[PATCH v1 1/3] mm/gup: consistently name GUP-fast functions
Peter Xu
peterx at redhat.com
Fri Apr 26 14:20:23 PDT 2024
On Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 07:28:31PM +0200, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> On 26.04.24 18:12, Peter Xu wrote:
> > On Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 09:44:58AM -0400, Peter Xu wrote:
> > > On Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 09:17:47AM +0200, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> > > > On 02.04.24 14:55, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> > > > > Let's consistently call the "fast-only" part of GUP "GUP-fast" and rename
> > > > > all relevant internal functions to start with "gup_fast", to make it
> > > > > clearer that this is not ordinary GUP. The current mixture of
> > > > > "lockless", "gup" and "gup_fast" is confusing.
> > > > >
> > > > > Further, avoid the term "huge" when talking about a "leaf" -- for
> > > > > example, we nowadays check pmd_leaf() because pmd_huge() is gone. For the
> > > > > "hugepd"/"hugepte" stuff, it's part of the name ("is_hugepd"), so that
> > > > > stays.
> > > > >
> > > > > What remains is the "external" interface:
> > > > > * get_user_pages_fast_only()
> > > > > * get_user_pages_fast()
> > > > > * pin_user_pages_fast()
> > > > >
> > > > > The high-level internal functions for GUP-fast (+slow fallback) are now:
> > > > > * internal_get_user_pages_fast() -> gup_fast_fallback()
> > > > > * lockless_pages_from_mm() -> gup_fast()
> > > > >
> > > > > The basic GUP-fast walker functions:
> > > > > * gup_pgd_range() -> gup_fast_pgd_range()
> > > > > * gup_p4d_range() -> gup_fast_p4d_range()
> > > > > * gup_pud_range() -> gup_fast_pud_range()
> > > > > * gup_pmd_range() -> gup_fast_pmd_range()
> > > > > * gup_pte_range() -> gup_fast_pte_range()
> > > > > * gup_huge_pgd() -> gup_fast_pgd_leaf()
> > > > > * gup_huge_pud() -> gup_fast_pud_leaf()
> > > > > * gup_huge_pmd() -> gup_fast_pmd_leaf()
> > > > >
> > > > > The weird hugepd stuff:
> > > > > * gup_huge_pd() -> gup_fast_hugepd()
> > > > > * gup_hugepte() -> gup_fast_hugepte()
> > > >
> > > > I just realized that we end up calling these from follow_hugepd() as well.
> > > > And something seems to be off, because gup_fast_hugepd() won't have the VMA
> > > > even in the slow-GUP case to pass it to gup_must_unshare().
> > > >
> > > > So these are GUP-fast functions and the terminology seem correct. But the
> > > > usage from follow_hugepd() is questionable,
> > > >
> > > > commit a12083d721d703f985f4403d6b333cc449f838f6
> > > > Author: Peter Xu <peterx at redhat.com>
> > > > Date: Wed Mar 27 11:23:31 2024 -0400
> > > >
> > > > mm/gup: handle hugepd for follow_page()
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > states "With previous refactors on fast-gup gup_huge_pd(), most of the code
> > > > can be leveraged", which doesn't look quite true just staring the the
> > > > gup_must_unshare() call where we don't pass the VMA. Also,
> > > > "unlikely(pte_val(pte) != pte_val(ptep_get(ptep)" doesn't make any sense for
> > > > slow GUP ...
> > >
> > > Yes it's not needed, just doesn't look worthwhile to put another helper on
> > > top just for this. I mentioned this in the commit message here:
> > >
> > > There's something not needed for follow page, for example, gup_hugepte()
> > > tries to detect pgtable entry change which will never happen with slow
> > > gup (which has the pgtable lock held), but that's not a problem to check.
> > >
> > > >
> > > > @Peter, any insights?
> > >
> > > However I think we should pass vma in for sure, I guess I overlooked that,
> > > and it didn't expose in my tests too as I probably missed ./cow.
> > >
> > > I'll prepare a separate patch on top of this series and the gup-fast rename
> > > patches (I saw this one just reached mm-stable), and I'll see whether I can
> > > test it too if I can find a Power system fast enough. I'll probably drop
> > > the "fast" in the hugepd function names too.
> >
>
> For the missing VMA parameter, the cow.c test might not trigger it. We never need the VMA to make
> a pinning decision for anonymous memory. We'll trigger an unsharing fault, get an exclusive anonymous page
> and can continue.
>
> We need the VMA in gup_must_unshare(), when long-term pinning a file hugetlb page. I *think*
> the gup_longterm.c selftest should trigger that, especially:
>
> # [RUN] R/O longterm GUP-fast pin in MAP_SHARED file mapping ... with memfd hugetlb (2048 kB)
> ...
> # [RUN] R/O longterm GUP-fast pin in MAP_SHARED file mapping ... with memfd hugetlb (1048576 kB)
>
>
> We need a MAP_SHARED page where the PTE is R/O that we want to long-term pin R/O.
> I don't remember from the top of my head if the test here might have a R/W-mapped
> folio. If so, we could extend it to cover that.
Let me try both then.
>
> > Hmm, so when I enable 2M hugetlb I found ./cow is even failing on x86.
> >
> > # ./cow | grep -B1 "not ok"
> > # [RUN] vmsplice() + unmap in child ... with hugetlb (2048 kB)
> > not ok 161 No leak from parent into child
> > --
> > # [RUN] vmsplice() + unmap in child with mprotect() optimization ... with hugetlb (2048 kB)
> > not ok 215 No leak from parent into child
> > --
> > # [RUN] vmsplice() before fork(), unmap in parent after fork() ... with hugetlb (2048 kB)
> > not ok 269 No leak from child into parent
> > --
> > # [RUN] vmsplice() + unmap in parent after fork() ... with hugetlb (2048 kB)
> > not ok 323 No leak from child into parent
> >
> > And it looks like it was always failing.. perhaps since the start? We
>
> Yes!
>
> commit 7dad331be7816103eba8c12caeb88fbd3599c0b9
> Author: David Hildenbrand <david at redhat.com>
> Date: Tue Sep 27 13:01:17 2022 +0200
>
> selftests/vm: anon_cow: hugetlb tests
> Let's run all existing test cases with all hugetlb sizes we're able to
> detect.
> Note that some tests cases still fail. This will, for example, be fixed
> once vmsplice properly uses FOLL_PIN instead of FOLL_GET for pinning.
> With 2 MiB and 1 GiB hugetlb on x86_64, the expected failures are:
> # [RUN] vmsplice() + unmap in child ... with hugetlb (2048 kB)
> not ok 23 No leak from parent into child
> # [RUN] vmsplice() + unmap in child ... with hugetlb (1048576 kB)
> not ok 24 No leak from parent into child
> # [RUN] vmsplice() before fork(), unmap in parent after fork() ... with hugetlb (2048 kB)
> not ok 35 No leak from child into parent
> # [RUN] vmsplice() before fork(), unmap in parent after fork() ... with hugetlb (1048576 kB)
> not ok 36 No leak from child into parent
> # [RUN] vmsplice() + unmap in parent after fork() ... with hugetlb (2048 kB)
> not ok 47 No leak from child into parent
> # [RUN] vmsplice() + unmap in parent after fork() ... with hugetlb (1048576 kB)
> not ok 48 No leak from child into parent
>
> As it keeps confusing people (until somebody cares enough to fix vmsplice), I already
> thought about just disabling the test and adding a comment why it happens and
> why nobody cares.
I think we should, and when doing so maybe add a rich comment in
hugetlb_wp() too explaining everything?
>
> > didn't do the same on hugetlb v.s. normal anon from that regard on the
> > vmsplice() fix.
> >
> > I drafted a patch to allow refcount>1 detection as the same, then all tests
> > pass for me, as below.
> >
> > David, I'd like to double check with you before I post anything: is that
> > your intention to do so when working on the R/O pinning or not?
>
> Here certainly the "if it's easy it would already have done" principle applies. :)
>
> The issue is the following: hugetlb pages are scarce resources that cannot usually
> be overcommitted. For ordinary memory, we don't care if we COW in some corner case
> because there is an unexpected reference. You temporarily consume an additional page
> that gets freed as soon as the unexpected reference is dropped.
>
> For hugetlb, it is problematic. Assume you have reserved a single 1 GiB hugetlb page
> and your process uses that in a MAP_PRIVATE mapping. Then it calls fork() and the
> child quits immediately.
>
> If you decide to COW, you would need a second hugetlb page, which we don't have, so
> you have to crash the program.
>
> And in hugetlb it's extremely easy to not get folio_ref_count() == 1:
>
> hugetlb_fault() will do a folio_get(folio) before calling hugetlb_wp()!
>
> ... so you essentially always copy.
Hmm yes there's one extra refcount. I think this is all fine, we can simply
take all of them into account when making a CoW decision. However crashing
an userspace can be a problem for sure.
>
>
> At that point I walked away from that, letting vmsplice() be fixed at some point. Dave
> Howells was close at some point IIRC ...
>
> I had some ideas about retrying until the other reference is gone (which cannot be a
> longterm GUP pin), but as vmsplice essentially does without FOLL_PIN|FOLL_LONGTERM,
> it's quit hopeless to resolve that as long as vmsplice holds longterm references the wrong
> way.
>
> ---
>
> One could argue that fork() with hugetlb and MAP_PRIVATE is stupid and fragile: assume
> your child MM is torn down deferred, and will unmap the hugetlb page deferred. Or assume
> you access the page concurrently with fork(). You'd have to COW and crash the program.
> BUT, there is a horribly ugly hack in hugetlb COW code where you *steal* the page form
> the child program and crash your child. I'm not making that up, it's horrible.
I didn't notice that code before; doesn't sound like a very responsible
parent..
Looks like either there come a hugetlb guru who can make a decision to
break hugetlb ABI at some point, knowing that nobody will really get
affected by it, or that's the uncharted area whoever needs to introduce
hugetlb v2.
Thanks,
--
Peter Xu
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