IOMMU groups have been mandatory for some time now, so a device without
one is necessarily a device without any usable IOMMU, therefore the
iommu_present() check is redundant (or at best unhelpful).

Signed-off-by: Robin Murphy <[email protected]>
---
 drivers/vfio/vfio.c | 6 +++---
 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/vfio/vfio.c b/drivers/vfio/vfio.c
index a4555014bd1e..7b0a7b85e77e 100644
--- a/drivers/vfio/vfio.c
+++ b/drivers/vfio/vfio.c
@@ -745,11 +745,11 @@ static struct vfio_group *vfio_group_find_or_alloc(struct 
device *dev)
 
        iommu_group = iommu_group_get(dev);
 #ifdef CONFIG_VFIO_NOIOMMU
-       if (!iommu_group && noiommu && !iommu_present(dev->bus)) {
+       if (!iommu_group && noiommu) {
                /*
                 * With noiommu enabled, create an IOMMU group for devices that
-                * don't already have one and don't have an iommu_ops on their
-                * bus.  Taint the kernel because we're about to give a DMA
+                * don't already have one, implying no IOMMU hardware/driver
+                * exists.  Taint the kernel because we're about to give a DMA
                 * capable device to a user without IOMMU protection.
                 */
                group = vfio_noiommu_group_alloc(dev, VFIO_NO_IOMMU);
-- 
2.28.0.dirty

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