#include <infiniband/verbs.h> struct ibv_mr *ibv_reg_mr(struct ibv_pd *pd, void *addr, size_t length, int access); struct ibv_mr *ibv_reg_mr_iova(struct ibv_pd *pd, void *addr, size_t length, uint64_t hca_va, int access); struct ibv_mr *ibv_reg_dmabuf_mr(struct ibv_pd *pd, uint64_t offset, size_t length, uint64_t iova, int fd, int access); int ibv_dereg_mr(struct ibv_mr *mr);
If IBV_ACCESS_REMOTE_WRITE or IBV_ACCESS_REMOTE_ATOMIC is set, then IBV_ACCESS_LOCAL_WRITE must be set too.
Local read access is always enabled for the MR.
To create an implicit ODP MR, IBV_ACCESS_ON_DEMAND should be set, addr should be 0 and length should be SIZE_MAX.
If IBV_ACCESS_HUGETLB is set, then application awares that for this MR all pages are huge and must promise it will never do anything to break huge pages.
ibv_reg_mr_iova() ibv_reg_mr_iova is the same as the normal reg_mr, except that the user is allowed to specify the virtual base address of the MR when accessed through a lkey or rkey. The offset in the memory region is computed as 'addr + (iova - hca_va)'. Specifying 0 for hca_va has the same effect as IBV_ACCESS_ZERO_BASED.
ibv_reg_dmabuf_mr() registers a dma-buf based memory region (MR) associated with the protection domain pd. The MR starts at offset of the dma-buf and its size is length. The dma-buf is identified by the file descriptor fd. The argument iova specifies the virtual base address of the MR when accessed through a lkey or rkey. It must have the same page offset as offset. The argument access describes the desired memory protection attributes; it is similar to the ibv_reg_mr case except that only the following flags are supported: IBV_ACCESS_LOCAL_WRITE, IBV_ACCESS_REMOTE_WRITE, IBV_ACCESS_REMOTE_READ, IBV_ACCESS_REMOTE_ATOMIC, IBV_ACCESS_RELAXED_ORDERING.
ibv_dereg_mr() deregisters the MR mr.
ibv_dereg_mr() returns 0 on success, or the value of errno on failure (which indicates the failure reason).