[BUG] random kernel crashes after THP rework on s390 (maybe also on PowerPC and ARM)
Christian Borntraeger
borntraeger at de.ibm.com
Wed Feb 24 02:51:47 PST 2016
On 02/24/2016 11:41 AM, Will Deacon wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 11:16:34AM +0100, Christian Borntraeger wrote:
>> On 02/23/2016 09:22 PM, Will Deacon wrote:
>>> On Tue, Feb 23, 2016 at 10:33:45PM +0300, Kirill A. Shutemov wrote:
>>>> On Tue, Feb 23, 2016 at 07:19:07PM +0100, Gerald Schaefer wrote:
>>>>> I'll check with Martin, maybe it is actually trivial, then we can
>>>>> do a quick test it to rule that one out.
>>>>
>>>> Oh. I found a bug in __split_huge_pmd_locked(). Although, not sure if it's
>>>> _the_ bug.
>>>>
>>>> pmdp_invalidate() is called for the wrong address :-/
>>>> I guess that can be destructive on the architecture, right?
>>>
>>> FWIW, arm64 ignores the address parameter for set_pmd_at, so this would
>>> only result in the TLBI nuking the wrong entries, which is going to be
>>> tricky to observe in practice given that we install a table entry
>>> immediately afterwards that maps the same pages. If s390 does more here
>>> (I see some magic asm using the address), that could be the answer...
>>
>> This patch does not change the address for set_pmd_at, it does that for the
>> pmdp_invalidate here (by keeping haddr at the start of the pmd)
>>
>> ---> pmdp_invalidate(vma, haddr, pmd);
>> pmd_populate(mm, pmd, pgtable);
>
> On arm64, pmdp_invalidate looks like:
>
> void pmdp_invalidate(struct vm_area_struct *vma, unsigned long address,
> pmd_t *pmdp)
> {
> pmd_t entry = *pmdp;
> set_pmd_at(vma->vm_mm, address, pmdp, pmd_mknotpresent(entry));
> flush_pmd_tlb_range(vma, address, address + hpage_pmd_size);
> }
>
> so that's the set_pmd_at call I was referring to.
>
> On s390, that address ends up in __pmdp_idte[_local], but I don't know
> what .insn rrf,0xb98e0000,%2,%3,0,{0,1} do ;)
It does invalidation of the pmd entry and tlb clearing for this entry.
>
>> Without that fix we would clearly have stale tlb entries, no?
>
> Yes, but AFAIU the sequence on arm64 is:
>
> 1. trans huge mapping (block mapping in arm64 speak)
> 2. faulting entry (pmd_mknotpresent)
> 3. tlb invalidation
> 4. table entry mapping the same pages as (1).
>
> so if the microarchitecture we're on can tolerate a mixture of block
> mappings and page mappings mapping the same VA to the same PA, then the
> lack of TLB maintenance would go unnoticed. There are certainly systems
> where that could cause an issue, but I believe the one I've been testing
> on would be ok.
So in essence you say it does not matter that you flush the wrong range in
flush_pmd_tlb_range as long as it will be flushed later on when the pages
really go away. Yes, then it really might be ok for arm64.
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