (many) sharing users of the buffer.
43 - doesn't need to worry about how the buffer is allocated, or where.
44 - and needs a mechanism to get access to the scatterlist that makes up this
45 buffer in memory, mapped into its own address space, so it can access the
46 same area of memory. This interface is provided by :c:type:`struct
47 dma_buf_attachment <dma_buf_attachment>`.
48
49Any exporters or users of the dma-buf buffer sharing framework must have a
50'select DMA_SHARED_BUFFER' in their respective Kconfigs.
51
52Userspace Interface Notes
53~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
54
55Mostly a DMA buffer file descriptor is simply an opaque object for userspace,
56and hence the generic interface exposed is very minimal. There's a few things to
57consider though:
58
59- Since kernel 3.12 the dma-buf FD supports the llseek system call, but only
60 with offset=0 and whence=SEEK_END|SEEK_SET. SEEK_SET is supported to allow
61 the usual size discover pattern size = SEEK_END(0); SEEK_SET(0). Every other
62 llseek operation will report -EINVAL.
63
64 If llseek on dma-buf FDs isn't support the kernel will report -ESPIPE for all
65 cases. Userspace can use this to detect support for discovering the dma-buf
66 size using llseek.
67
68- In order to avoid fd leaks on exec, the FD_CLOEXEC flag must be set
69 on the file descriptor. This is not just a resource leak, but a
70 potential security hole. It could give the newly exec'd application
71 access to buffers, via the leaked fd, to which it should otherwise
72 not be permitted access.
73
74 The problem with doing this via a separate fcntl() call, versus doing it
75 atomically when the fd is created, is that this is inherently racy in a
76 multi-threaded app[3]. The issue is made worse when it is library code
77 opening/creating the file descriptor, as the application may not even be
78 aware of the fd's.
79
80 To avoid this problem, userspace must have a way to request O_CLOEXEC
81 flag be set when the dma-buf fd is created. So any API provided by
82 the exporting driver to create a dmabuf fd must provide a way to let
83 userspace control setting of O_CLOEXEC flag passed in to dma_buf_fd().
84
85- Memory mapping the contents of the DMA buffer is also supported. See the
86 discussion below on `CPU Access to DMA Buffer Objects`_ for the full details.
87
88- The DMA buffer FD is also pollable, see `Fence Poll Support`_ below for
89 details.
90
91Basic Operation and Device DMA Access
92~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
93
94.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c
95 :doc: dma buf device access
96
97CPU Access to DMA Buffer Objects
98~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
99
100.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c
101 :doc: cpu access
102
103Implicit Fence Poll Support
104~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
105
106.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c
107 :doc: implicit fence polling
108
109Kernel Functions and Structures Reference
110~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
111
112.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c
113 :export:
114
115.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-buf.h
116 :internal:
117
118Reservation Objects
119-------------------
120
121.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-resv.c
122 :doc: Reservation Object Overview
123
124.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-resv.c
125 :export:
126
127.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-resv.h
128 :internal:
129
130DMA Fences
131----------
132
133.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c
134 :doc: DMA fences overview
135
136DMA Fence Cross-Driver Contract
137~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
138
139.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c
140 :doc: fence cross-driver contract
141
142DMA Fence Signalling Annotations
143~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
144
145.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c
146 :doc: fence signalling annotation
147
148DMA Fences Functions Reference
149~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
150
151.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c
152 :export:
153
154.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-fence.h
155 :internal:
156
157Seqno Hardware Fences
158~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
159
160.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/seqno-fence.h
161 :internal:
162
163DMA Fence Array
164~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
165
166.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence-array.c
167 :export:
168
169.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/dma-fence-array.h
170 :internal:
171
172DMA Fence uABI/Sync File
173~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
174
175.. kernel-doc:: drivers/dma-buf/sync_file.c
176 :export:
177
178.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/sync_file.h
179 :internal:
180
181Indefinite DMA Fences
182~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
183
184At various times &dma_fence with an indefinite time until dma_fence_wait()
185finishes have been proposed. Examples include:
186
187* Future fences, used in HWC1 to signal when a buffer isn't used by the display
188 any longer, and created with the screen update that makes the buffer visible.
189 The time this fence completes is entirely under userspace's control.
190
191* Proxy fences, proposed to handle &drm_syncobj for which the fence has not yet
192 been set. Used to asynchronously delay command submission.
193
194* Userspace fences or gpu futexes, fine-grained locking within a command buffer
195 that userspace uses for synchronization across engines or with the CPU, which
196 are then imported as a DMA fence for integration into existing winsys
197 protocols.
198
199* Long-running compute command buffers, while still using traditional end of
200 batch DMA fences for memory management instead of context preemption DMA
201 fences which get reattached when the compute job is rescheduled.
202
203Common to all these schemes is that userspace controls the dependencies of these
204fences and controls when they fire. Mixing indefinite fences with normal
205in-kernel DMA fences does not work, even when a fallback timeout is included to
206protect against malicious userspace:
207
208* Only the kernel knows about all DMA fence dependencies, userspace is not aware
209 of dependencies injected due to memory management or scheduler decisions.
210
211* Only userspace knows about all dependencies in indefinite fences and when
212 exactly they will complete, the kernel has no visibility.
213
214Furthermore the kernel has to be able to hold up userspace command submission
215for memory management needs, which means we must support indefinite fences being
216dependent upon DMA fences. If the kernel also support indefinite fences in the
217kernel like a DMA fence, like any of the above proposal would, there is the
218potential for deadlocks.
219
220.. kernel-render:: DOT
221 :alt: Indefinite Fencing Dependency Cycle
222 :caption: Indefinite Fencing Dependency Cycle
223
224 digraph "Fencing Cycle" {
225 node [shape=box bgcolor=grey style=filled]
226 kernel [label="Kernel DMA Fences"]
227 userspace [label="userspace controlled fences"]
228 kernel -> userspace [label="memory management"]
229 userspace -> kernel [label="Future fence, fence proxy, ..."]
230
231 { rank=same; kernel userspace }
232 }
233
234This means that the kernel might accidentally create deadlocks
235through memory management dependencies which userspace is unaware of, which
236randomly hangs workloads until the timeout kicks in. Workloads, which from
237userspace's perspective, do not contain a deadlock. In such a mixed fencing
238architecture there is no single entity with knowledge of all dependencies.
239Thefore preventing such deadlocks from within the kernel is not possible.
240
241The only solution to avoid dependencies loops is by not allowing indefinite
242fences in the kernel. This means:
243
244* No future fences, proxy fences or userspace fences imported as DMA fences,
245 with or without a timeout.
246
247* No DMA fences that signal end of batchbuffer for command submission where
248 userspace is allowed to use userspace fencing or long running compute
249 workloads. This also means no implicit fencing for shared buffers in these
250 cases.