[PATCH 01/15] arm64: KVM: Merged page tables documentation
Christoffer Dall
christoffer.dall at linaro.org
Tue Jun 28 04:46:08 PDT 2016
On Mon, Jun 27, 2016 at 03:06:11PM +0100, Marc Zyngier wrote:
> On 27/06/16 14:28, Christoffer Dall wrote:
> > On Tue, Jun 07, 2016 at 11:58:21AM +0100, Marc Zyngier wrote:
> >> Since dealing with VA ranges tends to hurt my brain badly, let's
> >> start with a bit of documentation that will hopefully help
> >> understanding what comes next...
> >>
> >> Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <marc.zyngier at arm.com>
> >> ---
> >> arch/arm64/include/asm/kvm_mmu.h | 45 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---
> >> 1 file changed, 42 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
> >>
> >> diff --git a/arch/arm64/include/asm/kvm_mmu.h b/arch/arm64/include/asm/kvm_mmu.h
> >> index f05ac27..00bc277 100644
> >> --- a/arch/arm64/include/asm/kvm_mmu.h
> >> +++ b/arch/arm64/include/asm/kvm_mmu.h
> >> @@ -29,10 +29,49 @@
> >> *
> >> * Instead, give the HYP mode its own VA region at a fixed offset from
> >> * the kernel by just masking the top bits (which are all ones for a
> >> - * kernel address).
> >> + * kernel address). We need to find out how many bits to mask.
> >> *
> >> - * ARMv8.1 (using VHE) does have a TTBR1_EL2, and doesn't use these
> >> - * macros (the entire kernel runs at EL2).
> >> + * We want to build a set of page tables that cover both parts of the
> >> + * idmap (the trampoline page used to initialize EL2), and our normal
> >> + * runtime VA space, at the same time.
> >> + *
> >> + * Given that the kernel uses VA_BITS for its entire address space,
> >> + * and that half of that space (VA_BITS - 1) is used for the linear
> >> + * mapping, we can limit the EL2 space to the same size.
> >
> > we can also limit the EL2 space to (VA_BITS - 1).
> >
> >> + *
> >> + * The main question is "Within the VA_BITS space, does EL2 use the
> >> + * top or the bottom half of that space to shadow the kernel's linear
> >> + * mapping?". As we need to idmap the trampoline page, this is
> >> + * determined by the range in which this page lives.
> >> + *
> >> + * If the page is in the bottom half, we have to use the top half. If
> >> + * the page is in the top half, we have to use the bottom half:
> >> + *
> >> + * if (PA(T)[VA_BITS - 1] == 1)
> >> + * HYP_VA_RANGE = [0 ... (1 << (VA_BITS - 1)) - 1]
> >> + * else
> >> + * HYP_VA_RANGE = [(1 << (VA_BITS - 1)) ... (1 << VA_BITS) - 1]
> >
> > Is this pseudo code or what am I looking at? What is T?
>
> Pseudocode indeed. T is the "trampoline page".
>
> > I don't understand what this is saying.
>
> This is giving you the range of HYP VAs that can be safely used to map
> kernel ranges.
Ah, by PA(T)[bit_nr] you mean the value of an individual bit 'bit_nr' ?
I just think I choked on the pseudocode syntax, perhaps this is easier
to understand?
T = __virt_to_phys(__hyp_idmap_text_start)
if (T & BIT(VA_BITS - 1))
HYP_VA_MIN = 0 //idmap in upper half
else
HYP_VA_MIN = 1 << (VA_BITS - 1)
HYP_VA_MAX = HYP_VA_MIN + (1 << (VA_BITS - 1)) - 1
>
> > Can this be written using known constructs such as hyp_idmap_end,
> > PHYS_OFFSET etc.?
>
> I'm not sure. We're trying to determine the VA range that doesn't
> conflict with a physical range. I don't see how introducing PHYS_OFFSET
> is going to help, because we're only interested in a single page (the
> trampoline page).
>
> > And perhaps the pseudo code should define HYP_VA_SHIFT instead of the
> > range to simplify it, at least I'm confused.
>
> I think HYP_VA_SHIFT is actually contributing to the confusion, because
> it has no practical impact on anything.
>
I was rambling, my suggestion above is basically what I meant.
> >
> >> + *
> >> + * In practice, the second case can be simplified to
> >> + * HYP_VA_RANGE = [0 ... (1 << VA_BITS) - 1]
> >> + * because we'll never get anything in the bottom range.
> >
> > and now I'm more confused, are we not supposed to map the idmap in the
> > bottom range? Is this part of the comment necessary?
>
> Well, I found it useful when I wrote it. What I meant is that we're
> never going to alias a kernel mapping there.
I think we should merge the documentation, this stuff is tricky so
having it properly documented is important IMHO.
The confusing part here is that we just said above that the HYP VA range
may have to live in the upper part because the lower part would be used
for the idmap, so why can we use it anyway?
Is the point that you'll be done with the idmap at some point?
>
> >
> >> + *
> >> + * This of course assumes that the trampoline page exists within the
> >> + * VA_BITS range. If it doesn't, then it means we're in the odd case
> >> + * where the kernel idmap (as well as HYP) uses more levels than the
> >> + * kernel runtime page tables (as seen when the kernel is configured
> >> + * for 4k pages, 39bits VA, and yet memory lives just above that
> >> + * limit, forcing the idmap to use 4 levels of page tables while the
> >> + * kernel itself only uses 3). In this particular case, it doesn't
> >> + * matter which side of VA_BITS we use, as we're guaranteed not to
> >> + * conflict with anything.
> >> + *
> >> + * An alternative would be to always use 4 levels of page tables for
> >> + * EL2, no matter what the kernel does. But who wants more levels than
> >> + * strictly necessary?
Our expectation here is that using an additional level is slower for TLB
misses, so we want to avoid this, correct? Also does the kernel never
use 4 levels of page tables so that this is always an option.
I appreciate the tongue-in-cheek, but since this hurts my brain (badly)
I want to get rid of anything here that leaves the reader with open
questions.
I don't mind trying to rewrite some of this, just have to make sure I
actually understand it first.
> >> + *
> >> + * Thankfully, ARMv8.1 (using VHE) does have a TTBR1_EL2, and doesn't
> >> + * need any of this madness (the entire kernel runs at EL2).
So here I would simply state that using VHE, there are no separate hyp
mappings and all KVM functionality is already mapped as part of the main
kernel mappings, and none of this applies in that case. Perhaps that's
what you said already, and I just misread it for some reason.
> >
> > Not sure how these two last paragraphs helps understanding what this
> > patch set is about to implement, as it seems to raise more questions
> > than answer them, but I will proceed to trying to read the code...
>
> As I said, I found this blurb useful when I was trying to reason about
> the problem. I don't mind it being dropped.
>
I would prefer if we can tweak it so I also understand it and then
actually merge it. That also makes it easier for me to review the patch
set :)
Thanks,
-Christoffer
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