[PATCH v2 06/13] mm/gup: Drop folio_fast_pin_allowed() in hugepd processing
Jason Gunthorpe
jgg at nvidia.com
Tue Jan 16 04:31:38 PST 2024
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 06:30:39AM +0000, Christophe Leroy wrote:
>
>
> Le 15/01/2024 à 19:37, Jason Gunthorpe a écrit :
> > On Wed, Jan 03, 2024 at 05:14:16PM +0800, peterx at redhat.com wrote:
> >> From: Peter Xu <peterx at redhat.com>
> >>
> >> Hugepd format for GUP is only used in PowerPC with hugetlbfs. There are
> >> some kernel usage of hugepd (can refer to hugepd_populate_kernel() for
> >> PPC_8XX), however those pages are not candidates for GUP.
> >>
> >> Commit a6e79df92e4a ("mm/gup: disallow FOLL_LONGTERM GUP-fast writing to
> >> file-backed mappings") added a check to fail gup-fast if there's potential
> >> risk of violating GUP over writeback file systems. That should never apply
> >> to hugepd. Considering that hugepd is an old format (and even
> >> software-only), there's no plan to extend hugepd into other file typed
> >> memories that is prone to the same issue.
> >
> > I didn't dig into the ppc stuff too deeply, but this looks to me like
> > it is the same thing as ARM's contig bits?
> >
> > ie a chunk of PMD/etc entries are all managed together as though they
> > are a virtual larger entry and we use the hugepte_addr_end() stuff to
> > iterate over each sub entry.
>
> As far as I understand ARM's contig stuff, hugepd on powerpc is
> something different.
>
> hugepd is a page directory dedicated to huge pages, where you have huge
> pages listed instead of regular pages. For instance, on powerpc 32 with
> each PGD entries covering 4Mbytes, a regular page table has 1024 PTEs. A
> hugepd for 512k is a page table with 8 entries.
>
> And for 8Mbytes entries, the hugepd is a page table with only one entry.
> And 2 consecutive PGS entries will point to the same hugepd to cover the
> entire 8Mbytes.
That still sounds alot like the ARM thing - except ARM replicates the
entry, you also said PPC relicates the entry like ARM to get to the
8M?
I guess the difference is in how the table memory is layed out? ARM
marks the size in the same entry that has the physical address so the
entries are self describing and then replicated. It kind of sounds
like PPC is marking the size in prior level and then reconfiguring the
layout of the lower level? Otherwise it surely must do the same
replication to make a radix index work..
If yes, I guess that is the main problem, the mm APIs don't have way
today to convey data from the pgd level to understand how to parse the
pmd level?
> > It seems to me we should see ARM and PPC agree on what the API is for
> > this and then get rid of hugepd by making both use the same page table
> > walker API. Is that too hopeful?
>
> Can't see the similarity between ARM contig PTE and PPC huge page
> directories.
Well, they are both variable sized entries.
So if you imagine a pmd_leaf(), pmd_leaf_size() and a pte_leaf_size()
that would return enough information for both.
Jason
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