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* [patch 0/6] MMU Notifiers V7
@ 2008-02-15  6:48 Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code Christoph Lameter
                   ` (6 more replies)
  0 siblings, 7 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-15  6:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: akpm
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

This is a patchset implementing MMU notifier callbacks based on Andrea's
earlier work. These are needed if Linux pages are referenced from something
else than tracked by the rmaps of the kernel (an external MMU). MMU
notifiers allow us to get rid of the page pinning for RDMA and various
other purposes. It gets rid of the broken use of mlock for page pinning and
avoids having to lock pages by increasing the refcount.
(mlock really does *not* pin pages....)

More information on the rationale and the technical details can be found in
the first patch and the README provided by that patch in
Documentation/mmu_notifiers.

The known immediate users are

KVM
- Establishes a refcount to the page via get_user_pages().
- External references are called spte.
- Has page tables to track pages whose refcount was elevated but
  no reverse maps.

GRU
- Simple additional hardware TLB (possibly covering multiple instances of
  Linux)
- Needs TLB shootdown when the VM unmaps pages.
- Determines page address via follow_page (from interrupt context) but can
  fall back to get_user_pages().
- No page reference possible since no page status is kept..

XPmem
- Allows use of a processes memory by remote instances of Linux.
- Provides its own reverse mappings to track remote pte.
- Established refcounts on the exported pages.
- Must sleep in order to wait for remote acks of ptes that are being
  cleared.

Andrea's mmu_notifier #4 -> RFC V1

- Merge subsystem rmap based with Linux rmap based approach
- Move Linux rmap based notifiers out of macro
- Try to account for what locks are held while the notifiers are
  called.
- Develop a patch sequence that separates out the different types of
  hooks so that we can review their use.
- Avoid adding include to linux/mm_types.h
- Integrate RCU logic suggested by Peter.

V1->V2:
- Improve RCU support
- Use mmap_sem for mmu_notifier register / unregister
- Drop invalidate_page from COW, mm/fremap.c and mm/rmap.c since we
  already have invalidate_range() callbacks there.
- Clean compile for !MMU_NOTIFIER
- Isolate filemap_xip strangeness into its own diff
- Pass a the flag to invalidate_range to indicate if a spinlock
  is held.
- Add invalidate_all()

V2->V3:
- Further RCU fixes
- Fixes from Andrea to fixup aging and move invalidate_range() in do_wp_page
  and sys_remap_file_pages() after the pte clearing.

V3->V4:
- Drop locking and synchronize_rcu() on ->release since we know on release that
  we are the only executing thread. This is also true for invalidate_all() so
  we could drop off the mmu_notifier there early. Use hlist_del_init instead
  of hlist_del_rcu.
- Do the invalidation as begin/end pairs with the requirement that the driver
  holds off new references in between.
- Fixup filemap_xip.c
- Figure out a potential way in which XPmem can deal with locks that are held.
- Robin's patches to make the mmu_notifier logic manage the PageRmapExported bit.
- Strip cc list down a bit.
- Drop Peters new rcu list macro
- Add description to the core patch

V4->V5:
- Provide missing callouts for mremap.
- Provide missing callouts for copy_page_range.
- Reduce mm_struct space to zero if !MMU_NOTIFIER by #ifdeffing out
  structure contents.
- Get rid of the invalidate_all() callback by moving ->release in place
  of invalidate_all.
- Require holding mmap_sem on register/unregister instead of acquiring it
  ourselves. In some contexts where we want to register/unregister we are
  already holding mmap_sem.
- Split out the rmap support patch so that there is no need to apply
  all patches for KVM and GRU.

V5->V6:
- Provide missing range callouts for mprotect
- Fix do_wp_page control path sequencing
- Clarify locking conventions
- GRU and XPmem confirmed to work with this patchset.
- Provide skeleton code for GRU/KVM type callback and for XPmem type.
- Rework documentation and put it into Documentation/mmu_notifier.

V6->V7:
- Code our own page table traversal in the skeletons so that we can perform
  the insertion of a remote pte under pte lock.
- Discuss page pinning by increasing page refcount

-- 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-15  6:48 [patch 0/6] MMU Notifiers V7 Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-15  6:49 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-18 22:33   ` Roland Dreier
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges Christoph Lameter
                   ` (5 subsequent siblings)
  6 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-15  6:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: akpm
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

[-- Attachment #1: mmu_core --]
[-- Type: text/plain, Size: 19064 bytes --]

MMU notifiers are used for hardware and software that establishes
external references to pages managed by the Linux kernel. These are
page table entriews or tlb entries or something else that allows
hardware (such as DMA engines, scatter gather devices, networking,
sharing of address spaces across operating system boundaries) and
software (Virtualization solutions such as KVM, Xen etc) to
access memory managed by the Linux kernel.

The MMU notifier will notify the device driver that subscribes to such
a notifier that the VM is going to do something with the memory
mapped by that device. The device must then drop references for the
indicated memory area. The references may be reestablished later.

The notification scheme is much better than the current schemes of
avoiding the danger of the VM removing pages that are externally
mapped. We currently either mlock pages used for RDMA, XPmem etc
in memory or increase the refcount to pin the pages. Increasing
the refcount makes it impossible for the VM to reclaim the page.

Mlock causes problems with reclaim and may lead to OOM if too many
pages are pinned in memory. It is also incorrect in terms what the POSIX
specificies for what role mlock should play. Mlock does *not* pin pages in
memory. Mlock just means do not allow the page to be moved to swap.

Linux can move pages in memory (for example through the page migration
mechanism). These pages can be moved even if they are mlocked(!!!!).
The current approach of page pinning in use by RDMA etc is conceptually
broken but there are currently no other easy solutions.

The alternate of increasing the page count to pin pages is also not
that enticing since there will be continual attempts to reclaim
or migrate these pages.

The solution here allows us to finally fix this issue by requiring
such devices to subscribe to a notification chain that will allow
them to work without pinning. The VM gains control of its memory again
and the memory that has external references can be managed like regular
memory.

This patch: Core portion

Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com>

---
 Documentation/mmu_notifier/README |  105 ++++++++++++++++++++++
 include/linux/mm_types.h          |    7 +
 include/linux/mmu_notifier.h      |  180 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 kernel/fork.c                     |    2 
 mm/Kconfig                        |    4 
 mm/Makefile                       |    1 
 mm/mmap.c                         |    2 
 mm/mmu_notifier.c                 |   76 ++++++++++++++++
 8 files changed, 377 insertions(+)

Index: linux-2.6/Documentation/mmu_notifier/README
===================================================================
--- /dev/null	1970-01-01 00:00:00.000000000 +0000
+++ linux-2.6/Documentation/mmu_notifier/README	2008-02-14 22:27:19.000000000 -0800
@@ -0,0 +1,105 @@
+Linux MMU Notifiers
+-------------------
+
+MMU notifiers are used for hardware and software that establishes
+external references to pages managed by the Linux kernel. These are
+page table entriews or tlb entries or something else that allows
+hardware (such as DMA engines, scatter gather devices, networking,
+sharing of address spaces across operating system boundaries) and
+software (Virtualization solutions such as KVM, Xen etc) to
+access memory managed by the Linux kernel.
+
+The MMU notifier will notify the device driver that subscribes to such
+a notifier that the VM is going to do something with the memory
+mapped by that device. The device must then drop references for the
+indicated memory area. The references may be reestablished later.
+
+The notification scheme is much better than the current schemes of
+dealing with the danger of the VM removing pages.
+We currently mlock pages used for RDMA, XPmem etc in memory or
+increase the refcount of the pages.
+
+Both cause problems with reclaim and may lead to OOM if too many
+pages are pinned in memory. Mlock is also incorrect in terms of the POSIX
+specification of the role of mlock. Mlock does *not* pin pages in
+memory. It just does not allow the page to be moved to swap.
+The page refcount is used to track current users of a page struct.
+Artificially inflating the refcount means that the VM cannot track
+down all references to a page. It will not be able to reclaim or
+move a page. However, the core code will try again and again because
+the assumption is that an elevated refcount is a temporary situation.
+
+Linux can move pages in memory (for example through the page migration
+mechanism). These pages can be moved even if they are mlocked(!!!!).
+So the current approach in use by RDMA etc etc is conceptually broken
+but there are currently no other easy solutions.
+
+The solution here allows us to finally fix this issue by requiring
+such devices to subscribe to a notification chain that will allow
+them to work without pinning.
+
+The notifier chains provide two callback mechanisms. The
+first one is required for any device that establishes external mappings.
+The second (rmap) mechanism is required if a device needs to be
+able to sleep when invalidating references. Sleeping may be necessary
+if we are mapping across a network or to different Linux instances
+in the same address space.
+
+mmu_notifier mechanism (for KVM/GRU etc)
+----------------------------------------
+Callbacks are registered with an mm_struct from a device driver using
+mmu_notifier_register(). When the VM removes pages (or changes
+permissions on pages etc) then callbacks are triggered.
+
+The invalidation function for a single page (*invalidate_page)
+is called with spinlocks (in particular the pte lock) held. This allow
+for an easy implementation of external ptes that are on the local system.
+
+The invalidation mechanism for a range (*invalidate_range_begin/end*) is
+called most of the time without any locks held. It is only called with
+locks held for file backed mappings that are truncated. A flag indicates
+in which mode we are. A driver can use that mechanism to f.e.
+delay the freeing of the pages during truncate until no locks are held.
+
+Pages must be marked dirty if dirty bits are found to be set in
+the external ptes during unmap.
+
+The *release* method is called when a Linux process exits. It is run before
+the pages and mappings of a process are torn down and gives the device driver
+a chance to zap all the external mappings in one go.
+
+An example for a code that can be used to build a notifier mechanism into
+a device driver can be found in the file
+Documentation/mmu_notifier/skeleton.c
+
+mmu_rmap_notifier mechanism (XPMEM etc)
+---------------------------------------
+The mmu_rmap_notifier allows the device driver to implement their own rmap
+and allows the device driver to sleep during page eviction. This is necessary
+for complex drivers that f.e. allow the sharing of memory between processes
+running on different Linux instances (typically over a network or in a
+partitioned NUMA system).
+
+The mmu_rmap_notifier adds another invalidate_page() callout that is called
+*before* the Linux rmaps are walked. At that point only the page lock is
+held. The invalidate_page() function must walk the driver rmaps and evict
+all the references to the page.
+
+There is no process information available before the rmaps are consulted.
+The notifier mechanism can therefore not be attached to an mm_struct. Instead
+it is a global callback list. Having to perform a callback for each and every
+page that is reclaimed would be inefficient. Therefore we add an additional
+page flag: PageRmapExternal(). Only pages that are marked with this bit can
+be exported and the rmap callbacks will only be performed for pages marked
+that way.
+
+The required additional Page flag is only availabe in 64 bit mode and
+therefore the mmu_rmap_notifier portion is not available on 32 bit platforms.
+
+An example of code to build a mmu_notifier mechanism with rmap capabilty
+can be found in Documentation/mmu_notifier/skeleton_rmap.c
+
+February 9, 2008,
+	Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com
+
+Index: linux-2.6/include/linux/mm_types.h
Index: linux-2.6/include/linux/mm_types.h
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/include/linux/mm_types.h	2008-02-14 20:59:01.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/include/linux/mm_types.h	2008-02-14 21:17:51.000000000 -0800
@@ -159,6 +159,12 @@ struct vm_area_struct {
 #endif
 };
 
+struct mmu_notifier_head {
+#ifdef CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER
+	struct hlist_head head;
+#endif
+};
+
 struct mm_struct {
 	struct vm_area_struct * mmap;		/* list of VMAs */
 	struct rb_root mm_rb;
@@ -228,6 +234,7 @@ struct mm_struct {
 #ifdef CONFIG_CGROUP_MEM_CONT
 	struct mem_cgroup *mem_cgroup;
 #endif
+	struct mmu_notifier_head mmu_notifier; /* MMU notifier list */
 };
 
 #endif /* _LINUX_MM_TYPES_H */
Index: linux-2.6/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h
===================================================================
--- /dev/null	1970-01-01 00:00:00.000000000 +0000
+++ linux-2.6/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h	2008-02-14 22:42:28.000000000 -0800
@@ -0,0 +1,180 @@
+#ifndef _LINUX_MMU_NOTIFIER_H
+#define _LINUX_MMU_NOTIFIER_H
+
+/*
+ * MMU motifier
+ *
+ * Notifier functions for hardware and software that establishes external
+ * references to pages of a Linux system. The notifier calls ensure that
+ * external mappings are removed when the Linux VM removes memory ranges
+ * or individual pages from a process.
+ *
+ * These fall into two classes:
+ *
+ * 1. mmu_notifier
+ *
+ * 	These are callbacks registered with an mm_struct. If pages are
+ * 	removed from an address space then callbacks are performed.
+ *
+ * 	Spinlocks must be held in order to walk reverse maps. The
+ * 	invalidate_page() callbacks are performed with spinlocks held.
+ *
+ * 	The invalidate_range_start/end callbacks can be performed in contexts
+ * 	where sleeping is allowed or in atomic contexts. A flag is passed
+ * 	to indicate an atomic context.
+ *
+ *	Pages must be marked dirty if dirty bits are found to be set in
+ *	the external ptes.
+ */
+
+#include <linux/list.h>
+#include <linux/spinlock.h>
+#include <linux/rcupdate.h>
+#include <linux/mm_types.h>
+
+struct mmu_notifier_ops;
+
+struct mmu_notifier {
+	struct hlist_node hlist;
+	const struct mmu_notifier_ops *ops;
+};
+
+struct mmu_notifier_ops {
+	/*
+	 * The release notifier is called when no other execution threads
+	 * are left. Synchronization is not necessary.
+	 */
+	void (*release)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+			struct mm_struct *mm);
+
+	/*
+	 * age_page is called from contexts where the pte_lock is held
+	 */
+	int (*age_page)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+			struct mm_struct *mm,
+			unsigned long address);
+
+	/*
+	 * invalidate_page is called from contexts where the pte_lock is held.
+	 */
+	void (*invalidate_page)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+				struct mm_struct *mm,
+				unsigned long address);
+
+	/*
+	 * invalidate_range_begin() and invalidate_range_end() must be paired.
+	 *
+	 * Multiple invalidate_range_begin/ends may be nested or called
+	 * concurrently. That is legit. However, no new external references
+	 * may be established as long as any invalidate_xxx is running or
+	 * any invalidate_range_begin() and has not been completed through a
+	 * corresponding call to invalidate_range_end().
+	 *
+	 * Locking within the notifier needs to serialize events correspondingly.
+	 *
+	 * invalidate_range_begin() must clear all references in the range
+	 * and stop the establishment of new references.
+	 *
+	 * invalidate_range_end() reenables the establishment of references.
+	 *
+	 * atomic indicates that the function is called in an atomic context.
+	 * We can sleep if atomic == 0.
+	 *
+	 * invalidate_range_begin() must remove all external references.
+	 * There will be no retries as with invalidate_page().
+	 */
+	void (*invalidate_range_begin)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+				 struct mm_struct *mm,
+				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
+				 int atomic);
+
+	void (*invalidate_range_end)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+				 struct mm_struct *mm,
+				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
+				 int atomic);
+};
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER
+
+/*
+ * Must hold the mmap_sem for write.
+ *
+ * RCU is used to traverse the list. A quiescent period needs to pass
+ * before the notifier is guaranteed to be visible to all threads
+ */
+extern void mmu_notifier_register(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+				  struct mm_struct *mm);
+
+/*
+ * Must hold mmap_sem for write.
+ *
+ * A quiescent period needs to pass before the mmu_notifier structure
+ * can be released. mmu_notifier_release() will wait for a quiescent period
+ * after calling the ->release callback. So it is safe to call
+ * mmu_notifier_unregister from the ->release function.
+ */
+extern void mmu_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+				    struct mm_struct *mm);
+
+
+extern void mmu_notifier_release(struct mm_struct *mm);
+extern int mmu_notifier_age_page(struct mm_struct *mm,
+				 unsigned long address);
+
+static inline void mmu_notifier_head_init(struct mmu_notifier_head *mnh)
+{
+	INIT_HLIST_HEAD(&mnh->head);
+}
+
+#define mmu_notifier(function, mm, args...)				\
+	do {								\
+		struct mmu_notifier *__mn;				\
+		struct hlist_node *__n;					\
+									\
+		if (unlikely(!hlist_empty(&(mm)->mmu_notifier.head))) { \
+			rcu_read_lock();				\
+			hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(__mn, __n,		\
+					     &(mm)->mmu_notifier.head,	\
+					     hlist)			\
+				if (__mn->ops->function)		\
+					__mn->ops->function(__mn,	\
+							    mm,		\
+							    args);	\
+			rcu_read_unlock();				\
+		}							\
+	} while (0)
+
+#else /* CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER */
+
+/*
+ * Notifiers that use the parameters that they were passed so that the
+ * compiler does not complain about unused variables but does proper
+ * parameter checks even if !CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER.
+ * Macros generate no code.
+ */
+#define mmu_notifier(function, mm, args...)				\
+	do {								\
+		if (0) {						\
+			struct mmu_notifier *__mn;			\
+									\
+			__mn = (struct mmu_notifier *)(0x00ff);		\
+			__mn->ops->function(__mn, mm, args);		\
+		};							\
+	} while (0)
+
+static inline void mmu_notifier_register(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+						struct mm_struct *mm) {}
+static inline void mmu_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+						struct mm_struct *mm) {}
+static inline void mmu_notifier_release(struct mm_struct *mm) {}
+static inline int mmu_notifier_age_page(struct mm_struct *mm,
+				unsigned long address)
+{
+	return 0;
+}
+
+static inline void mmu_notifier_head_init(struct mmu_notifier_head *mmh) {}
+
+#endif /* CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER */
+
+#endif /* _LINUX_MMU_NOTIFIER_H */
Index: linux-2.6/mm/Kconfig
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/Kconfig	2008-02-14 20:59:01.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/Kconfig	2008-02-14 21:17:51.000000000 -0800
@@ -193,3 +193,7 @@ config NR_QUICK
 config VIRT_TO_BUS
 	def_bool y
 	depends on !ARCH_NO_VIRT_TO_BUS
+
+config MMU_NOTIFIER
+	def_bool y
+	bool "MMU notifier, for paging KVM/RDMA"
Index: linux-2.6/mm/Makefile
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/Makefile	2008-02-14 20:59:01.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/Makefile	2008-02-14 21:17:51.000000000 -0800
@@ -33,4 +33,5 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_MIGRATION) += migrate.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_SMP) += allocpercpu.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_QUICKLIST) += quicklist.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_CGROUP_MEM_CONT) += memcontrol.o
+obj-$(CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER) += mmu_notifier.o
 
Index: linux-2.6/mm/mmu_notifier.c
===================================================================
--- /dev/null	1970-01-01 00:00:00.000000000 +0000
+++ linux-2.6/mm/mmu_notifier.c	2008-02-14 22:41:55.000000000 -0800
@@ -0,0 +1,76 @@
+/*
+ *  linux/mm/mmu_notifier.c
+ *
+ *  Copyright (C) 2008  Qumranet, Inc.
+ *  Copyright (C) 2008  SGI
+ *  		Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>
+ *
+ *  This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2. See
+ *  the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
+ */
+
+#include <linux/module.h>
+#include <linux/mm.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
+
+/*
+ * No synchronization. This function can only be called when only a single
+ * process remains that performs teardown.
+ */
+void mmu_notifier_release(struct mm_struct *mm)
+{
+	struct mmu_notifier *mn;
+	struct hlist_node *n, *t;
+
+	if (unlikely(!hlist_empty(&mm->mmu_notifier.head))) {
+		hlist_for_each_entry_safe(mn, n, t,
+					  &mm->mmu_notifier.head, hlist) {
+			hlist_del_init(&mn->hlist);
+			if (mn->ops->release)
+				mn->ops->release(mn, mm);
+		}
+	}
+}
+
+/*
+ * If no young bitflag is supported by the hardware, ->age_page can
+ * unmap the address and return 1 or 0 depending if the mapping previously
+ * existed or not.
+ */
+int mmu_notifier_age_page(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long address)
+{
+	struct mmu_notifier *mn;
+	struct hlist_node *n;
+	int young = 0;
+
+	if (unlikely(!hlist_empty(&mm->mmu_notifier.head))) {
+		rcu_read_lock();
+		hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(mn, n,
+					  &mm->mmu_notifier.head, hlist) {
+			if (mn->ops->age_page)
+				young |= mn->ops->age_page(mn, mm, address);
+		}
+		rcu_read_unlock();
+	}
+
+	return young;
+}
+
+/*
+ * Note that all notifiers use RCU. The updates are only guaranteed to be
+ * visible to other processes after a RCU quiescent period!
+ *
+ * Must hold mmap_sem writably when calling registration functions.
+ */
+void mmu_notifier_register(struct mmu_notifier *mn, struct mm_struct *mm)
+{
+	hlist_add_head_rcu(&mn->hlist, &mm->mmu_notifier.head);
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(mmu_notifier_register);
+
+void mmu_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_notifier *mn, struct mm_struct *mm)
+{
+	hlist_del_rcu(&mn->hlist);
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(mmu_notifier_unregister);
+
Index: linux-2.6/kernel/fork.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/kernel/fork.c	2008-02-14 20:59:01.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/kernel/fork.c	2008-02-14 21:17:51.000000000 -0800
@@ -53,6 +53,7 @@
 #include <linux/tty.h>
 #include <linux/proc_fs.h>
 #include <linux/blkdev.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/pgtable.h>
 #include <asm/pgalloc.h>
@@ -362,6 +363,7 @@ static struct mm_struct * mm_init(struct
 
 	if (likely(!mm_alloc_pgd(mm))) {
 		mm->def_flags = 0;
+		mmu_notifier_head_init(&mm->mmu_notifier);
 		return mm;
 	}
 
Index: linux-2.6/mm/mmap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/mmap.c	2008-02-14 20:59:01.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/mmap.c	2008-02-14 22:42:02.000000000 -0800
@@ -26,6 +26,7 @@
 #include <linux/mount.h>
 #include <linux/mempolicy.h>
 #include <linux/rmap.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/uaccess.h>
 #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
@@ -2037,6 +2038,7 @@ void exit_mmap(struct mm_struct *mm)
 	unsigned long end;
 
 	/* mm's last user has gone, and its about to be pulled down */
+	mmu_notifier_release(mm);
 	arch_exit_mmap(mm);
 
 	lru_add_drain();

-- 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-15  6:48 [patch 0/6] MMU Notifiers V7 Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-15  6:49 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
                     ` (2 more replies)
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 3/6] mmu_notifier: invalidate_page callbacks Christoph Lameter
                   ` (4 subsequent siblings)
  6 siblings, 3 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-15  6:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: akpm
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

[-- Attachment #1: mmu_invalidate_range_callbacks --]
[-- Type: text/plain, Size: 11235 bytes --]

The invalidation of address ranges in a mm_struct needs to be
performed when pages are removed or permissions etc change.

If invalidate_range_begin() is called with locks held then we
pass a flag into invalidate_range() to indicate that no sleeping is
possible. Locks are only held for truncate and huge pages.

In two cases we use invalidate_range_begin/end to invalidate
single pages because the pair allows holding off new references
(idea by Robin Holt).

do_wp_page(): We hold off new references while we update the pte.

xip_unmap: We are not taking the PageLock so we cannot
use the invalidate_page mmu_rmap_notifier. invalidate_range_begin/end
stands in.

Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com>
Signed-off-by: Robin Holt <holt@sgi.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>

---
 mm/filemap_xip.c |    5 +++++
 mm/fremap.c      |    3 +++
 mm/hugetlb.c     |    3 +++
 mm/memory.c      |   35 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------
 mm/mmap.c        |    2 ++
 mm/mprotect.c    |    3 +++
 mm/mremap.c      |    7 ++++++-
 7 files changed, 51 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)

Index: linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/fremap.c	2008-02-14 18:43:31.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c	2008-02-14 18:45:07.000000000 -0800
@@ -15,6 +15,7 @@
 #include <linux/rmap.h>
 #include <linux/module.h>
 #include <linux/syscalls.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/mmu_context.h>
 #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
@@ -214,7 +215,9 @@ asmlinkage long sys_remap_file_pages(uns
 		spin_unlock(&mapping->i_mmap_lock);
 	}
 
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, start + size, 0);
 	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, start + size, 0);
 	if (!err && !(flags & MAP_NONBLOCK)) {
 		if (unlikely(has_write_lock)) {
 			downgrade_write(&mm->mmap_sem);
Index: linux-2.6/mm/memory.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/memory.c	2008-02-14 18:43:31.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/memory.c	2008-02-14 18:45:07.000000000 -0800
@@ -51,6 +51,7 @@
 #include <linux/init.h>
 #include <linux/writeback.h>
 #include <linux/memcontrol.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/pgalloc.h>
 #include <asm/uaccess.h>
@@ -611,6 +612,9 @@ int copy_page_range(struct mm_struct *ds
 	if (is_vm_hugetlb_page(vma))
 		return copy_hugetlb_page_range(dst_mm, src_mm, vma);
 
+	if (is_cow_mapping(vma->vm_flags))
+		mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, src_mm, addr, end, 0);
+
 	dst_pgd = pgd_offset(dst_mm, addr);
 	src_pgd = pgd_offset(src_mm, addr);
 	do {
@@ -621,6 +625,11 @@ int copy_page_range(struct mm_struct *ds
 						vma, addr, next))
 			return -ENOMEM;
 	} while (dst_pgd++, src_pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
+
+	if (is_cow_mapping(vma->vm_flags))
+		mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, src_mm,
+						vma->vm_start, end, 0);
+
 	return 0;
 }
 
@@ -893,13 +902,16 @@ unsigned long zap_page_range(struct vm_a
 	struct mmu_gather *tlb;
 	unsigned long end = address + size;
 	unsigned long nr_accounted = 0;
+	int atomic = details ? (details->i_mmap_lock != 0) : 0;
 
 	lru_add_drain();
 	tlb = tlb_gather_mmu(mm, 0);
 	update_hiwater_rss(mm);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, address, end, atomic);
 	end = unmap_vmas(&tlb, vma, address, end, &nr_accounted, details);
 	if (tlb)
 		tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, address, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, address, end, atomic);
 	return end;
 }
 
@@ -1339,7 +1351,7 @@ int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struc
 {
 	pgd_t *pgd;
 	unsigned long next;
-	unsigned long end = addr + PAGE_ALIGN(size);
+	unsigned long start = addr, end = addr + PAGE_ALIGN(size);
 	struct mm_struct *mm = vma->vm_mm;
 	int err;
 
@@ -1373,6 +1385,7 @@ int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struc
 	pfn -= addr >> PAGE_SHIFT;
 	pgd = pgd_offset(mm, addr);
 	flush_cache_range(vma, addr, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, end, 0);
 	do {
 		next = pgd_addr_end(addr, end);
 		err = remap_pud_range(mm, pgd, addr, next,
@@ -1380,6 +1393,7 @@ int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struc
 		if (err)
 			break;
 	} while (pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, end, 0);
 	return err;
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL(remap_pfn_range);
@@ -1463,10 +1477,11 @@ int apply_to_page_range(struct mm_struct
 {
 	pgd_t *pgd;
 	unsigned long next;
-	unsigned long end = addr + size;
+	unsigned long start = addr, end = addr + size;
 	int err;
 
 	BUG_ON(addr >= end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, end, 0);
 	pgd = pgd_offset(mm, addr);
 	do {
 		next = pgd_addr_end(addr, end);
@@ -1474,6 +1489,7 @@ int apply_to_page_range(struct mm_struct
 		if (err)
 			break;
 	} while (pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, end, 0);
 	return err;
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(apply_to_page_range);
@@ -1614,8 +1630,10 @@ static int do_wp_page(struct mm_struct *
 			page_table = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address,
 							 &ptl);
 			page_cache_release(old_page);
-			if (!pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte))
-				goto unlock;
+			if (!pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte)) {
+				pte_unmap_unlock(page_table, ptl);
+				goto check_dirty;
+			}
 
 			page_mkwrite = 1;
 		}
@@ -1631,7 +1649,8 @@ static int do_wp_page(struct mm_struct *
 		if (ptep_set_access_flags(vma, address, page_table, entry,1))
 			update_mmu_cache(vma, address, entry);
 		ret |= VM_FAULT_WRITE;
-		goto unlock;
+		pte_unmap_unlock(page_table, ptl);
+		goto check_dirty;
 	}
 
 	/*
@@ -1653,6 +1672,8 @@ gotten:
 	if (mem_cgroup_charge(new_page, mm, GFP_KERNEL))
 		goto oom_free_new;
 
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, address,
+				address + PAGE_SIZE, 0);
 	/*
 	 * Re-check the pte - we dropped the lock
 	 */
@@ -1691,8 +1712,10 @@ gotten:
 		page_cache_release(new_page);
 	if (old_page)
 		page_cache_release(old_page);
-unlock:
 	pte_unmap_unlock(page_table, ptl);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm,
+				address, address + PAGE_SIZE, 0);
+check_dirty:
 	if (dirty_page) {
 		if (vma->vm_file)
 			file_update_time(vma->vm_file);
Index: linux-2.6/mm/mmap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/mmap.c	2008-02-14 18:44:56.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/mmap.c	2008-02-14 18:45:07.000000000 -0800
@@ -1748,11 +1748,13 @@ static void unmap_region(struct mm_struc
 	lru_add_drain();
 	tlb = tlb_gather_mmu(mm, 0);
 	update_hiwater_rss(mm);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, end, 0);
 	unmap_vmas(&tlb, vma, start, end, &nr_accounted, NULL);
 	vm_unacct_memory(nr_accounted);
 	free_pgtables(&tlb, vma, prev? prev->vm_end: FIRST_USER_ADDRESS,
 				 next? next->vm_start: 0);
 	tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, start, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, end, 0);
 }
 
 /*
Index: linux-2.6/mm/hugetlb.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/hugetlb.c	2008-02-14 18:43:31.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/hugetlb.c	2008-02-14 18:45:07.000000000 -0800
@@ -14,6 +14,7 @@
 #include <linux/mempolicy.h>
 #include <linux/cpuset.h>
 #include <linux/mutex.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/page.h>
 #include <asm/pgtable.h>
@@ -755,6 +756,7 @@ void __unmap_hugepage_range(struct vm_ar
 	BUG_ON(start & ~HPAGE_MASK);
 	BUG_ON(end & ~HPAGE_MASK);
 
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, end, 1);
 	spin_lock(&mm->page_table_lock);
 	for (address = start; address < end; address += HPAGE_SIZE) {
 		ptep = huge_pte_offset(mm, address);
@@ -775,6 +777,7 @@ void __unmap_hugepage_range(struct vm_ar
 	}
 	spin_unlock(&mm->page_table_lock);
 	flush_tlb_range(vma, start, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, end, 1);
 	list_for_each_entry_safe(page, tmp, &page_list, lru) {
 		list_del(&page->lru);
 		put_page(page);
Index: linux-2.6/mm/filemap_xip.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/filemap_xip.c	2008-02-14 18:43:31.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/filemap_xip.c	2008-02-14 18:45:07.000000000 -0800
@@ -13,6 +13,7 @@
 #include <linux/module.h>
 #include <linux/uio.h>
 #include <linux/rmap.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 #include <linux/sched.h>
 #include <asm/tlbflush.h>
 
@@ -190,6 +191,8 @@ __xip_unmap (struct address_space * mapp
 		address = vma->vm_start +
 			((pgoff - vma->vm_pgoff) << PAGE_SHIFT);
 		BUG_ON(address < vma->vm_start || address >= vma->vm_end);
+		mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, address,
+					address + PAGE_SIZE, 1);
 		pte = page_check_address(page, mm, address, &ptl);
 		if (pte) {
 			/* Nuke the page table entry. */
@@ -201,6 +204,8 @@ __xip_unmap (struct address_space * mapp
 			pte_unmap_unlock(pte, ptl);
 			page_cache_release(page);
 		}
+		mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm,
+				address, address + PAGE_SIZE, 1);
 	}
 	spin_unlock(&mapping->i_mmap_lock);
 }
Index: linux-2.6/mm/mremap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/mremap.c	2008-02-14 18:43:31.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/mremap.c	2008-02-14 18:45:07.000000000 -0800
@@ -18,6 +18,7 @@
 #include <linux/highmem.h>
 #include <linux/security.h>
 #include <linux/syscalls.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/uaccess.h>
 #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
@@ -124,12 +125,15 @@ unsigned long move_page_tables(struct vm
 		unsigned long old_addr, struct vm_area_struct *new_vma,
 		unsigned long new_addr, unsigned long len)
 {
-	unsigned long extent, next, old_end;
+	unsigned long extent, next, old_start, old_end;
 	pmd_t *old_pmd, *new_pmd;
 
+	old_start = old_addr;
 	old_end = old_addr + len;
 	flush_cache_range(vma, old_addr, old_end);
 
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, vma->vm_mm,
+					old_addr, old_end, 0);
 	for (; old_addr < old_end; old_addr += extent, new_addr += extent) {
 		cond_resched();
 		next = (old_addr + PMD_SIZE) & PMD_MASK;
@@ -150,6 +154,7 @@ unsigned long move_page_tables(struct vm
 		move_ptes(vma, old_pmd, old_addr, old_addr + extent,
 				new_vma, new_pmd, new_addr);
 	}
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, vma->vm_mm, old_start, old_end, 0);
 
 	return len + old_addr - old_end;	/* how much done */
 }
Index: linux-2.6/mm/mprotect.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/mprotect.c	2008-02-14 18:43:31.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/mprotect.c	2008-02-14 18:45:07.000000000 -0800
@@ -21,6 +21,7 @@
 #include <linux/syscalls.h>
 #include <linux/swap.h>
 #include <linux/swapops.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 #include <asm/uaccess.h>
 #include <asm/pgtable.h>
 #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
@@ -198,10 +199,12 @@ success:
 		dirty_accountable = 1;
 	}
 
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, end, 0);
 	if (is_vm_hugetlb_page(vma))
 		hugetlb_change_protection(vma, start, end, vma->vm_page_prot);
 	else
 		change_protection(vma, start, end, vma->vm_page_prot, dirty_accountable);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, end, 0);
 	vm_stat_account(mm, oldflags, vma->vm_file, -nrpages);
 	vm_stat_account(mm, newflags, vma->vm_file, nrpages);
 	return 0;

-- 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* [patch 3/6] mmu_notifier: invalidate_page callbacks
  2008-02-15  6:48 [patch 0/6] MMU Notifiers V7 Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-15  6:49 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 4/6] mmu_notifier: Skeleton driver for a simple mmu_notifier Christoph Lameter
                   ` (3 subsequent siblings)
  6 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-15  6:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: akpm
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

[-- Attachment #1: mmu_invalidate_page --]
[-- Type: text/plain, Size: 3026 bytes --]

Two callbacks to remove individual pages as done in rmap code

	invalidate_page()

Called from the inner loop of rmap walks to invalidate pages.

	age_page()

Called for the determination of the page referenced status.

If we do not care about page referenced status then an age_page callback
may be be omitted. PageLock and pte lock are held when either of the
functions is called.

Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com>
Signed-off-by: Robin Holt <holt@sgi.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>

---
 mm/rmap.c |   13 ++++++++++---
 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

Index: linux-2.6/mm/rmap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/rmap.c	2008-02-07 16:49:32.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/rmap.c	2008-02-07 17:25:25.000000000 -0800
@@ -49,6 +49,7 @@
 #include <linux/module.h>
 #include <linux/kallsyms.h>
 #include <linux/memcontrol.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/tlbflush.h>
 
@@ -287,7 +288,8 @@ static int page_referenced_one(struct pa
 	if (vma->vm_flags & VM_LOCKED) {
 		referenced++;
 		*mapcount = 1;	/* break early from loop */
-	} else if (ptep_clear_flush_young(vma, address, pte))
+	} else if (ptep_clear_flush_young(vma, address, pte) |
+		   mmu_notifier_age_page(mm, address))
 		referenced++;
 
 	/* Pretend the page is referenced if the task has the
@@ -455,6 +457,7 @@ static int page_mkclean_one(struct page 
 
 		flush_cache_page(vma, address, pte_pfn(*pte));
 		entry = ptep_clear_flush(vma, address, pte);
+		mmu_notifier(invalidate_page, mm, address);
 		entry = pte_wrprotect(entry);
 		entry = pte_mkclean(entry);
 		set_pte_at(mm, address, pte, entry);
@@ -712,7 +715,8 @@ static int try_to_unmap_one(struct page 
 	 * skipped over this mm) then we should reactivate it.
 	 */
 	if (!migration && ((vma->vm_flags & VM_LOCKED) ||
-			(ptep_clear_flush_young(vma, address, pte)))) {
+			(ptep_clear_flush_young(vma, address, pte) |
+				mmu_notifier_age_page(mm, address)))) {
 		ret = SWAP_FAIL;
 		goto out_unmap;
 	}
@@ -720,6 +724,7 @@ static int try_to_unmap_one(struct page 
 	/* Nuke the page table entry. */
 	flush_cache_page(vma, address, page_to_pfn(page));
 	pteval = ptep_clear_flush(vma, address, pte);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_page, mm, address);
 
 	/* Move the dirty bit to the physical page now the pte is gone. */
 	if (pte_dirty(pteval))
@@ -844,12 +849,14 @@ static void try_to_unmap_cluster(unsigne
 		page = vm_normal_page(vma, address, *pte);
 		BUG_ON(!page || PageAnon(page));
 
-		if (ptep_clear_flush_young(vma, address, pte))
+		if (ptep_clear_flush_young(vma, address, pte) |
+		    mmu_notifier_age_page(mm, address))
 			continue;
 
 		/* Nuke the page table entry. */
 		flush_cache_page(vma, address, pte_pfn(*pte));
 		pteval = ptep_clear_flush(vma, address, pte);
+		mmu_notifier(invalidate_page, mm, address);
 
 		/* If nonlinear, store the file page offset in the pte. */
 		if (page->index != linear_page_index(vma, address))

-- 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* [patch 4/6] mmu_notifier: Skeleton driver for a simple mmu_notifier
  2008-02-15  6:48 [patch 0/6] MMU Notifiers V7 Christoph Lameter
                   ` (2 preceding siblings ...)
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 3/6] mmu_notifier: invalidate_page callbacks Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-15  6:49 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem) Christoph Lameter
                   ` (2 subsequent siblings)
  6 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-15  6:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: akpm
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

[-- Attachment #1: mmu_skeleton --]
[-- Type: text/plain, Size: 7685 bytes --]

This is example code for a simple device driver interface to unmap
pages that were externally mapped.

Locking is simple through a single lock that is used to protect the
device drivers data structures as well as a counter that tracks the
active invalidates on a single address space.

The invalidation of extern ptes must be possible with code that does
not require sleeping. The lock is taken for all driver operations on
the mmu that the driver manages. Locking could be made more sophisticated
but I think this is going to be okay for most uses.

Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>

---
 Documentation/mmu_notifier/skeleton.c |  267 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 1 file changed, 267 insertions(+)

Index: linux-2.6/Documentation/mmu_notifier/skeleton.c
===================================================================
--- /dev/null	1970-01-01 00:00:00.000000000 +0000
+++ linux-2.6/Documentation/mmu_notifier/skeleton.c	2008-02-14 22:23:18.000000000 -0800
@@ -0,0 +1,267 @@
+#include <linux/mm.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
+#include <linux/err.h>
+#include <linux/init.h>
+#include <linux/pagemap.h>
+
+/*
+ * Skeleton for an mmu notifier without rmap callbacks and no need to slepp
+ * during invalidate_page().
+ *
+ * (C) 2008 Silicon Graphics, Inc.
+ * 		Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>
+ *
+ * Note that the locking is fairly basic. One can add various optimizations
+ * here and there. There is a single lock for an address space which should be
+ * satisfactory for most cases. If not then the lock can be split like the
+ * pte_lock in Linux. It is most likely best to place the locks in the
+ * page table structure or into whatever the external mmu uses to
+ * track the mappings.
+ */
+
+struct my_mmu {
+	/* MMU notifier specific fields */
+	struct mmu_notifier notifier;
+	spinlock_t lock;	/* Protects counter and invidual zaps */
+	int invalidates;	/* Number of active range_invalidates */
+};
+
+/*
+ * Called with m->lock held
+ */
+static void my_mmu_insert_page(struct my_mmu *m,
+		unsigned long address, unsigned long pfn)
+{
+	/* Must be provided */
+	printk(KERN_INFO "insert page %p address=%lx pfn=%ld\n",
+							m, address, pfn);
+}
+
+/*
+ * Called with m->lock held (optional but usually required to
+ * protect data structures of the driver).
+ */
+static void my_mmu_zap_page(struct my_mmu *m, unsigned long address)
+{
+	/* Must be provided */
+	printk(KERN_INFO "zap page %p address=%lx\n", m, address);
+}
+
+/*
+ * Called with m->lock held
+ */
+static void my_mmu_zap_range(struct my_mmu *m,
+	unsigned long start, unsigned long end, int atomic)
+{
+	/* Must be provided */
+	printk(KERN_INFO "zap range %p address=%lx-%lx atomic=%d\n",
+						m, start, end, atomic);
+}
+
+/*
+ * Zap an individual page.
+ *
+ * Serialization with establishment of a new external pte occurs
+ * through the pte lock. The m->lock is taken to serialize access
+ * to the driver private data. If the driver does not need this
+ * serialization then the lock can be omitted.
+ */
+static void my_mmu_invalidate_page(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+	struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long address)
+{
+	struct my_mmu *m = container_of(mn, struct my_mmu, notifier);
+
+	spin_lock(&m->lock);
+	my_mmu_zap_page(m, address);
+	spin_unlock(&m->lock);
+}
+
+/*
+ * Increment and decrement of the number of range invalidates
+ */
+static inline void inc_active(struct my_mmu *m)
+{
+	spin_lock(&m->lock);
+	m->invalidates++;
+	spin_unlock(&m->lock);
+}
+
+static inline void dec_active(struct my_mmu *m)
+{
+	spin_lock(&m->lock);
+	m->invalidates--;
+	spin_unlock(&m->lock);
+}
+
+static void my_mmu_invalidate_range_begin(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+	struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
+	int atomic)
+{
+	struct my_mmu *m = container_of(mn, struct my_mmu, notifier);
+
+	inc_active(m);	/* Holds off new references */
+	my_mmu_zap_range(m, start, end, atomic);
+}
+
+static void my_mmu_invalidate_range_end(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+	struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
+	int atomic)
+{
+	struct my_mmu *m = container_of(mn, struct my_mmu, notifier);
+
+	dec_active(m);		/* Enables new references */
+}
+
+/*
+ * Populate a page.
+ *
+ * A return value of-EAGAIN means please retry this operation.
+ *
+ * Acquisition of mmap_sem can be omitted if the caller already holds
+ * the semaphore.
+ */
+struct page *my_mmu_populate_page(struct my_mmu *m,
+	struct vm_area_struct *vma,
+	unsigned long address, int atomic, int write)
+{
+	struct mm_struct *mm = vma->vm_mm;
+	struct page *page = ERR_PTR(-EAGAIN);
+	int err;
+	int done = 0;
+	pgd_t *pgd;
+	pud_t *pud;
+	pmd_t *pmd;
+	pte_t *ptep, pte;
+	spinlock_t *ptl;
+
+	/* No need to do anything if a range invalidate is running */
+	if (m->invalidates)
+		return ERR_PTR(-EAGAIN);
+
+	if (atomic) {
+		if (!down_read_trylock(&mm->mmap_sem))
+			return ERR_PTR(-EAGAIN);
+	} else
+		down_read(&mm->mmap_sem);
+
+	do {
+		page = ERR_PTR(-EAGAIN);
+
+		if (m->invalidates)
+			break;
+
+		pgd = pgd_offset(mm, address);
+		if (pgd_none(*pgd) || unlikely(pgd_bad(*pgd)))
+			goto check;
+
+		pud = pud_offset(pgd, address);
+		if (pud_none(*pud) || unlikely(pud_bad(*pud)))
+			goto check;
+
+		pmd = pmd_offset(pud, address);
+		if (pmd_none(*pmd) || unlikely(pmd_bad(*pmd)))
+			goto check;
+
+		ptep = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address, &ptl);
+		if (!ptep)
+			goto check;
+
+		pte = *ptep;
+		if (!pte_present(pte))
+			goto pte_unlock;
+		if (write && !pte_write(pte))
+			goto pte_unlock;
+
+		page = vm_normal_page(vma, address, pte);
+		if (page) {
+			done = 1;
+			/*
+			 * The m->lock is held to ensure that the count of
+			 * current invalidates stays constant.
+			 * invalidate_page() is held off by the pte lock.
+			 */
+			spin_lock(&m->lock);
+
+			if (!m->invalidates)
+				my_mmu_insert_page(m, address, page_to_pfn(page));
+			else
+				page = ERR_PTR(-EAGAIN);
+
+			spin_unlock(&m->lock);
+		}
+pte_unlock:
+		pte_unmap_unlock(ptep, ptl);
+check:
+
+		if (done || atomic)
+			break;
+
+		/*
+		 * Need to run the page fault handler to get the pte entry
+		 * setup right.
+		 */
+		err = get_user_pages(current, vma->vm_mm, address, 1,
+					write, 1, NULL, NULL);
+
+		if (err < 0) {
+			page = ERR_PTR(err);
+			break;
+		}
+
+	} while (!done);
+
+	up_read(&vma->vm_mm->mmap_sem);
+	return page;
+}
+
+/*
+ * All other threads accessing this mm_struct must have terminated by now.
+ */
+static void my_mmu_release(struct mmu_notifier *mn, struct mm_struct *mm)
+{
+	struct my_mmu *m = container_of(mn, struct my_mmu, notifier);
+
+	my_mmu_zap_range(m, 0, TASK_SIZE, 0);
+	kfree(m);
+	printk(KERN_INFO "MMU Notifier detaching\n");
+}
+
+static struct mmu_notifier_ops my_mmu_ops = {
+	my_mmu_release,
+	NULL,			/* No aging function */
+	my_mmu_invalidate_page,
+	my_mmu_invalidate_range_begin,
+	my_mmu_invalidate_range_end
+};
+
+/*
+ * This function must be called to activate callbacks from a process
+ */
+int my_mmu_attach_to_process(struct mm_struct *mm)
+{
+	struct my_mmu *m = kzalloc(sizeof(struct my_mmu), GFP_KERNEL);
+
+	if (!m)
+		return -ENOMEM;
+
+	m->notifier.ops = &my_mmu_ops;
+	spin_lock_init(&m->lock);
+
+	/*
+	 * mmap_sem handling can be omitted if it is guaranteed that
+	 * the context from which my_mmu_attach_to_process is called
+	 * is already holding a writelock on mmap_sem.
+	 */
+	down_write(&mm->mmap_sem);
+	mmu_notifier_register(&m->notifier, mm);
+	up_write(&mm->mmap_sem);
+
+	/*
+	 * RCU sync is expensive but necessary if we need to guarantee
+	 * that multiple threads running on other cpus have seen the
+	 * notifier changes.
+	 */
+	synchronize_rcu();
+	return 0;
+}
+

-- 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-15  6:48 [patch 0/6] MMU Notifiers V7 Christoph Lameter
                   ` (3 preceding siblings ...)
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 4/6] mmu_notifier: Skeleton driver for a simple mmu_notifier Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-15  6:49 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-19 23:55   ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 6/6] mmu_rmap_notifier: Skeleton for complex driver that uses its own rmaps Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-16 10:48 ` [PATCH] KVM swapping with MMU Notifiers V7 Andrea Arcangeli
  6 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-15  6:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: akpm
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

[-- Attachment #1: mmu_rmap_support --]
[-- Type: text/plain, Size: 8290 bytes --]

These special additional callbacks are required because XPmem (and likely
other mechanisms) do use their own rmap (multiple processes on a series
of remote Linux instances may be accessing the memory of a process).
F.e. XPmem may have to send out notifications to remote Linux instances
and receive confirmation before a page can be freed.

So we handle this like an additional Linux reverse map that is walked after
the existing rmaps have been walked. We leave the walking to the driver that
is then able to use something else than a spinlock to walk its reverse
maps. So we can actually call the driver without holding spinlocks while
we hold the Pagelock.

However, we cannot determine the mm_struct that a page belongs to at
that point. The mm_struct can only be determined from the rmaps by the
device driver.

We add another pageflag (PageExternalRmap) that is set if a page has
been remotely mapped (f.e. by a process from another Linux instance).
We can then only perform the callbacks for pages that are actually in
remote use.

Rmap notifiers need an extra page bit and are only available
on 64 bit platforms. This functionality is not available on 32 bit!

A notifier that uses the reverse maps callbacks does not need to provide
the invalidate_page() method that is called when locks are held.

Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>

---
 include/linux/mmu_notifier.h |   65 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 include/linux/page-flags.h   |   11 +++++++
 mm/mmu_notifier.c            |   34 ++++++++++++++++++++++
 mm/rmap.c                    |    9 +++++
 4 files changed, 119 insertions(+)

Index: linux-2.6/include/linux/page-flags.h
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/include/linux/page-flags.h	2008-02-14 20:58:17.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/include/linux/page-flags.h	2008-02-14 21:21:04.000000000 -0800
@@ -105,6 +105,7 @@
  * 64 bit  |           FIELDS             | ??????         FLAGS         |
  *         63                            32                              0
  */
+#define PG_external_rmap	30	/* Page has external rmap */
 #define PG_uncached		31	/* Page has been mapped as uncached */
 #endif
 
@@ -296,6 +297,16 @@ static inline void __ClearPageTail(struc
 #define SetPageUncached(page)	set_bit(PG_uncached, &(page)->flags)
 #define ClearPageUncached(page)	clear_bit(PG_uncached, &(page)->flags)
 
+#if defined(CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER) && defined(CONFIG_64BIT)
+#define PageExternalRmap(page)	test_bit(PG_external_rmap, &(page)->flags)
+#define SetPageExternalRmap(page) set_bit(PG_external_rmap, &(page)->flags)
+#define ClearPageExternalRmap(page) clear_bit(PG_external_rmap, \
+							&(page)->flags)
+#else
+#define ClearPageExternalRmap(page) do {} while (0)
+#define PageExternalRmap(page)	0
+#endif
+
 struct page;	/* forward declaration */
 
 extern void cancel_dirty_page(struct page *page, unsigned int account_size);
Index: linux-2.6/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h	2008-02-14 21:20:55.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h	2008-02-14 21:21:04.000000000 -0800
@@ -23,6 +23,18 @@
  * 	where sleeping is allowed or in atomic contexts. A flag is passed
  * 	to indicate an atomic context.
  *
+ *
+ * 2. mmu_rmap_notifier
+ *
+ *	Callbacks for subsystems that provide their own rmaps. These
+ *	need to walk their own rmaps for a page. The invalidate_page
+ *	callback is outside of locks so that we are not in a strictly
+ *	atomic context (but we may be in a PF_MEMALLOC context if the
+ *	notifier is called from reclaim code) and are able to sleep.
+ *
+ *	Rmap notifiers need an extra page bit and are only available
+ *	on 64 bit platforms.
+ *
  *	Pages must be marked dirty if dirty bits are found to be set in
  *	the external ptes.
  */
@@ -96,6 +108,23 @@ struct mmu_notifier_ops {
 				 int atomic);
 };
 
+struct mmu_rmap_notifier_ops;
+
+struct mmu_rmap_notifier {
+	struct hlist_node hlist;
+	const struct mmu_rmap_notifier_ops *ops;
+};
+
+struct mmu_rmap_notifier_ops {
+	/*
+	 * Called with the page lock held after ptes are modified or removed
+	 * so that a subsystem with its own rmap's can remove remote ptes
+	 * mapping a page.
+	 */
+	void (*invalidate_page)(struct mmu_rmap_notifier *mrn,
+						struct page *page);
+};
+
 #ifdef CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER
 
 /*
@@ -146,6 +175,27 @@ static inline void mmu_notifier_head_ini
 		}							\
 	} while (0)
 
+extern void mmu_rmap_notifier_register(struct mmu_rmap_notifier *mrn);
+extern void mmu_rmap_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_rmap_notifier *mrn);
+
+/* Must hold PageLock */
+extern void mmu_rmap_export_page(struct page *page);
+
+extern struct hlist_head mmu_rmap_notifier_list;
+
+#define mmu_rmap_notifier(function, args...)				\
+	do {								\
+		struct mmu_rmap_notifier *__mrn;			\
+		struct hlist_node *__n;					\
+									\
+		rcu_read_lock();					\
+		hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(__mrn, __n,			\
+				&mmu_rmap_notifier_list, hlist)		\
+			if (__mrn->ops->function)			\
+				__mrn->ops->function(__mrn, args);	\
+		rcu_read_unlock();					\
+	} while (0);
+
 #else /* CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER */
 
 /*
@@ -164,6 +214,16 @@ static inline void mmu_notifier_head_ini
 		};							\
 	} while (0)
 
+#define mmu_rmap_notifier(function, args...)				\
+	do {								\
+		if (0) {						\
+			struct mmu_rmap_notifier *__mrn;		\
+									\
+			__mrn = (struct mmu_rmap_notifier *)(0x00ff);	\
+			__mrn->ops->function(__mrn, args);		\
+		}							\
+	} while (0);
+
 static inline void mmu_notifier_register(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
 						struct mm_struct *mm) {}
 static inline void mmu_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
@@ -177,6 +237,11 @@ static inline int mmu_notifier_age_page(
 
 static inline void mmu_notifier_head_init(struct mmu_notifier_head *mmh) {}
 
+static inline void mmu_rmap_notifier_register(struct mmu_rmap_notifier *mrn)
+									{}
+static inline void mmu_rmap_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_rmap_notifier *mrn)
+									{}
+
 #endif /* CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER */
 
 #endif /* _LINUX_MMU_NOTIFIER_H */
Index: linux-2.6/mm/mmu_notifier.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/mmu_notifier.c	2008-02-14 21:17:51.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/mmu_notifier.c	2008-02-14 21:21:04.000000000 -0800
@@ -74,3 +74,37 @@ void mmu_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(mmu_notifier_unregister);
 
+#ifdef CONFIG_64BIT
+static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(mmu_notifier_list_lock);
+HLIST_HEAD(mmu_rmap_notifier_list);
+
+void mmu_rmap_notifier_register(struct mmu_rmap_notifier *mrn)
+{
+	spin_lock(&mmu_notifier_list_lock);
+	hlist_add_head_rcu(&mrn->hlist, &mmu_rmap_notifier_list);
+	spin_unlock(&mmu_notifier_list_lock);
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(mmu_rmap_notifier_register);
+
+void mmu_rmap_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_rmap_notifier *mrn)
+{
+	spin_lock(&mmu_notifier_list_lock);
+	hlist_del_rcu(&mrn->hlist);
+	spin_unlock(&mmu_notifier_list_lock);
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(mmu_rmap_notifier_unregister);
+
+/*
+ * Export a page.
+ *
+ * Pagelock must be held.
+ * Must be called before a page is put on an external rmap.
+ */
+void mmu_rmap_export_page(struct page *page)
+{
+	BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page));
+	SetPageExternalRmap(page);
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(mmu_rmap_export_page);
+
+#endif
Index: linux-2.6/mm/rmap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/rmap.c	2008-02-14 21:21:00.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/rmap.c	2008-02-14 21:21:04.000000000 -0800
@@ -497,6 +497,10 @@ int page_mkclean(struct page *page)
 		struct address_space *mapping = page_mapping(page);
 		if (mapping) {
 			ret = page_mkclean_file(mapping, page);
+			if (unlikely(PageExternalRmap(page))) {
+				mmu_rmap_notifier(invalidate_page, page);
+				ClearPageExternalRmap(page);
+			}
 			if (page_test_dirty(page)) {
 				page_clear_dirty(page);
 				ret = 1;
@@ -1013,6 +1017,11 @@ int try_to_unmap(struct page *page, int 
 	else
 		ret = try_to_unmap_file(page, migration);
 
+	if (unlikely(PageExternalRmap(page))) {
+		mmu_rmap_notifier(invalidate_page, page);
+		ClearPageExternalRmap(page);
+	}
+
 	if (!page_mapped(page))
 		ret = SWAP_SUCCESS;
 	return ret;

-- 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* [patch 6/6] mmu_rmap_notifier: Skeleton for complex driver that uses its own rmaps
  2008-02-15  6:48 [patch 0/6] MMU Notifiers V7 Christoph Lameter
                   ` (4 preceding siblings ...)
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem) Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-15  6:49 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-16 10:48 ` [PATCH] KVM swapping with MMU Notifiers V7 Andrea Arcangeli
  6 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-15  6:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: akpm
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

[-- Attachment #1: mmu_rmap_skeleton --]
[-- Type: text/plain, Size: 8619 bytes --]

The skeleton for the rmap notifier leaves the invalidate_page method of
the mmu_notifier empty and hooks a new invalidate_page callback into the
global chain for mmu_rmap_notifiers.

There are seveal simplifications in here to avoid making this too complex.
The reverse maps need to consit of references to vma f.e.

Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>

---
 Documentation/mmu_notifier/skeleton_rmap.c |  311 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 1 file changed, 311 insertions(+)

Index: linux-2.6/Documentation/mmu_notifier/skeleton_rmap.c
===================================================================
--- /dev/null	1970-01-01 00:00:00.000000000 +0000
+++ linux-2.6/Documentation/mmu_notifier/skeleton_rmap.c	2008-02-14 22:23:01.000000000 -0800
@@ -0,0 +1,311 @@
+#include <linux/mm.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
+#include <linux/err.h>
+#include <linux/init.h>
+#include <linux/pagemap.h>
+
+/*
+ * Skeleton for an mmu notifier with rmap callbacks and sleeping during
+ * invalidate_page.
+ *
+ * (C) 2008 Silicon Graphics, Inc.
+ * 		Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>
+ *
+ * Note that the locking is fairly basic. One can add various optimizations
+ * here and there. There is a single lock for an address space which should be
+ * satisfactory for most cases. If not then the lock can be split like the
+ * pte_lock in Linux. It is most likely best to place the locks in the
+ * page table structure or into whatever the external mmu uses to
+ * track the mappings.
+ */
+
+struct my_mmu {
+	/* MMU notifier specific fields */
+	struct mmu_notifier notifier;
+	spinlock_t lock;	/* Protects counter and invidual zaps */
+	int invalidates;	/* Number of active range_invalidate */
+
+       /* Rmap support */
+       struct list_head list;	/* rmap list of my_mmu structs */
+       unsigned long base;
+};
+
+/*
+ * Called with m->lock held
+ */
+static void my_mmu_insert_page(struct my_mmu *m,
+		unsigned long address, unsigned long pfn)
+{
+	/* Must be provided */
+	printk(KERN_INFO "insert page %p address=%lx pfn=%ld\n",
+							m, address, pfn);
+}
+
+/*
+ * Called with m->lock held
+ */
+static void my_mmu_zap_range(struct my_mmu *m,
+	unsigned long start, unsigned long end, int atomic)
+{
+	/* Must be provided */
+	printk(KERN_INFO "zap range %p address=%lx-%lx atomic=%d\n",
+						m, start, end, atomic);
+}
+
+/*
+ * Called with m->lock held (optional but usually required to
+ * protect data structures of the driver).
+ */
+static void my_mmu_zap_page(struct my_mmu *m, unsigned long address)
+{
+	/* Must be provided */
+	printk(KERN_INFO "zap page %p address=%lx\n", m, address);
+}
+
+/*
+ * Increment and decrement of the number of range invalidates
+ */
+static inline void inc_active(struct my_mmu *m)
+{
+	spin_lock(&m->lock);
+	m->invalidates++;
+	spin_unlock(&m->lock);
+}
+
+static inline void dec_active(struct my_mmu *m)
+{
+	spin_lock(&m->lock);
+	m->invalidates--;
+	spin_unlock(&m->lock);
+}
+
+static void my_mmu_invalidate_range_begin(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+	struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
+	int atomic)
+{
+	struct my_mmu *m = container_of(mn, struct my_mmu, notifier);
+
+	inc_active(m);	/* Holds off new references */
+	my_mmu_zap_range(m, start, end, atomic);
+}
+
+static void my_mmu_invalidate_range_end(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+	struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
+	int atomic)
+{
+	struct my_mmu *m = container_of(mn, struct my_mmu, notifier);
+
+	dec_active(m);	/* Enables new references */
+}
+
+/*
+ * Populate a page.
+ *
+ * A return value of-EAGAIN means please retry this operation.
+ *
+ * Acuisition of mmap_sem can be omitted if the caller already holds
+ * the semaphore.
+ */
+struct page *my_mmu_populate_page(struct my_mmu *m,
+	struct vm_area_struct *vma,
+	unsigned long address, int write)
+{
+	struct mm_struct *mm = vma->vm_mm;
+	struct page *page;
+	int err;
+	int done = 0;
+	pgd_t *pgd;
+	pud_t *pud;
+	pmd_t *pmd;
+	pte_t *ptep, pte;
+	spinlock_t *ptl;
+
+	/* No need to do anything if a range invalidate is running */
+	if (m->invalidates)
+		return ERR_PTR(-EAGAIN);
+
+	down_read(&mm->mmap_sem);
+	do {
+		page = ERR_PTR(-EAGAIN);
+
+		if (m->invalidates)
+			break;
+
+		pgd = pgd_offset(mm, address);
+		if (pgd_none(*pgd) || unlikely(pgd_bad(*pgd)))
+			goto check;
+
+		pud = pud_offset(pgd, address);
+		if (pud_none(*pud) || unlikely(pud_bad(*pud)))
+			goto check;
+
+		pmd = pmd_offset(pud, address);
+		if (pmd_none(*pmd) || unlikely(pmd_bad(*pmd)))
+			goto check;
+
+		ptep = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address, &ptl);
+		if (!ptep)
+			goto check;
+
+		pte = *ptep;
+		if (!pte_present(pte))
+			goto pte_unlock;
+		if (write && !pte_write(pte))
+			goto pte_unlock;
+
+		page = vm_normal_page(vma, address, pte);
+		if (page) {
+			done = 1;
+			/*
+			 * The m->lock is held to ensure that the count of
+			 * current invalidates stays constant.
+			 * invalidate_page() is held off by the pte lock.
+			 */
+			spin_lock(&m->lock);
+
+			if (!m->invalidates)
+				my_mmu_insert_page(m, address, page_to_pfn(page));
+			else
+				page = ERR_PTR(-EAGAIN);
+
+			spin_unlock(&m->lock);
+		}
+pte_unlock:
+		pte_unmap_unlock(ptep, ptl);
+check:
+
+		if (done)
+			break;
+
+		/*
+		 * Need to run the page fault handler to get the pte entry
+		 * setup right.
+		 */
+		err = get_user_pages(current, vma->vm_mm, address, 1,
+					write, 1, NULL, NULL);
+
+		if (err < 0) {
+			page = ERR_PTR(err);
+			break;
+		}
+
+	} while (!done);
+
+	up_read(&vma->vm_mm->mmap_sem);
+	return page;
+}
+
+/*
+ * All other threads accessing this mm_struct must have terminated by now.
+ */
+static void my_mmu_release(struct mmu_notifier *mn, struct mm_struct *mm)
+{
+	struct my_mmu *m = container_of(mn, struct my_mmu, notifier);
+
+	my_mmu_zap_range(m, 0, TASK_SIZE, 0);
+	/* No concurrent processes thus no worries about RCU */
+	list_del(&m->list);
+	kfree(m);
+	printk(KERN_INFO "MMU Notifier terminating\n");
+}
+
+static struct mmu_notifier_ops my_mmu_ops = {
+	my_mmu_release,
+	NULL,		/* No aging function */
+	NULL,		/* No atomic invalidate_page function */
+	my_mmu_invalidate_range_begin,
+	my_mmu_invalidate_range_end
+};
+
+/* Rmap specific fields */
+static LIST_HEAD(my_mmu_list);
+static struct rw_semaphore listlock;
+
+/*
+ * This function must be called to activate callbacks from a process
+ */
+int my_mmu_attach_to_process(struct mm_struct *mm)
+{
+	struct my_mmu *m = kzalloc(sizeof(struct my_mmu), GFP_KERNEL);
+
+	if (!m)
+		return -ENOMEM;
+
+	m->notifier.ops = &my_mmu_ops;
+	spin_lock_init(&m->lock);
+
+	/*
+	 * mmap_sem handling can be omitted if it is guaranteed that
+	 * the context from which my_mmu_attach_to_process is called
+	 * is already holding a writelock on mmap_sem.
+	 */
+	down_write(&mm->mmap_sem);
+	mmu_notifier_register(&m->notifier, mm);
+	up_write(&mm->mmap_sem);
+	down_write(&listlock);
+	list_add(&m->list, &my_mmu_list);
+	up_write(&listlock);
+
+	/*
+	 * RCU sync is expensive but necessary if we need to guarantee
+	 * that multiple threads running on other cpus have seen the
+	 * notifier changes.
+	 */
+	synchronize_rcu();
+	return 0;
+}
+
+
+static void my_sleeping_invalidate_page(struct my_mmu *m, unsigned long address)
+{
+	/* Must be provided */
+	spin_lock(&m->lock);	/* Only taken to ensure mmu data integrity */
+	my_mmu_zap_page(m, address);
+	spin_unlock(&m->lock);
+	printk(KERN_INFO "Sleeping invalidate_page %p address=%lx\n",
+                                                               m, address);
+}
+
+static unsigned long my_mmu_find_addr(struct my_mmu *m, struct page *page)
+{
+	/* Determine the address of a page in a mmu segment */
+	return -EFAULT;
+}
+
+/*
+ * A reference must be held on the page passed and the page passed
+ * must be locked. No spinlocks are held. invalidate_page() is held
+ * off by us holding the page lock.
+ */
+static void my_mmu_rmap_invalidate_page(struct mmu_rmap_notifier *mrn,
+							struct page *page)
+{
+	struct my_mmu *m;
+
+	BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page));
+	down_read(&listlock);
+	list_for_each_entry(m, &my_mmu_list, list) {
+		unsigned long address = my_mmu_find_addr(m, page);
+
+		if (address != -EFAULT)
+			my_sleeping_invalidate_page(m, address);
+	}
+	up_read(&listlock);
+}
+
+static struct mmu_rmap_notifier_ops my_mmu_rmap_ops = {
+	.invalidate_page = my_mmu_rmap_invalidate_page
+};
+
+static struct mmu_rmap_notifier my_mmu_rmap_notifier = {
+	.ops = &my_mmu_rmap_ops
+};
+
+static int __init my_mmu_init(void)
+{
+	mmu_rmap_notifier_register(&my_mmu_rmap_notifier);
+	return 0;
+}
+
+late_initcall(my_mmu_init);
+

-- 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16  8:45     ` Avi Kivity
                       ` (3 more replies)
  2008-02-18 22:33   ` Roland Dreier
  1 sibling, 4 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2008-02-16  3:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Thu, 14 Feb 2008 22:49:00 -0800 Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com> wrote:

> MMU notifiers are used for hardware and software that establishes
> external references to pages managed by the Linux kernel. These are
> page table entriews or tlb entries or something else that allows
> hardware (such as DMA engines, scatter gather devices, networking,
> sharing of address spaces across operating system boundaries) and
> software (Virtualization solutions such as KVM, Xen etc) to
> access memory managed by the Linux kernel.
> 
> The MMU notifier will notify the device driver that subscribes to such
> a notifier that the VM is going to do something with the memory
> mapped by that device. The device must then drop references for the
> indicated memory area. The references may be reestablished later.
> 
> The notification scheme is much better than the current schemes of
> avoiding the danger of the VM removing pages that are externally
> mapped. We currently either mlock pages used for RDMA, XPmem etc
> in memory or increase the refcount to pin the pages. Increasing
> the refcount makes it impossible for the VM to reclaim the page.
> 
> Mlock causes problems with reclaim and may lead to OOM if too many
> pages are pinned in memory. It is also incorrect in terms what the POSIX
> specificies for what role mlock should play. Mlock does *not* pin pages in
> memory. Mlock just means do not allow the page to be moved to swap.
> 
> Linux can move pages in memory (for example through the page migration
> mechanism). These pages can be moved even if they are mlocked(!!!!).
> The current approach of page pinning in use by RDMA etc is conceptually
> broken but there are currently no other easy solutions.
> 
> The alternate of increasing the page count to pin pages is also not
> that enticing since there will be continual attempts to reclaim
> or migrate these pages.
> 
> The solution here allows us to finally fix this issue by requiring
> such devices to subscribe to a notification chain that will allow
> them to work without pinning. The VM gains control of its memory again
> and the memory that has external references can be managed like regular
> memory.
> 
> This patch: Core portion
> 

What is the status of getting infiniband to use this facility?

How important is this feature to KVM?

To xpmem?

Which other potential clients have been identified and how important it it
to those?


> Index: linux-2.6/Documentation/mmu_notifier/README
> ===================================================================
> --- /dev/null	1970-01-01 00:00:00.000000000 +0000
> +++ linux-2.6/Documentation/mmu_notifier/README	2008-02-14 22:27:19.000000000 -0800
> @@ -0,0 +1,105 @@
> +Linux MMU Notifiers
> +-------------------
> +
> +MMU notifiers are used for hardware and software that establishes
> +external references to pages managed by the Linux kernel. These are
> +page table entriews or tlb entries or something else that allows
> +hardware (such as DMA engines, scatter gather devices, networking,
> +sharing of address spaces across operating system boundaries) and
> +software (Virtualization solutions such as KVM, Xen etc) to
> +access memory managed by the Linux kernel.
> +
> +The MMU notifier will notify the device driver that subscribes to such
> +a notifier that the VM is going to do something with the memory
> +mapped by that device. The device must then drop references for the
> +indicated memory area. The references may be reestablished later.
> +
> +The notification scheme is much better than the current schemes of
> +dealing with the danger of the VM removing pages.
> +We currently mlock pages used for RDMA, XPmem etc in memory or
> +increase the refcount of the pages.
> +
> +Both cause problems with reclaim and may lead to OOM if too many
> +pages are pinned in memory. Mlock is also incorrect in terms of the POSIX
> +specification of the role of mlock. Mlock does *not* pin pages in
> +memory. It just does not allow the page to be moved to swap.
> +The page refcount is used to track current users of a page struct.
> +Artificially inflating the refcount means that the VM cannot track
> +down all references to a page. It will not be able to reclaim or
> +move a page. However, the core code will try again and again because
> +the assumption is that an elevated refcount is a temporary situation.
> +
> +Linux can move pages in memory (for example through the page migration
> +mechanism). These pages can be moved even if they are mlocked(!!!!).
> +So the current approach in use by RDMA etc etc is conceptually broken
> +but there are currently no other easy solutions.
> +
> +The solution here allows us to finally fix this issue by requiring
> +such devices to subscribe to a notification chain that will allow
> +them to work without pinning.
> +
> +The notifier chains provide two callback mechanisms. The
> +first one is required for any device that establishes external mappings.
> +The second (rmap) mechanism is required if a device needs to be
> +able to sleep when invalidating references. Sleeping may be necessary
> +if we are mapping across a network or to different Linux instances
> +in the same address space.

I'd have thought that a major reason for sleeping would be to wait for IO
to complete.  Worth mentioning here?

> +mmu_notifier mechanism (for KVM/GRU etc)
> +----------------------------------------
> +Callbacks are registered with an mm_struct from a device driver using
> +mmu_notifier_register(). When the VM removes pages (or changes
> +permissions on pages etc) then callbacks are triggered.
> +
> +The invalidation function for a single page (*invalidate_page)

We already have an invalidatepage.  Ho hum.

> +is called with spinlocks (in particular the pte lock) held. This allow
> +for an easy implementation of external ptes that are on the local system.
>

Why is that "easy"?  I's have thought that it would only be easy if the
driver happened to be using those same locks for its own purposes. 
Otherwise it is "awkward"?

> +The invalidation mechanism for a range (*invalidate_range_begin/end*) is
> +called most of the time without any locks held. It is only called with
> +locks held for file backed mappings that are truncated. A flag indicates
> +in which mode we are. A driver can use that mechanism to f.e.
> +delay the freeing of the pages during truncate until no locks are held.

That sucks big time.  What do we need to do to make get the callback
functions called in non-atomic context?

> +Pages must be marked dirty if dirty bits are found to be set in
> +the external ptes during unmap.

That sentence is too vague.  Define "marked dirty"?

> +The *release* method is called when a Linux process exits. It is run before

We'd conventionally use a notation such as "->release()" here, rather than
the asterisks.

> +the pages and mappings of a process are torn down and gives the device driver
> +a chance to zap all the external mappings in one go.

I assume what you mean here is that ->release() is called during exit()
when the final reference to an mm is being dropped.

> +An example for a code that can be used to build a notifier mechanism into
> +a device driver can be found in the file
> +Documentation/mmu_notifier/skeleton.c

Should that be in samples/?

> +mmu_rmap_notifier mechanism (XPMEM etc)
> +---------------------------------------
> +The mmu_rmap_notifier allows the device driver to implement their own rmap

s/their/its/

> +and allows the device driver to sleep during page eviction. This is necessary
> +for complex drivers that f.e. allow the sharing of memory between processes
> +running on different Linux instances (typically over a network or in a
> +partitioned NUMA system).
> +
> +The mmu_rmap_notifier adds another invalidate_page() callout that is called
> +*before* the Linux rmaps are walked. At that point only the page lock is
> +held. The invalidate_page() function must walk the driver rmaps and evict
> +all the references to the page.

What happens if it cannot do so?

> +There is no process information available before the rmaps are consulted.

Not sure what that sentence means.  I guess "available to the core VM"?

> +The notifier mechanism can therefore not be attached to an mm_struct. Instead
> +it is a global callback list. Having to perform a callback for each and every
> +page that is reclaimed would be inefficient. Therefore we add an additional
> +page flag: PageRmapExternal().

How many page flags are left?

Is this feature important enough to justfy consumption of another one?

> Only pages that are marked with this bit can
> +be exported and the rmap callbacks will only be performed for pages marked
> +that way.

"exported": new term, unclear what it means.

> +The required additional Page flag is only availabe in 64 bit mode and
> +therefore the mmu_rmap_notifier portion is not available on 32 bit platforms.

whoa.  Is that good?  You just made your feature unavailable on the great
majority of Linux systems.

> +An example of code to build a mmu_notifier mechanism with rmap capabilty
> +can be found in Documentation/mmu_notifier/skeleton_rmap.c
> +
> +February 9, 2008,
> +	Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com
> +
> +Index: linux-2.6/include/linux/mm_types.h
> Index: linux-2.6/include/linux/mm_types.h
> ===================================================================
> --- linux-2.6.orig/include/linux/mm_types.h	2008-02-14 20:59:01.000000000 -0800
> +++ linux-2.6/include/linux/mm_types.h	2008-02-14 21:17:51.000000000 -0800
> @@ -159,6 +159,12 @@ struct vm_area_struct {
>  #endif
>  };
>  
> +struct mmu_notifier_head {
> +#ifdef CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER
> +	struct hlist_head head;
> +#endif
> +};
> +
>  struct mm_struct {
>  	struct vm_area_struct * mmap;		/* list of VMAs */
>  	struct rb_root mm_rb;
> @@ -228,6 +234,7 @@ struct mm_struct {
>  #ifdef CONFIG_CGROUP_MEM_CONT
>  	struct mem_cgroup *mem_cgroup;
>  #endif
> +	struct mmu_notifier_head mmu_notifier; /* MMU notifier list */
>  };
>  
>  #endif /* _LINUX_MM_TYPES_H */
> Index: linux-2.6/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h
> ===================================================================
> --- /dev/null	1970-01-01 00:00:00.000000000 +0000
> +++ linux-2.6/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h	2008-02-14 22:42:28.000000000 -0800
> @@ -0,0 +1,180 @@
> +#ifndef _LINUX_MMU_NOTIFIER_H
> +#define _LINUX_MMU_NOTIFIER_H
> +
> +/*
> + * MMU motifier

typo

> + * Notifier functions for hardware and software that establishes external
> + * references to pages of a Linux system. The notifier calls ensure that
> + * external mappings are removed when the Linux VM removes memory ranges
> + * or individual pages from a process.

So the callee cannot fail.  hm.  If it can't block, it's likely screwed in
that case.  In other cases it might be screwed anyway.  I suspect we'll
need to be able to handle callee failure.

> + * These fall into two classes:
> + *
> + * 1. mmu_notifier
> + *
> + * 	These are callbacks registered with an mm_struct. If pages are
> + * 	removed from an address space then callbacks are performed.

"to be removed", I guess.  It's called before the page is actually removed?

> + * 	Spinlocks must be held in order to walk reverse maps. The
> + * 	invalidate_page() callbacks are performed with spinlocks held.

hm, yes, problem.   Permitting callee failure might be good enough.

> + * 	The invalidate_range_start/end callbacks can be performed in contexts
> + * 	where sleeping is allowed or in atomic contexts. A flag is passed
> + * 	to indicate an atomic context.

We generally would prefer separate callbacks, rather than a unified
callback with a mode flag.


> + *	Pages must be marked dirty if dirty bits are found to be set in
> + *	the external ptes.
> + */
> +
> +#include <linux/list.h>
> +#include <linux/spinlock.h>
> +#include <linux/rcupdate.h>
> +#include <linux/mm_types.h>
> +
> +struct mmu_notifier_ops;
> +
> +struct mmu_notifier {
> +	struct hlist_node hlist;
> +	const struct mmu_notifier_ops *ops;
> +};
> +
> +struct mmu_notifier_ops {
> +	/*
> +	 * The release notifier is called when no other execution threads
> +	 * are left. Synchronization is not necessary.

"and the mm is about to be destroyed"?

> +	 */
> +	void (*release)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> +			struct mm_struct *mm);
> +
> +	/*
> +	 * age_page is called from contexts where the pte_lock is held
> +	 */
> +	int (*age_page)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> +			struct mm_struct *mm,
> +			unsigned long address);

This wasn't documented.

> +	/*
> +	 * invalidate_page is called from contexts where the pte_lock is held.
> +	 */
> +	void (*invalidate_page)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> +				struct mm_struct *mm,
> +				unsigned long address);
> +
> +	/*
> +	 * invalidate_range_begin() and invalidate_range_end() must be paired.
> +	 *
> +	 * Multiple invalidate_range_begin/ends may be nested or called
> +	 * concurrently.

Under what circumstances would they be nested?

> That is legit. However, no new external references

references to what?

> +	 * may be established as long as any invalidate_xxx is running or
> +	 * any invalidate_range_begin() and has not been completed through a

stray "and".

> +	 * corresponding call to invalidate_range_end().
> +	 *
> +	 * Locking within the notifier needs to serialize events correspondingly.
> +	 *
> +	 * invalidate_range_begin() must clear all references in the range
> +	 * and stop the establishment of new references.

and stop the establishment of new references within the range, I assume?

If so, that's putting a heck of a lot of complexity into the driver, isn't
it?  It needs to temporarily remember an arbitrarily large number of
regions in this mm against which references may not be taken?

> +	 * invalidate_range_end() reenables the establishment of references.

within the range?

> +	 * atomic indicates that the function is called in an atomic context.
> +	 * We can sleep if atomic == 0.
> +	 *
> +	 * invalidate_range_begin() must remove all external references.
> +	 * There will be no retries as with invalidate_page().
> +	 */
> +	void (*invalidate_range_begin)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> +				 struct mm_struct *mm,
> +				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
> +				 int atomic);
> +
> +	void (*invalidate_range_end)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> +				 struct mm_struct *mm,
> +				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
> +				 int atomic);
> +};
> +
> +#ifdef CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER
> +
> +/*
> + * Must hold the mmap_sem for write.
> + *
> + * RCU is used to traverse the list. A quiescent period needs to pass
> + * before the notifier is guaranteed to be visible to all threads
> + */
> +extern void mmu_notifier_register(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> +				  struct mm_struct *mm);
> +
> +/*
> + * Must hold mmap_sem for write.
> + *
> + * A quiescent period needs to pass before the mmu_notifier structure
> + * can be released. mmu_notifier_release() will wait for a quiescent period
> + * after calling the ->release callback. So it is safe to call
> + * mmu_notifier_unregister from the ->release function.
> + */
> +extern void mmu_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> +				    struct mm_struct *mm);
> +
> +
> +extern void mmu_notifier_release(struct mm_struct *mm);
> +extern int mmu_notifier_age_page(struct mm_struct *mm,
> +				 unsigned long address);

There's the mysterious age_page again.

> +static inline void mmu_notifier_head_init(struct mmu_notifier_head *mnh)
> +{
> +	INIT_HLIST_HEAD(&mnh->head);
> +}
> +
> +#define mmu_notifier(function, mm, args...)				\
> +	do {								\
> +		struct mmu_notifier *__mn;				\
> +		struct hlist_node *__n;					\
> +									\
> +		if (unlikely(!hlist_empty(&(mm)->mmu_notifier.head))) { \
> +			rcu_read_lock();				\
> +			hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(__mn, __n,		\
> +					     &(mm)->mmu_notifier.head,	\
> +					     hlist)			\
> +				if (__mn->ops->function)		\
> +					__mn->ops->function(__mn,	\
> +							    mm,		\
> +							    args);	\
> +			rcu_read_unlock();				\
> +		}							\
> +	} while (0)

The macro references its args more than once.  Anyone who does

	mmu_notifier(function, some_function_which_has_side_effects())

will get a surprise.  Use temporaries.

> +#else /* CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER */
> +
> +/*
> + * Notifiers that use the parameters that they were passed so that the
> + * compiler does not complain about unused variables but does proper
> + * parameter checks even if !CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER.
> + * Macros generate no code.
> + */
> +#define mmu_notifier(function, mm, args...)				\
> +	do {								\
> +		if (0) {						\
> +			struct mmu_notifier *__mn;			\
> +									\
> +			__mn = (struct mmu_notifier *)(0x00ff);		\
> +			__mn->ops->function(__mn, mm, args);		\
> +		};							\
> +	} while (0)

That's a bit weird.  Can't we do the old

	(void)function;
	(void)mm;

trick?  Or make it a staic inline function?

> +static inline void mmu_notifier_register(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> +						struct mm_struct *mm) {}
> +static inline void mmu_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> +						struct mm_struct *mm) {}
> +static inline void mmu_notifier_release(struct mm_struct *mm) {}
> +static inline int mmu_notifier_age_page(struct mm_struct *mm,
> +				unsigned long address)
> +{
> +	return 0;
> +}
> +
> +static inline void mmu_notifier_head_init(struct mmu_notifier_head *mmh) {}
> +
> +#endif /* CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER */
> +
> +#endif /* _LINUX_MMU_NOTIFIER_H */
> Index: linux-2.6/mm/Kconfig
> ===================================================================
> --- linux-2.6.orig/mm/Kconfig	2008-02-14 20:59:01.000000000 -0800
> +++ linux-2.6/mm/Kconfig	2008-02-14 21:17:51.000000000 -0800
> @@ -193,3 +193,7 @@ config NR_QUICK
>  config VIRT_TO_BUS
>  	def_bool y
>  	depends on !ARCH_NO_VIRT_TO_BUS
> +
> +config MMU_NOTIFIER
> +	def_bool y
> +	bool "MMU notifier, for paging KVM/RDMA"

Why is this not selectable?  The help seems a bit brief.

Does this cause 32-bit systems to drag in a bunch of code they're not
allowed to ever use?

> Index: linux-2.6/mm/Makefile
> ===================================================================
> --- linux-2.6.orig/mm/Makefile	2008-02-14 20:59:01.000000000 -0800
> +++ linux-2.6/mm/Makefile	2008-02-14 21:17:51.000000000 -0800
> @@ -33,4 +33,5 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_MIGRATION) += migrate.o
>  obj-$(CONFIG_SMP) += allocpercpu.o
>  obj-$(CONFIG_QUICKLIST) += quicklist.o
>  obj-$(CONFIG_CGROUP_MEM_CONT) += memcontrol.o
> +obj-$(CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER) += mmu_notifier.o
>  
> Index: linux-2.6/mm/mmu_notifier.c
> ===================================================================
> --- /dev/null	1970-01-01 00:00:00.000000000 +0000
> +++ linux-2.6/mm/mmu_notifier.c	2008-02-14 22:41:55.000000000 -0800
> @@ -0,0 +1,76 @@
> +/*
> + *  linux/mm/mmu_notifier.c
> + *
> + *  Copyright (C) 2008  Qumranet, Inc.
> + *  Copyright (C) 2008  SGI
> + *  		Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>
> + *
> + *  This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2. See
> + *  the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
> + */
> +
> +#include <linux/module.h>
> +#include <linux/mm.h>
> +#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
> +
> +/*
> + * No synchronization. This function can only be called when only a single
> + * process remains that performs teardown.
> + */
> +void mmu_notifier_release(struct mm_struct *mm)
> +{
> +	struct mmu_notifier *mn;
> +	struct hlist_node *n, *t;
> +
> +	if (unlikely(!hlist_empty(&mm->mmu_notifier.head))) {
> +		hlist_for_each_entry_safe(mn, n, t,
> +					  &mm->mmu_notifier.head, hlist) {
> +			hlist_del_init(&mn->hlist);
> +			if (mn->ops->release)
> +				mn->ops->release(mn, mm);

We do this a lot, but back in the old days people didn't like optional
callbacks which can be NULL.  If we expect that mmu_notifier_ops.release is
usually implemented, the just unconditionally call it and require that all
clients implement it.  Perhaps provide an exported-to-modules stuv in core
kernel for clients which didn't want to implement ->release().

> +		}
> +	}
> +}
> +
> +/*
> + * If no young bitflag is supported by the hardware, ->age_page can
> + * unmap the address and return 1 or 0 depending if the mapping previously
> + * existed or not.
> + */
> +int mmu_notifier_age_page(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long address)
> +{
> +	struct mmu_notifier *mn;
> +	struct hlist_node *n;
> +	int young = 0;
> +
> +	if (unlikely(!hlist_empty(&mm->mmu_notifier.head))) {
> +		rcu_read_lock();
> +		hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(mn, n,
> +					  &mm->mmu_notifier.head, hlist) {
> +			if (mn->ops->age_page)
> +				young |= mn->ops->age_page(mn, mm, address);
> +		}
> +		rcu_read_unlock();
> +	}
> +
> +	return young;
> +}

should the rcu_read_lock() cover the hlist_empty() test?

This function looks like it was tossed in at the last minute.  It's
mysterious, undocumented, poorly commented, poorly named.  A better name
would be one which has some correlation with the return value.

Because anyone who looks at some code which does

	if (mmu_notifier_age_page(mm, address))
		...

has to go and reverse-engineer the implementation of
mmu_notifier_age_page() to work out under which circumstances the "..."
will be executed.  But this should be apparent just from reading the callee
implementation.

This function *really* does need some documentation.  What does it *mean*
when the ->age_page() from some of the notifiers returned "1" and the
->age_page() from some other notifiers returned zero?  Dunno.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16 19:26     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-19  8:54   ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-19 23:08   ` Nick Piggin
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2008-02-16  3:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Thu, 14 Feb 2008 22:49:01 -0800 Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com> wrote:

> The invalidation of address ranges in a mm_struct needs to be
> performed when pages are removed or permissions etc change.

hm.  Do they?  Why?  If I'm in the process of zero-copy writing a hunk of
memory out to hardware then do I care if someone write-protects the ptes?

Spose so, but some fleshing-out of the various scenarios here would clarify
things.

> If invalidate_range_begin() is called with locks held then we
> pass a flag into invalidate_range() to indicate that no sleeping is
> possible. Locks are only held for truncate and huge pages.

This is so bad.

I supposed in the restricted couple of cases which you're focussed on it
works OK.  But is it generally suitable?  What if IO is in progress?  What
if other cluster nodes need to be talked to?  Does it suit RDMA?

> In two cases we use invalidate_range_begin/end to invalidate
> single pages because the pair allows holding off new references
> (idea by Robin Holt).

Assuming that there is a missing "within the range" in this description, I
assume that all clients will just throw up theior hands in horror and will
disallow all references to all parts of the mm.

Of course, to do that they will need to take a sleeping lock to prevent
other threads from establishing new references.  whoops.

> do_wp_page(): We hold off new references while we update the pte.
> 
> xip_unmap: We are not taking the PageLock so we cannot
> use the invalidate_page mmu_rmap_notifier. invalidate_range_begin/end
> stands in.

What does "stands in" mean?

> Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com>
> Signed-off-by: Robin Holt <holt@sgi.com>
> Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>
> 
> ---
>  mm/filemap_xip.c |    5 +++++
>  mm/fremap.c      |    3 +++
>  mm/hugetlb.c     |    3 +++
>  mm/memory.c      |   35 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------
>  mm/mmap.c        |    2 ++
>  mm/mprotect.c    |    3 +++
>  mm/mremap.c      |    7 ++++++-
>  7 files changed, 51 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)
> 
> Index: linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c
> ===================================================================
> --- linux-2.6.orig/mm/fremap.c	2008-02-14 18:43:31.000000000 -0800
> +++ linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c	2008-02-14 18:45:07.000000000 -0800
> @@ -15,6 +15,7 @@
>  #include <linux/rmap.h>
>  #include <linux/module.h>
>  #include <linux/syscalls.h>
> +#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
>  
>  #include <asm/mmu_context.h>
>  #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
> @@ -214,7 +215,9 @@ asmlinkage long sys_remap_file_pages(uns
>  		spin_unlock(&mapping->i_mmap_lock);
>  	}
>  
> +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, start + size, 0);
>  	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
> +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, start + size, 0);

To avoid off-by-one confusion the changelogs, documentation and comments
should be very careful to tell the reader whether the range includes the
byte at start+size.  I don't thik that was done?



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 3/6] mmu_notifier: invalidate_page callbacks
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 3/6] mmu_notifier: invalidate_page callbacks Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16 11:07     ` Andrea Arcangeli
                       ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2008-02-16  3:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Thu, 14 Feb 2008 22:49:02 -0800 Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com> wrote:

> Two callbacks to remove individual pages as done in rmap code
> 
> 	invalidate_page()
> 
> Called from the inner loop of rmap walks to invalidate pages.
> 
> 	age_page()
> 
> Called for the determination of the page referenced status.
> 
> If we do not care about page referenced status then an age_page callback
> may be be omitted. PageLock and pte lock are held when either of the
> functions is called.

The age_page mystery shallows.

It would be useful to have some rationale somewhere in the patchset for the
existence of this callback.

>  #include <asm/tlbflush.h>
>  
> @@ -287,7 +288,8 @@ static int page_referenced_one(struct pa
>  	if (vma->vm_flags & VM_LOCKED) {
>  		referenced++;
>  		*mapcount = 1;	/* break early from loop */
> -	} else if (ptep_clear_flush_young(vma, address, pte))
> +	} else if (ptep_clear_flush_young(vma, address, pte) |
> +		   mmu_notifier_age_page(mm, address))
>  		referenced++;

The "|" is obviously deliberate.  But no explanation is provided telling us
why we still call the callback if ptep_clear_flush_young() said the page
was recently referenced.  People who read your code will want to understand
this.

>  	/* Pretend the page is referenced if the task has the
> @@ -455,6 +457,7 @@ static int page_mkclean_one(struct page 
>  
>  		flush_cache_page(vma, address, pte_pfn(*pte));
>  		entry = ptep_clear_flush(vma, address, pte);
> +		mmu_notifier(invalidate_page, mm, address);

I just don't see how ths can be done if the callee has another thread in
the middle of establishing IO against this region of memory. 
->invalidate_page() _has_ to be able to block.  Confused.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem) Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16 19:28     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-19 23:55   ` Nick Piggin
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2008-02-16  3:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Thu, 14 Feb 2008 22:49:04 -0800 Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com> wrote:

> These special additional callbacks are required because XPmem (and likely
> other mechanisms) do use their own rmap (multiple processes on a series
> of remote Linux instances may be accessing the memory of a process).
> F.e. XPmem may have to send out notifications to remote Linux instances
> and receive confirmation before a page can be freed.
> 
> So we handle this like an additional Linux reverse map that is walked after
> the existing rmaps have been walked. We leave the walking to the driver that
> is then able to use something else than a spinlock to walk its reverse
> maps. So we can actually call the driver without holding spinlocks while
> we hold the Pagelock.
> 
> However, we cannot determine the mm_struct that a page belongs to at
> that point. The mm_struct can only be determined from the rmaps by the
> device driver.
> 
> We add another pageflag (PageExternalRmap) that is set if a page has
> been remotely mapped (f.e. by a process from another Linux instance).
> We can then only perform the callbacks for pages that are actually in
> remote use.
> 
> Rmap notifiers need an extra page bit and are only available
> on 64 bit platforms. This functionality is not available on 32 bit!
> 
> A notifier that uses the reverse maps callbacks does not need to provide
> the invalidate_page() method that is called when locks are held.
> 

hrm.

> +#define mmu_rmap_notifier(function, args...)				\
> +	do {								\
> +		struct mmu_rmap_notifier *__mrn;			\
> +		struct hlist_node *__n;					\
> +									\
> +		rcu_read_lock();					\
> +		hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(__mrn, __n,			\
> +				&mmu_rmap_notifier_list, hlist)		\
> +			if (__mrn->ops->function)			\
> +				__mrn->ops->function(__mrn, args);	\
> +		rcu_read_unlock();					\
> +	} while (0);
> +

buggy macro: use locals.

> +#define mmu_rmap_notifier(function, args...)				\
> +	do {								\
> +		if (0) {						\
> +			struct mmu_rmap_notifier *__mrn;		\
> +									\
> +			__mrn = (struct mmu_rmap_notifier *)(0x00ff);	\
> +			__mrn->ops->function(__mrn, args);		\
> +		}							\
> +	} while (0);
> +

Same observation as in the other patch.

> ===================================================================
> --- linux-2.6.orig/mm/mmu_notifier.c	2008-02-14 21:17:51.000000000 -0800
> +++ linux-2.6/mm/mmu_notifier.c	2008-02-14 21:21:04.000000000 -0800
> @@ -74,3 +74,37 @@ void mmu_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_
>  }
>  EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(mmu_notifier_unregister);
>  
> +#ifdef CONFIG_64BIT
> +static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(mmu_notifier_list_lock);
> +HLIST_HEAD(mmu_rmap_notifier_list);
> +
> +void mmu_rmap_notifier_register(struct mmu_rmap_notifier *mrn)
> +{
> +	spin_lock(&mmu_notifier_list_lock);
> +	hlist_add_head_rcu(&mrn->hlist, &mmu_rmap_notifier_list);
> +	spin_unlock(&mmu_notifier_list_lock);
> +}
> +EXPORT_SYMBOL(mmu_rmap_notifier_register);
> +
> +void mmu_rmap_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_rmap_notifier *mrn)
> +{
> +	spin_lock(&mmu_notifier_list_lock);
> +	hlist_del_rcu(&mrn->hlist);
> +	spin_unlock(&mmu_notifier_list_lock);
> +}
> +EXPORT_SYMBOL(mmu_rmap_notifier_unregister);
>
> +/*
> + * Export a page.
> + *
> + * Pagelock must be held.
> + * Must be called before a page is put on an external rmap.
> + */
> +void mmu_rmap_export_page(struct page *page)
> +{
> +	BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page));
> +	SetPageExternalRmap(page);
> +}
> +EXPORT_SYMBOL(mmu_rmap_export_page);

The other patch used EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
@ 2008-02-16  8:45     ` Avi Kivity
  2008-02-16  8:56       ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16 10:41     ` Brice Goglin
                       ` (2 subsequent siblings)
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Avi Kivity @ 2008-02-16  8:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

Andrew Morton wrote:
> How important is this feature to KVM?
>   

Very.  kvm pins pages that are referenced by the guest; a 64-bit guest 
will easily pin its entire memory with the kernel map.  So this is 
critical for guest swapping to actually work.

Other nice features like page migration are also enabled by this patch.

-- 
Any sufficiently difficult bug is indistinguishable from a feature.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-16  8:45     ` Avi Kivity
@ 2008-02-16  8:56       ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16  9:21         ` Avi Kivity
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2008-02-16  8:56 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Avi Kivity
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Sat, 16 Feb 2008 10:45:50 +0200 Avi Kivity <avi@qumranet.com> wrote:

> Andrew Morton wrote:
> > How important is this feature to KVM?
> >   
> 
> Very.  kvm pins pages that are referenced by the guest;

hm.  Why does it do that?

> a 64-bit guest 
> will easily pin its entire memory with the kernel map.

>  So this is 
> critical for guest swapping to actually work.

Curious.  If KVM can release guest pages at the request of this notifier so
that they can be swapped out, why can't it release them by default, and
allow swapping to proceed?

> 
> Other nice features like page migration are also enabled by this patch.
> 

We already have page migration.  Do you mean page-migration-when-using-kvm?

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-16  8:56       ` Andrew Morton
@ 2008-02-16  9:21         ` Avi Kivity
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Avi Kivity @ 2008-02-16  9:21 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

Andrew Morton wrote:

  

>> Very.  kvm pins pages that are referenced by the guest;
>>     
>
> hm.  Why does it do that?
>
>   

It was deemed best not to allow the guest to write to a page that has 
been swapped out and assigned to an unrelated host process.

One way to view the kvm shadow page tables is as hardware dma 
descriptors. kvm pins pages for the same reason that drivers pin pages 
that are being dma'ed. It's also the reason why mmu notifiers are useful 
for such a wide range of dma capable hardware.

>> a 64-bit guest 
>> will easily pin its entire memory with the kernel map.
>>     
>
>   
>>  So this is 
>> critical for guest swapping to actually work.
>>     
>
> Curious.  If KVM can release guest pages at the request of this notifier so
> that they can be swapped out, why can't it release them by default, and
> allow swapping to proceed?
>
>   

If kvm releases a page, it must also zap any shadow ptes pointing at the 
page and flush the tlb. If you do that for all of memory you can't 
reference any of it.

Releasing a page has costs, both at the time of the release and when the 
guest eventually refers to the page again.

>> Other nice features like page migration are also enabled by this patch.
>>
>>     
>
> We already have page migration.  Do you mean page-migration-when-using-kvm?
>   

Yes, I'm obviously writing from a kvm-centric point of view. This is an 
important feature, as the virtualization future seems to be NUMA hosts 
(2- or 4- way, 4 cores per socket) running moderately sized guests. The 
ability to load-balance guests among the NUMA nodes is important for 
performance.

(btw, I'm also looking forward to memory defragmentation. large pages 
are important for virtualization workloads and mmu notifiers are again 
critical to getting it to work while running kvm).

-- 
Any sufficiently difficult bug is indistinguishable from a feature.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16  8:45     ` Avi Kivity
@ 2008-02-16 10:41     ` Brice Goglin
  2008-02-16 10:58       ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16 19:21     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-17  5:04     ` Doug Maxey
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Brice Goglin @ 2008-02-16 10:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: Christoph Lameter, Andrea Arcangeli, linux-kernel, linux-mm

Andrew Morton wrote:
> What is the status of getting infiniband to use this facility?
>
> How important is this feature to KVM?
>
> To xpmem?
>
> Which other potential clients have been identified and how important it it
> to those?
>   

As I said when Andrea posted the first patch series, I used something
very similar for non-RDMA-based HPC about 4 years ago. I haven't had
time yet to look in depth and try the latest proposed API but my feeling
is that it looks good.

Brice


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* [PATCH] KVM swapping with MMU Notifiers V7
  2008-02-15  6:48 [patch 0/6] MMU Notifiers V7 Christoph Lameter
                   ` (5 preceding siblings ...)
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 6/6] mmu_rmap_notifier: Skeleton for complex driver that uses its own rmaps Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-16 10:48 ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-16 11:08   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16 11:51   ` Robin Holt
  6 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-16 10:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

Those below two patches enable KVM to swap the guest physical memory
through Christoph's V7.

There's one last _purely_theoretical_ race condition I figured out and
that I'm wondering how to best fix. The race condition worst case is
that a few guest physical pages could remain pinned by sptes. The race
can materialize if the linux pte is zapped after get_user_pages
returns but before the page is mapped by the spte and tracked by
rmap. The invalidate_ calls can also likely be optimized further but
it's not a fast path so it's not urgent.

Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com>

diff --git a/arch/x86/kvm/Kconfig b/arch/x86/kvm/Kconfig
index 41962e7..e1287ab 100644
--- a/arch/x86/kvm/Kconfig
+++ b/arch/x86/kvm/Kconfig
@@ -21,6 +21,7 @@ config KVM
 	tristate "Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) support"
 	depends on HAVE_KVM && EXPERIMENTAL
 	select PREEMPT_NOTIFIERS
+	select MMU_NOTIFIER
 	select ANON_INODES
 	---help---
 	  Support hosting fully virtualized guest machines using hardware
diff --git a/arch/x86/kvm/mmu.c b/arch/x86/kvm/mmu.c
index fd39cd1..b56e388 100644
--- a/arch/x86/kvm/mmu.c
+++ b/arch/x86/kvm/mmu.c
@@ -533,6 +533,110 @@ static void rmap_write_protect(struct kvm *kvm, u64 gfn)
 		kvm_flush_remote_tlbs(kvm);
 }
 
+static void kvm_unmap_spte(struct kvm *kvm, u64 *spte)
+{
+	struct page *page = pfn_to_page((*spte & PT64_BASE_ADDR_MASK) >> PAGE_SHIFT);
+	get_page(page);
+	rmap_remove(kvm, spte);
+	set_shadow_pte(spte, shadow_trap_nonpresent_pte);
+	kvm_flush_remote_tlbs(kvm);
+	__free_page(page);
+}
+
+static void kvm_unmap_rmapp(struct kvm *kvm, unsigned long *rmapp)
+{
+	u64 *spte, *curr_spte;
+
+	spte = rmap_next(kvm, rmapp, NULL);
+	while (spte) {
+		BUG_ON(!(*spte & PT_PRESENT_MASK));
+		rmap_printk("kvm_rmap_unmap_hva: spte %p %llx\n", spte, *spte);
+		curr_spte = spte;
+		spte = rmap_next(kvm, rmapp, spte);
+		kvm_unmap_spte(kvm, curr_spte);
+	}
+}
+
+void kvm_unmap_hva(struct kvm *kvm, unsigned long hva)
+{
+	int i;
+
+	/*
+	 * If mmap_sem isn't taken, we can look the memslots with only
+	 * the mmu_lock by skipping over the slots with userspace_addr == 0.
+	 */
+	spin_lock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
+	for (i = 0; i < kvm->nmemslots; i++) {
+		struct kvm_memory_slot *memslot = &kvm->memslots[i];
+		unsigned long start = memslot->userspace_addr;
+		unsigned long end;
+
+		/* mmu_lock protects userspace_addr */
+		if (!start)
+			continue;
+
+		end = start + (memslot->npages << PAGE_SHIFT);
+		if (hva >= start && hva < end) {
+			gfn_t gfn_offset = (hva - start) >> PAGE_SHIFT;
+			kvm_unmap_rmapp(kvm, &memslot->rmap[gfn_offset]);
+		}
+	}
+	spin_unlock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
+}
+
+static int kvm_age_rmapp(struct kvm *kvm, unsigned long *rmapp)
+{
+	u64 *spte;
+	int young = 0;
+
+	spte = rmap_next(kvm, rmapp, NULL);
+	while (spte) {
+		int _young;
+		u64 _spte = *spte;
+		BUG_ON(!(_spte & PT_PRESENT_MASK));
+		_young = _spte & PT_ACCESSED_MASK;
+		if (_young) {
+			young = !!_young;
+			set_shadow_pte(spte, _spte & ~PT_ACCESSED_MASK);
+		}
+		spte = rmap_next(kvm, rmapp, spte);
+	}
+	return young;
+}
+
+int kvm_age_hva(struct kvm *kvm, unsigned long hva)
+{
+	int i;
+	int young = 0;
+
+	/*
+	 * If mmap_sem isn't taken, we can look the memslots with only
+	 * the mmu_lock by skipping over the slots with userspace_addr == 0.
+	 */
+	spin_lock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
+	for (i = 0; i < kvm->nmemslots; i++) {
+		struct kvm_memory_slot *memslot = &kvm->memslots[i];
+		unsigned long start = memslot->userspace_addr;
+		unsigned long end;
+
+		/* mmu_lock protects userspace_addr */
+		if (!start)
+			continue;
+
+		end = start + (memslot->npages << PAGE_SHIFT);
+		if (hva >= start && hva < end) {
+			gfn_t gfn_offset = (hva - start) >> PAGE_SHIFT;
+			young |= kvm_age_rmapp(kvm, &memslot->rmap[gfn_offset]);
+		}
+	}
+	spin_unlock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
+
+	if (young)
+		kvm_flush_remote_tlbs(kvm);
+
+	return young;
+}
+
 #ifdef MMU_DEBUG
 static int is_empty_shadow_page(u64 *spt)
 {
diff --git a/arch/x86/kvm/x86.c b/arch/x86/kvm/x86.c
index 0c910c7..2b2398f 100644
--- a/arch/x86/kvm/x86.c
+++ b/arch/x86/kvm/x86.c
@@ -3185,6 +3185,46 @@ void kvm_arch_vcpu_uninit(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu)
 	free_page((unsigned long)vcpu->arch.pio_data);
 }
 
+static inline struct kvm *mmu_notifier_to_kvm(struct mmu_notifier *mn)
+{
+	struct kvm_arch *kvm_arch;
+	kvm_arch = container_of(mn, struct kvm_arch, mmu_notifier);
+	return container_of(kvm_arch, struct kvm, arch);
+}
+
+void kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_page(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+				      struct mm_struct *mm,
+				      unsigned long address)
+{
+	struct kvm *kvm = mmu_notifier_to_kvm(mn);
+	BUG_ON(mm != kvm->mm);
+	kvm_unmap_hva(kvm, address);
+}
+
+int kvm_mmu_notifier_age_page(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+			      struct mm_struct *mm,
+			      unsigned long address)
+{
+	struct kvm *kvm = mmu_notifier_to_kvm(mn);
+	BUG_ON(mm != kvm->mm);
+	return kvm_age_hva(kvm, address);
+}
+
+void kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_range_end(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+					   struct mm_struct *mm,
+					   unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
+					   int lock)
+{
+	for (; start < end; start += PAGE_SIZE)
+		kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_page(mn, mm, start);
+}
+
+static const struct mmu_notifier_ops kvm_mmu_notifier_ops = {
+	.invalidate_page	= kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_page,
+	.age_page		= kvm_mmu_notifier_age_page,
+	.invalidate_range_end	= kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_range_end,
+};
+
 struct  kvm *kvm_arch_create_vm(void)
 {
 	struct kvm *kvm = kzalloc(sizeof(struct kvm), GFP_KERNEL);
@@ -3194,6 +3234,9 @@ struct  kvm *kvm_arch_create_vm(void)
 
 	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&kvm->arch.active_mmu_pages);
 
+	kvm->arch.mmu_notifier.ops = &kvm_mmu_notifier_ops;
+	mmu_notifier_register(&kvm->arch.mmu_notifier, current->mm);
+
 	return kvm;
 }
 
diff --git a/include/asm-x86/kvm_host.h b/include/asm-x86/kvm_host.h
index da61255..11976c8 100644
--- a/include/asm-x86/kvm_host.h
+++ b/include/asm-x86/kvm_host.h
@@ -13,6 +13,7 @@
 
 #include <linux/types.h>
 #include <linux/mm.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <linux/kvm.h>
 #include <linux/kvm_para.h>
@@ -287,6 +288,8 @@ struct kvm_arch{
 	int round_robin_prev_vcpu;
 	unsigned int tss_addr;
 	struct page *apic_access_page;
+
+	struct mmu_notifier mmu_notifier;
 };
 
 struct kvm_vm_stat {
@@ -404,6 +407,8 @@ int kvm_mmu_create(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu);
 int kvm_mmu_setup(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu);
 void kvm_mmu_set_nonpresent_ptes(u64 trap_pte, u64 notrap_pte);
 
+void kvm_unmap_hva(struct kvm *kvm, unsigned long hva);
+int kvm_age_hva(struct kvm *kvm, unsigned long hva);
 int kvm_mmu_reset_context(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu);
 void kvm_mmu_slot_remove_write_access(struct kvm *kvm, int slot);
 void kvm_mmu_zap_all(struct kvm *kvm);


This allows to browse the memslots with only the mmu_lock hold and
it should be applied along the above patch:

Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com>

diff --git a/arch/x86/kvm/x86.c b/arch/x86/kvm/x86.c
index 0c910c7..80b719d 100644
--- a/arch/x86/kvm/x86.c
+++ b/arch/x86/kvm/x86.c
@@ -3245,16 +3245,23 @@ int kvm_arch_set_memory_region(struct kvm *kvm,
 	 */
 	if (!user_alloc) {
 		if (npages && !old.rmap) {
+			unsigned long userspace_addr;
+
 			down_write(&current->mm->mmap_sem);
-			memslot->userspace_addr = do_mmap(NULL, 0,
-						     npages * PAGE_SIZE,
-						     PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE,
-						     MAP_SHARED | MAP_ANONYMOUS,
-						     0);
+			userspace_addr = do_mmap(NULL, 0,
+						 npages * PAGE_SIZE,
+						 PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE,
+						 MAP_SHARED | MAP_ANONYMOUS,
+						 0);
 			up_write(&current->mm->mmap_sem);
 
-			if (IS_ERR((void *)memslot->userspace_addr))
-				return PTR_ERR((void *)memslot->userspace_addr);
+			if (IS_ERR((void *)userspace_addr))
+				return PTR_ERR((void *)userspace_addr);
+
+			/* set userspace_addr atomically for kvm_hva_to_rmapp */
+			spin_lock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
+			memslot->userspace_addr = userspace_addr;
+			spin_unlock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
 		} else {
 			if (!old.user_alloc && old.rmap) {
 				int ret;
diff --git a/virt/kvm/kvm_main.c b/virt/kvm/kvm_main.c
index cf6df51..743c5c5 100644
--- a/virt/kvm/kvm_main.c
+++ b/virt/kvm/kvm_main.c
@@ -299,7 +299,15 @@ int __kvm_set_memory_region(struct kvm *kvm,
 		memset(new.rmap, 0, npages * sizeof(*new.rmap));
 
 		new.user_alloc = user_alloc;
-		new.userspace_addr = mem->userspace_addr;
+		/*
+		 * hva_to_rmmap() serialzies with the mmu_lock and to be
+		 * safe it has to ignore memslots with !user_alloc &&
+		 * !userspace_addr.
+		 */
+		if (user_alloc)
+			new.userspace_addr = mem->userspace_addr;
+		else
+			new.userspace_addr = 0;
 	}
 
 	/* Allocate page dirty bitmap if needed */
@@ -312,14 +320,18 @@ int __kvm_set_memory_region(struct kvm *kvm,
 		memset(new.dirty_bitmap, 0, dirty_bytes);
 	}
 
+	spin_lock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
 	if (mem->slot >= kvm->nmemslots)
 		kvm->nmemslots = mem->slot + 1;
 
 	*memslot = new;
+	spin_unlock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
 
 	r = kvm_arch_set_memory_region(kvm, mem, old, user_alloc);
 	if (r) {
+		spin_lock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
 		*memslot = old;
+		spin_unlock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
 		goto out_free;
 	}
 

^ permalink raw reply related	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-16 10:41     ` Brice Goglin
@ 2008-02-16 10:58       ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16 19:31         ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2008-02-16 10:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Brice Goglin; +Cc: Christoph Lameter, Andrea Arcangeli, linux-kernel, linux-mm

On Sat, 16 Feb 2008 11:41:35 +0100 Brice Goglin <Brice.Goglin@inria.fr> wrote:

> Andrew Morton wrote:
> > What is the status of getting infiniband to use this facility?
> >
> > How important is this feature to KVM?
> >
> > To xpmem?
> >
> > Which other potential clients have been identified and how important it it
> > to those?
> >   
> 
> As I said when Andrea posted the first patch series, I used something
> very similar for non-RDMA-based HPC about 4 years ago. I haven't had
> time yet to look in depth and try the latest proposed API but my feeling
> is that it looks good.
> 

"looks good" maybe.  But it's in the details where I fear this will come
unstuck.  The likelihood that some callbacks really will want to be able to
block in places where this interface doesn't permit that - either to wait
for IO to complete or to wait for other threads to clear critical regions.

>From that POV it doesn't look like a sufficiently general and useful
design.  Looks like it was grafted onto the current VM implementation in a
way which just about suits two particular clients if they try hard enough.

Which is all perfectly understandable - it would be hard to rework core MM
to be able to make this interface more general.  But I do think it's
half-baked and there is a decent risk that future (or present) code which
_could_ use something like this won't be able to use this one, and will
continue to futz with mlock, page-pinning, etc.

Not that I know what the fix to that is..

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 3/6] mmu_notifier: invalidate_page callbacks
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
@ 2008-02-16 11:07     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-16 19:22     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-18  1:51     ` Nick Piggin
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-16 11:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, Feb 15, 2008 at 07:37:36PM -0800, Andrew Morton wrote:
> The "|" is obviously deliberate.  But no explanation is provided telling us
> why we still call the callback if ptep_clear_flush_young() said the page
> was recently referenced.  People who read your code will want to understand
> this.

This is to clear the young bit in every pte and spte to such physical
page before backing off because any young bit was on. So if any young
bit will be on in the next scan, we're guaranteed the page has been
touched recently and not ages before (otherwise it would take a worst
case N rounds of the lru before the page can be freed, where N is the
number of pte or sptes pointing to the page).

> I just don't see how ths can be done if the callee has another thread in
> the middle of establishing IO against this region of memory. 
> ->invalidate_page() _has_ to be able to block.  Confused.

invalidate_page marking the spte invalid and flushing the asid/tlb
doesn't need to block the same way ptep_clear_flush doesn't need to
block for the main linux pte. Infact before invalidate_page and
ptep_clear_flush can touch anything at all, they've to take their own
spinlocks (mmu_lock for the former, and PT lock for the latter).

The only sleeping trouble is for networked driven message passing,
where they want to schedule while they wait the message to arrive or
it'd hang the whole cpu to spin for so long.

sptes are cpu-clocked entities like ptes so scheduling there is by far
not necessary because there's zero delay in invalidating them and
flushing their tlbs. GRU is similar. Because we boost the reference
count of the pages for every spte mapping, only implementing
invalidate_range_end is enough, but I need to figure out the
get_user_pages->rmap_add window too and because get_user_pages can
schedule, and if I want to add a critical section around it to avoid
calling get_user_pages twice during the kvm page fault, a mutex would
be the only way (it sure can't be a spinlock). But a mutex can't be
taken by invalidate_page to stop it. So that leaves me with the idea
of adding a get_user_pages variant that returns the page locked. So
instead of calling get_user_pages a second time after rmap_add
returns, I will only need to call unlock_page which should be faster
than a follow_page. And setting the PG_lock before dropping the PT
lock in follow_page, should be fast enough too.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [PATCH] KVM swapping with MMU Notifiers V7
  2008-02-16 10:48 ` [PATCH] KVM swapping with MMU Notifiers V7 Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-16 11:08   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-18 12:17     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-16 11:51   ` Robin Holt
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2008-02-16 11:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Sat, 16 Feb 2008 11:48:27 +0100 Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com> wrote:

> +void kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_range_end(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> +					   struct mm_struct *mm,
> +					   unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
> +					   int lock)
> +{
> +	for (; start < end; start += PAGE_SIZE)
> +		kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_page(mn, mm, start);
> +}
> +
> +static const struct mmu_notifier_ops kvm_mmu_notifier_ops = {
> +	.invalidate_page	= kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_page,
> +	.age_page		= kvm_mmu_notifier_age_page,
> +	.invalidate_range_end	= kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_range_end,
> +};

So this doesn't implement ->invalidate_range_start().

By what means does it prevent new mappings from being established in the
range after core mm has tried to call ->invalidate_rande_start()?
mmap_sem, I assume?


> +			/* set userspace_addr atomically for kvm_hva_to_rmapp */
> +			spin_lock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
> +			memslot->userspace_addr = userspace_addr;
> +			spin_unlock(&kvm->mmu_lock);

are you sure?  kvm_unmap_hva() and kvm_age_hva() read ->userspace_addr a
single time and it doesn't immediately look like there's a need to take the
lock here?



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [PATCH] KVM swapping with MMU Notifiers V7
  2008-02-16 10:48 ` [PATCH] KVM swapping with MMU Notifiers V7 Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-16 11:08   ` Andrew Morton
@ 2008-02-16 11:51   ` Robin Holt
  2008-02-18 12:35     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-02-16 11:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Sat, Feb 16, 2008 at 11:48:27AM +0100, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> Those below two patches enable KVM to swap the guest physical memory
> through Christoph's V7.
> 
> There's one last _purely_theoretical_ race condition I figured out and
> that I'm wondering how to best fix. The race condition worst case is
> that a few guest physical pages could remain pinned by sptes. The race
> can materialize if the linux pte is zapped after get_user_pages
> returns but before the page is mapped by the spte and tracked by
> rmap. The invalidate_ calls can also likely be optimized further but
> it's not a fast path so it's not urgent.

I am doing this in xpmem with a stack-based structure in the function
calling get_user_pages.  That structure describes the start and
end address of the range we are doing the get_user_pages on.  If an
invalidate_range_begin comes in while we are off to the kernel doing
the get_user_pages, the invalidate_range_begin marks that structure
indicating an invalidate came in.  When the get_user_pages gets the
structures relocked, it checks that flag (really a generation counter)
and if it is set, retries the get_user_pages.  After 3 retries, it
returns -EAGAIN and the fault is started over from the remote side.

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16  8:45     ` Avi Kivity
  2008-02-16 10:41     ` Brice Goglin
@ 2008-02-16 19:21     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-17  3:01       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-17  5:04     ` Doug Maxey
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-16 19:21 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, 15 Feb 2008, Andrew Morton wrote:

> What is the status of getting infiniband to use this facility?

Well we are talking about this it seems.
> 
> How important is this feature to KVM?

Andrea can answer this.

> To xpmem?

Without this feature we are stuck with page pinning by increasing 
refcounts which leads to endless lru scanning and other misbehavior. Also 
applications that use XPmem will not be able to swap or be able to use 
things like remap.
 
> Which other potential clients have been identified and how important it it
> to those?

It is likely important to various DMA engines, framebuffers devices etc 
etc. Seems to be a generally useful feature.


> > +The notifier chains provide two callback mechanisms. The
> > +first one is required for any device that establishes external mappings.
> > +The second (rmap) mechanism is required if a device needs to be
> > +able to sleep when invalidating references. Sleeping may be necessary
> > +if we are mapping across a network or to different Linux instances
> > +in the same address space.
> 
> I'd have thought that a major reason for sleeping would be to wait for IO
> to complete.  Worth mentioning here?

Right.

> Why is that "easy"?  I's have thought that it would only be easy if the
> driver happened to be using those same locks for its own purposes. 
> Otherwise it is "awkward"?

Its relatively easy because it is tied directly to a process and can use
external tlb shootdown / external page table clearing directly. The other 
method requires an rmap in the device driver where it can lookup the 
processes that are mapping the page.
 
> > +The invalidation mechanism for a range (*invalidate_range_begin/end*) is
> > +called most of the time without any locks held. It is only called with
> > +locks held for file backed mappings that are truncated. A flag indicates
> > +in which mode we are. A driver can use that mechanism to f.e.
> > +delay the freeing of the pages during truncate until no locks are held.
> 
> That sucks big time.  What do we need to do to make get the callback
> functions called in non-atomic context?

We would have to drop the inode_mmap_lock. Could be done with some minor 
work.

> > +Pages must be marked dirty if dirty bits are found to be set in
> > +the external ptes during unmap.
> 
> That sentence is too vague.  Define "marked dirty"?

Call set_page_dirty().

> > +The *release* method is called when a Linux process exits. It is run before
> 
> We'd conventionally use a notation such as "->release()" here, rather than
> the asterisks.

Ok.

> 
> > +the pages and mappings of a process are torn down and gives the device driver
> > +a chance to zap all the external mappings in one go.
> 
> I assume what you mean here is that ->release() is called during exit()
> when the final reference to an mm is being dropped.

Right.

> > +An example for a code that can be used to build a notifier mechanism into
> > +a device driver can be found in the file
> > +Documentation/mmu_notifier/skeleton.c
> 
> Should that be in samples/?

Oh. We have that?

> > +The mmu_rmap_notifier adds another invalidate_page() callout that is called
> > +*before* the Linux rmaps are walked. At that point only the page lock is
> > +held. The invalidate_page() function must walk the driver rmaps and evict
> > +all the references to the page.
> 
> What happens if it cannot do so?

The page is not reclaimed if we were called from try_to_unmap(). From 
page_mkclean() we must always evict the page to switch off the write 
protect bit.

> > +There is no process information available before the rmaps are consulted.
> 
> Not sure what that sentence means.  I guess "available to the core VM"?

At that point we only have the page. We do not know which processes map 
the page. In order to find out we need to take a spinlock.


> > +The notifier mechanism can therefore not be attached to an mm_struct. Instead
> > +it is a global callback list. Having to perform a callback for each and every
> > +page that is reclaimed would be inefficient. Therefore we add an additional
> > +page flag: PageRmapExternal().
> 
> How many page flags are left?

30 or so. Its only available on 64bit.

> Is this feature important enough to justfy consumption of another one?
> 
> > Only pages that are marked with this bit can
> > +be exported and the rmap callbacks will only be performed for pages marked
> > +that way.
> 
> "exported": new term, unclear what it means.

Something external to the kernel references the page.

> > +The required additional Page flag is only availabe in 64 bit mode and
> > +therefore the mmu_rmap_notifier portion is not available on 32 bit platforms.
> 
> whoa.  Is that good?  You just made your feature unavailable on the great
> majority of Linux systems.

rmaps are usually used by complex drivers that are typically used in large 
systems.

> > + * Notifier functions for hardware and software that establishes external
> > + * references to pages of a Linux system. The notifier calls ensure that
> > + * external mappings are removed when the Linux VM removes memory ranges
> > + * or individual pages from a process.
> 
> So the callee cannot fail.  hm.  If it can't block, it's likely screwed in
> that case.  In other cases it might be screwed anyway.  I suspect we'll
> need to be able to handle callee failure.

Probably.

> 
> > + * These fall into two classes:
> > + *
> > + * 1. mmu_notifier
> > + *
> > + * 	These are callbacks registered with an mm_struct. If pages are
> > + * 	removed from an address space then callbacks are performed.
> 
> "to be removed", I guess.  It's called before the page is actually removed?

Its called after the pte was cleared while holding the pte lock.

> > + * 	The invalidate_range_start/end callbacks can be performed in contexts
> > + * 	where sleeping is allowed or in atomic contexts. A flag is passed
> > + * 	to indicate an atomic context.
> 
> We generally would prefer separate callbacks, rather than a unified
> callback with a mode flag.

We could drop the inode_mmap_lock when doing truncate. That would make 
this work but its a kind of invasive thing for the VM.

> > +struct mmu_notifier_ops {
> > +	/*
> > +	 * The release notifier is called when no other execution threads
> > +	 * are left. Synchronization is not necessary.
> 
> "and the mm is about to be destroyed"?

Right.

> > +	/*
> > +	 * invalidate_range_begin() and invalidate_range_end() must be paired.
> > +	 *
> > +	 * Multiple invalidate_range_begin/ends may be nested or called
> > +	 * concurrently.
> 
> Under what circumstances would they be nested?

Hmmmm.. Right they cannot be nested. Multiple processors can have 
invalidates() concurrently in progress.

> > That is legit. However, no new external references
> 
> references to what?

To the ranges that are in the process of being invalidated.

> > +	 * invalidate_range_begin() must clear all references in the range
> > +	 * and stop the establishment of new references.
> 
> and stop the establishment of new references within the range, I assume?

Right.
 
> If so, that's putting a heck of a lot of complexity into the driver, isn't
> it?  It needs to temporarily remember an arbitrarily large number of
> regions in this mm against which references may not be taken?

That is one implementation (XPmem does that). The other is to simply stop 
all references when any invalidate_range is in progress (KVM and GRU do 
that).


> > +	 * invalidate_range_end() reenables the establishment of references.
> 
> within the range?

Right.

> > +extern void mmu_notifier_release(struct mm_struct *mm);
> > +extern int mmu_notifier_age_page(struct mm_struct *mm,
> > +				 unsigned long address);
> 
> There's the mysterious age_page again.

Andrea put this in to check the reference status of a page. It functions 
like the accessed bit.

> > +static inline void mmu_notifier_head_init(struct mmu_notifier_head *mnh)
> > +{
> > +	INIT_HLIST_HEAD(&mnh->head);
> > +}
> > +
> > +#define mmu_notifier(function, mm, args...)				\
> > +	do {								\
> > +		struct mmu_notifier *__mn;				\
> > +		struct hlist_node *__n;					\
> > +									\
> > +		if (unlikely(!hlist_empty(&(mm)->mmu_notifier.head))) { \
> > +			rcu_read_lock();				\
> > +			hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(__mn, __n,		\
> > +					     &(mm)->mmu_notifier.head,	\
> > +					     hlist)			\
> > +				if (__mn->ops->function)		\
> > +					__mn->ops->function(__mn,	\
> > +							    mm,		\
> > +							    args);	\
> > +			rcu_read_unlock();				\
> > +		}							\
> > +	} while (0)
> 
> The macro references its args more than once.  Anyone who does
> 
> 	mmu_notifier(function, some_function_which_has_side_effects())
> 
> will get a surprise.  Use temporaries.

Ok.

> > +#define mmu_notifier(function, mm, args...)				\
> > +	do {								\
> > +		if (0) {						\
> > +			struct mmu_notifier *__mn;			\
> > +									\
> > +			__mn = (struct mmu_notifier *)(0x00ff);		\
> > +			__mn->ops->function(__mn, mm, args);		\
> > +		};							\
> > +	} while (0)
> 
> That's a bit weird.  Can't we do the old
> 
> 	(void)function;
> 	(void)mm;
> 
> trick?  Or make it a staic inline function?

Static inline wont allow the checking of the parameters.

(void) may be a good thing here.

> > +config MMU_NOTIFIER
> > +	def_bool y
> > +	bool "MMU notifier, for paging KVM/RDMA"
> 
> Why is this not selectable?  The help seems a bit brief.
> 
> Does this cause 32-bit systems to drag in a bunch of code they're not
> allowed to ever use?

I have selected it a number of times. We could make that a bit longer 
right.


> > +	if (unlikely(!hlist_empty(&mm->mmu_notifier.head))) {
> > +		hlist_for_each_entry_safe(mn, n, t,
> > +					  &mm->mmu_notifier.head, hlist) {
> > +			hlist_del_init(&mn->hlist);
> > +			if (mn->ops->release)
> > +				mn->ops->release(mn, mm);
> 
> We do this a lot, but back in the old days people didn't like optional
> callbacks which can be NULL.  If we expect that mmu_notifier_ops.release is
> usually implemented, the just unconditionally call it and require that all
> clients implement it.  Perhaps provide an exported-to-modules stuv in core
> kernel for clients which didn't want to implement ->release().

Ok.

> > +{
> > +	struct mmu_notifier *mn;
> > +	struct hlist_node *n;
> > +	int young = 0;
> > +
> > +	if (unlikely(!hlist_empty(&mm->mmu_notifier.head))) {
> > +		rcu_read_lock();
> > +		hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(mn, n,
> > +					  &mm->mmu_notifier.head, hlist) {
> > +			if (mn->ops->age_page)
> > +				young |= mn->ops->age_page(mn, mm, address);
> > +		}
> > +		rcu_read_unlock();
> > +	}
> > +
> > +	return young;
> > +}
> 
> should the rcu_read_lock() cover the hlist_empty() test?
> 
> This function looks like it was tossed in at the last minute.  It's
> mysterious, undocumented, poorly commented, poorly named.  A better name
> would be one which has some correlation with the return value.
> 
> Because anyone who looks at some code which does
> 
> 	if (mmu_notifier_age_page(mm, address))
> 		...
> 
> has to go and reverse-engineer the implementation of
> mmu_notifier_age_page() to work out under which circumstances the "..."
> will be executed.  But this should be apparent just from reading the callee
> implementation.
> 
> This function *really* does need some documentation.  What does it *mean*
> when the ->age_page() from some of the notifiers returned "1" and the
> ->age_page() from some other notifiers returned zero?  Dunno.

Andrea: Could you provide some more detail here?


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 3/6] mmu_notifier: invalidate_page callbacks
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16 11:07     ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-16 19:22     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-16 19:54       ` Avi Kivity
  2008-02-19  8:46       ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-18  1:51     ` Nick Piggin
  2 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-16 19:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, 15 Feb 2008, Andrew Morton wrote:

> > @@ -287,7 +288,8 @@ static int page_referenced_one(struct pa
> >  	if (vma->vm_flags & VM_LOCKED) {
> >  		referenced++;
> >  		*mapcount = 1;	/* break early from loop */
> > -	} else if (ptep_clear_flush_young(vma, address, pte))
> > +	} else if (ptep_clear_flush_young(vma, address, pte) |
> > +		   mmu_notifier_age_page(mm, address))
> >  		referenced++;
> 
> The "|" is obviously deliberate.  But no explanation is provided telling us
> why we still call the callback if ptep_clear_flush_young() said the page
> was recently referenced.  People who read your code will want to understand
> this.

Andrea?

> >  		flush_cache_page(vma, address, pte_pfn(*pte));
> >  		entry = ptep_clear_flush(vma, address, pte);
> > +		mmu_notifier(invalidate_page, mm, address);
> 
> I just don't see how ths can be done if the callee has another thread in
> the middle of establishing IO against this region of memory. 
> ->invalidate_page() _has_ to be able to block.  Confused.

The page lock is held and that holds off I/O?


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
@ 2008-02-16 19:26     ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-16 19:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, 15 Feb 2008, Andrew Morton wrote:

> On Thu, 14 Feb 2008 22:49:01 -0800 Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com> wrote:
> 
> > The invalidation of address ranges in a mm_struct needs to be
> > performed when pages are removed or permissions etc change.
> 
> hm.  Do they?  Why?  If I'm in the process of zero-copy writing a hunk of
> memory out to hardware then do I care if someone write-protects the ptes?
> 
> Spose so, but some fleshing-out of the various scenarios here would clarify
> things.

You care f.e. if the VM needs to writeprotect a memory range and a write 
occurs. In that case the VM needs to be proper write processing and write 
through an external pte would cause memory corruption.

> > If invalidate_range_begin() is called with locks held then we
> > pass a flag into invalidate_range() to indicate that no sleeping is
> > possible. Locks are only held for truncate and huge pages.
> 
> This is so bad.

Ok so I can twidlle around with the inode_mmap_lock to drop it while this 
is called?

> > In two cases we use invalidate_range_begin/end to invalidate
> > single pages because the pair allows holding off new references
> > (idea by Robin Holt).
> 
> Assuming that there is a missing "within the range" in this description, I
> assume that all clients will just throw up theior hands in horror and will
> disallow all references to all parts of the mm.

Right. Missing within the range. We only need to disallow creating new 
ptes right? Why disallow references?
 

> > xip_unmap: We are not taking the PageLock so we cannot
> > use the invalidate_page mmu_rmap_notifier. invalidate_range_begin/end
> > stands in.
> 
> What does "stands in" mean?

Use a range begin / end to invalidate a page.

> > +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, start + size, 0);
> >  	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
> > +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, start + size, 0);
> 
> To avoid off-by-one confusion the changelogs, documentation and comments
> should be very careful to tell the reader whether the range includes the
> byte at start+size.  I don't thik that was done?

No it was not. I assumed that the convention is always start - (end - 1) 
and the byte at end is not affected by the operation.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
@ 2008-02-16 19:28     ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-16 19:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, 15 Feb 2008, Andrew Morton wrote:

> > +#define mmu_rmap_notifier(function, args...)				\
> > +	do {								\
> > +		struct mmu_rmap_notifier *__mrn;			\
> > +		struct hlist_node *__n;					\
> > +									\
> > +		rcu_read_lock();					\
> > +		hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(__mrn, __n,			\
> > +				&mmu_rmap_notifier_list, hlist)		\
> > +			if (__mrn->ops->function)			\
> > +				__mrn->ops->function(__mrn, args);	\
> > +		rcu_read_unlock();					\
> > +	} while (0);
> > +
> 
> buggy macro: use locals.

Ok. Same as the non rmap version.

> > +EXPORT_SYMBOL(mmu_rmap_export_page);
> 
> The other patch used EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL.

Ok will make that consistent.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-16 10:58       ` Andrew Morton
@ 2008-02-16 19:31         ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-16 19:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: Brice Goglin, Andrea Arcangeli, linux-kernel, linux-mm

On Sat, 16 Feb 2008, Andrew Morton wrote:

> "looks good" maybe.  But it's in the details where I fear this will come
> unstuck.  The likelihood that some callbacks really will want to be able to
> block in places where this interface doesn't permit that - either to wait
> for IO to complete or to wait for other threads to clear critical regions.

We can get the invalidate_range to always be called without spinlocks if 
we deal with the case of the inode_mmap_lock being held in truncate case.

If you always want to be able to sleep then we could drop the 
invalidate_page() that is called while pte locks held and require the use 
of a device driver rmap?

> >From that POV it doesn't look like a sufficiently general and useful
> design.  Looks like it was grafted onto the current VM implementation in a
> way which just about suits two particular clients if they try hard enough.

You missed KVM. We did the best we could being as least invasive as 
possible.

> Which is all perfectly understandable - it would be hard to rework core MM
> to be able to make this interface more general.  But I do think it's
> half-baked and there is a decent risk that future (or present) code which
> _could_ use something like this won't be able to use this one, and will
> continue to futz with mlock, page-pinning, etc.
> 
> Not that I know what the fix to that is..

You do not see a chance of this being okay if we adopt the two measures 
that I mentioned above?
 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 3/6] mmu_notifier: invalidate_page callbacks
  2008-02-16 19:22     ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-16 19:54       ` Avi Kivity
  2008-02-19  8:46       ` Nick Piggin
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Avi Kivity @ 2008-02-16 19:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Andrew Morton, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Fri, 15 Feb 2008, Andrew Morton wrote:
>
>   
>>> @@ -287,7 +288,8 @@ static int page_referenced_one(struct pa
>>>  	if (vma->vm_flags & VM_LOCKED) {
>>>  		referenced++;
>>>  		*mapcount = 1;	/* break early from loop */
>>> -	} else if (ptep_clear_flush_young(vma, address, pte))
>>> +	} else if (ptep_clear_flush_young(vma, address, pte) |
>>> +		   mmu_notifier_age_page(mm, address))
>>>  		referenced++;
>>>       
>> The "|" is obviously deliberate.  But no explanation is provided telling us
>> why we still call the callback if ptep_clear_flush_young() said the page
>> was recently referenced.  People who read your code will want to understand
>> this.
>>     
>
> Andrea?
>
>   

I'm not Andrea, but the way I read it, ptep_clear_flush_young() and 
->age_page() each have two effects: check whether the page has been 
referenced and clear the referenced bit.  || would retain the semantics 
of the check but lose the clearing.  | does the right thing.

-- 
Any sufficiently difficult bug is indistinguishable from a feature.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-16 19:21     ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-17  3:01       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-17 12:24         ` Robin Holt
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-17  3:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Andrew Morton, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Sat, Feb 16, 2008 at 11:21:07AM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Fri, 15 Feb 2008, Andrew Morton wrote:
> 
> > What is the status of getting infiniband to use this facility?
> 
> Well we are talking about this it seems.

It seems the IB folks think allowing RDMA over virtual memory is not
interesting, their argument seem to be that RDMA is only interesting
on RAM (and they seem not interested in allowing RDMA over a ram+swap
backed _virtual_ memory allocation). They've just to decide if
ram+swap allocation for RDMA is useful or not.

> > How important is this feature to KVM?
> 
> Andrea can answer this.

I think I already did in separate email.

> > That sucks big time.  What do we need to do to make get the callback
> > functions called in non-atomic context?

I sure agree given I also asked to drop the lock param and enforce the
invalidate_range_* to always be called in non atomic context.

> We would have to drop the inode_mmap_lock. Could be done with some minor 
> work.

The invalidate may be deferred after releasing the lock, the lock may
not have to be dropped to cleanup the API (and make xpmem life easier).

> That is one implementation (XPmem does that). The other is to simply stop 
> all references when any invalidate_range is in progress (KVM and GRU do 
> that).

KVM doesn't stop new references. It doesn't need to because it holds a
reference on the page (GRU doesn't). KVM can invalidate the spte and
flush the tlb only after the linux pte has been cleared and after the
page has been released by the VM (because the page doesn't go in the
freelist and it remains pinned for a little while, until the spte is
dropped too inside invalidate_range_end). GRU has to invalidate
_before_ the linux pte is cleared so it has to stop new references
from being established in the invalidate_range_start/end critical
section.

> Andrea put this in to check the reference status of a page. It functions 
> like the accessed bit.

In short each pte can have some spte associated to it. So whenever we
do a ptep_clear_flush protected by the PT lock, we also have to run
invalidate_page that will internally invoke a sort-of
sptep_clear_flush protected by a kvm->mmu_lock (equivalent of
page_table_lock/PT-lock). sptes just like ptes maps virtual addresses
to physical addresses, so you can read/write to RAM either through a
pte or through a spte.

Just like it would be insane to have any requirement that
ptep_clear_flush has to run in not-atomic context (forcing a
conversion of the PT lock to a mutex), it's also weird require the
invalidate_page/age_page to run in atomic context.

All troubles start with the xpmem requirements of having to schedule
in its equivalent of the sptep_clear_flush because it's not a
gigaherz-in-cpu thing but a gigabit thing where the network stack is
involved with its own software linux driven skb memory allocations,
schedules waiting for network I/O, etc... Imagine ptes allocated in a
remote node, no surprise its brings a new set of problems (assuming it
can work reliably during oom given its memory requirements in the
try_to_unmap path, no page can ever be freed until the skbs have been
allocated and sent and allocated again to receive the ack).

Furthermore xpmem doesn't associate any pte to a spte, it associates a
page_t to certain remote references, or it would be in trouble with
invalidate_page that corresponds to ptep_clear_flush on a virtual
address that exists thanks to the anon_vma/i_mmap lock held (and not
thanks to the mmap_sem like in all invalidate_range calls).

Christoph's patch is a mix of two entirely separated features. KVM can
live with V7 just fine, but it's a lot more than what is needed by KVM.

I don't think that invalidate_page/age_page must be allowed to sleep
because invalidate_range also can sleep. You've to just ask yourself
if the VM locks shall remain spinlocks, for the VM own good (not for
the mmu notifiers good). It'd be bad to make the VM underperform with
mutex protecting tiny critical sections to please some mmu notifier
user. But if they're spinlocks, then clearly invalidate_page/age_page
based on virtual addresses can't sleep or the virtual address wouldn't
make sense anymore by the time the spinlock is released.

> > This function looks like it was tossed in at the last minute.  It's
> > mysterious, undocumented, poorly commented, poorly named.  A better name
> > would be one which has some correlation with the return value.
> > 
> > Because anyone who looks at some code which does
> > 
> > 	if (mmu_notifier_age_page(mm, address))
> > 		...
> > 
> > has to go and reverse-engineer the implementation of
> > mmu_notifier_age_page() to work out under which circumstances the "..."
> > will be executed.  But this should be apparent just from reading the callee
> > implementation.
> > 
> > This function *really* does need some documentation.  What does it *mean*
> > when the ->age_page() from some of the notifiers returned "1" and the
> > ->age_page() from some other notifiers returned zero?  Dunno.
> 
> Andrea: Could you provide some more detail here?

age_page is simply the ptep_clear_flush_young equivalent for
sptes. It's meant to provide aging to the pages mapped by secondary
mmus. Its return value is the same one of ptep_clear_flush_young but
it represents the sptes associated with the pte,
ptep_clear_flush_young instead only takes care of the pte itself.

For KVM the below would be all that is needed, the fact
invalidate_range can sleep and invalidate_page/age_page can't, is
because their users are very different. With my approach the mmu
notifiers callback are always protected by the PT lock (just like
ptep_clear_flush and the other pte+tlb manglings) and they're called
after the pte is cleared and before the VM reference on the page has
been dropped. That makes it safe for GRU too, so for my initial
approach _none_ of the callbacks was allowed to sleep, and that was a
feature that allows GRU not to block its tlb miss interrupt with any
further locking (the PT-lock taken by follow_page automatically
serialized the GRU interrupt against the MMU notifiers and the linux
page fault). For KVM the invalidate_pages of my patch is converted to
invalidate_range_end because it doesn't matter for KVM if it's called
after the PT lock has been dropped. In the try_to_unmap case
invalidate_page is called by atomic context in Christoph's patch too,
because a virtual address and in turn a pte and in turn certain sptes,
can only exist thanks to the spinlocks taken by the VM. Changing the
VM to make mmu notifiers sleepable in the try_to_unmap path sounds bad
to me, especially given not even xpmem needs this.

You can see how everything looks simpler and more symmetric by
assuming the secondary mmu-references are established and dropped like
ptes, like in the KVM case where infact sptes are a pure cpu thing
exact like the ptes. XPMEM adds the requirement that sptes are infact
remote entities that are mangled by a message passing protocol over
the network, it's the same as ptep_clear_flush being required to
schedule and send skbs to be successful and allowing try_to_unmap to
do its work. Same problem. No wonder patch gets more complicated then.

Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com>

diff --git a/include/asm-generic/pgtable.h b/include/asm-generic/pgtable.h
--- a/include/asm-generic/pgtable.h
+++ b/include/asm-generic/pgtable.h
@@ -46,6 +46,7 @@
 	__young = ptep_test_and_clear_young(__vma, __address, __ptep);	\
 	if (__young)							\
 		flush_tlb_page(__vma, __address);			\
+	__young |= mmu_notifier_age_page((__vma)->vm_mm, __address);	\
 	__young;							\
 })
 #endif
@@ -86,6 +87,7 @@ do {									\
 	pte_t __pte;							\
 	__pte = ptep_get_and_clear((__vma)->vm_mm, __address, __ptep);	\
 	flush_tlb_page(__vma, __address);				\
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_page, (__vma)->vm_mm, __address);	\
 	__pte;								\
 })
 #endif
diff --git a/include/asm-s390/pgtable.h b/include/asm-s390/pgtable.h
--- a/include/asm-s390/pgtable.h
+++ b/include/asm-s390/pgtable.h
@@ -712,6 +712,7 @@ static inline pte_t ptep_clear_flush(str
 {
 	pte_t pte = *ptep;
 	ptep_invalidate(address, ptep);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_page, vma->vm_mm, address);
 	return pte;
 }
 
diff --git a/include/linux/mm_types.h b/include/linux/mm_types.h
--- a/include/linux/mm_types.h
+++ b/include/linux/mm_types.h
@@ -10,6 +10,7 @@
 #include <linux/rbtree.h>
 #include <linux/rwsem.h>
 #include <linux/completion.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 #include <asm/page.h>
 #include <asm/mmu.h>
 
@@ -219,6 +220,8 @@ struct mm_struct {
 	/* aio bits */
 	rwlock_t		ioctx_list_lock;
 	struct kioctx		*ioctx_list;
+
+	struct mmu_notifier_head mmu_notifier; /* MMU notifier list */
 };
 
 #endif /* _LINUX_MM_TYPES_H */
diff --git a/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h b/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h
new file mode 100644
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h
@@ -0,0 +1,132 @@
+#ifndef _LINUX_MMU_NOTIFIER_H
+#define _LINUX_MMU_NOTIFIER_H
+
+#include <linux/list.h>
+#include <linux/spinlock.h>
+
+struct mmu_notifier;
+
+struct mmu_notifier_ops {
+	/*
+	 * Called when nobody can register any more notifier in the mm
+	 * and after the "mn" notifier has been disarmed already.
+	 */
+	void (*release)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+			struct mm_struct *mm);
+
+	/*
+	 * invalidate_page[s] is called in atomic context
+	 * after any pte has been updated and before
+	 * dropping the PT lock required to update any Linux pte.
+	 * Once the PT lock will be released the pte will have its
+	 * final value to export through the secondary MMU.
+	 * Before this is invoked any secondary MMU is still ok
+	 * to read/write to the page previously pointed by the
+	 * Linux pte because the old page hasn't been freed yet.
+	 * If required set_page_dirty has to be called internally
+	 * to this method.
+	 */
+	void (*invalidate_page)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+				struct mm_struct *mm,
+				unsigned long address);
+	void (*invalidate_pages)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+				 struct mm_struct *mm,
+				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end);
+
+	/*
+	 * Age page is called in atomic context inside the PT lock
+	 * right after the VM is test-and-clearing the young/accessed
+	 * bitflag in the pte. This way the VM will provide proper aging
+	 * to the accesses to the page through the secondary MMUs
+	 * and not only to the ones through the Linux pte.
+	 */
+	int (*age_page)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+			struct mm_struct *mm,
+			unsigned long address);
+};
+
+struct mmu_notifier {
+	struct hlist_node hlist;
+	const struct mmu_notifier_ops *ops;
+};
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER
+
+struct mmu_notifier_head {
+	struct hlist_head head;
+	spinlock_t lock;
+};
+
+#include <linux/mm_types.h>
+
+/*
+ * RCU is used to traverse the list. A quiescent period needs to pass
+ * before the notifier is guaranteed to be visible to all threads.
+ */
+extern void mmu_notifier_register(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+				  struct mm_struct *mm);
+/*
+ * RCU is used to traverse the list. A quiescent period needs to pass
+ * before the "struct mmu_notifier" can be freed. Alternatively it
+ * can be synchronously freed inside ->release when the list can't
+ * change anymore and nobody could possibly walk it.
+ */
+extern void mmu_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+				    struct mm_struct *mm);
+extern void mmu_notifier_release(struct mm_struct *mm);
+extern int mmu_notifier_age_page(struct mm_struct *mm,
+				 unsigned long address);
+
+static inline void mmu_notifier_head_init(struct mmu_notifier_head *mnh)
+{
+	INIT_HLIST_HEAD(&mnh->head);
+	spin_lock_init(&mnh->lock);
+}
+
+#define mmu_notifier(function, mm, args...)				\
+	do {								\
+		struct mmu_notifier *__mn;				\
+		struct hlist_node *__n;					\
+									\
+		if (unlikely(!hlist_empty(&(mm)->mmu_notifier.head))) { \
+			rcu_read_lock();				\
+			hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(__mn, __n,		\
+						 &(mm)->mmu_notifier.head, \
+						 hlist)			\
+				if (__mn->ops->function)		\
+					__mn->ops->function(__mn,	\
+							    mm,		\
+							    args);	\
+			rcu_read_unlock();				\
+		}							\
+	} while (0)
+
+#else /* CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER */
+
+struct mmu_notifier_head {};
+
+#define mmu_notifier_register(mn, mm) do {} while(0)
+#define mmu_notifier_unregister(mn, mm) do {} while (0)
+#define mmu_notifier_release(mm) do {} while (0)
+#define mmu_notifier_age_page(mm, address) ({ 0; })
+#define mmu_notifier_head_init(mmh) do {} while (0)
+
+/*
+ * Notifiers that use the parameters that they were passed so that the
+ * compiler does not complain about unused variables but does proper
+ * parameter checks even if !CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER.
+ * Macros generate no code.
+ */
+#define mmu_notifier(function, mm, args...)			       \
+	do {							       \
+		if (0) {					       \
+			struct mmu_notifier *__mn;		       \
+								       \
+			__mn = (struct mmu_notifier *)(0x00ff);	       \
+			__mn->ops->function(__mn, mm, args);	       \
+		};						       \
+	} while (0)
+
+#endif /* CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER */
+
+#endif /* _LINUX_MMU_NOTIFIER_H */
diff --git a/kernel/fork.c b/kernel/fork.c
--- a/kernel/fork.c
+++ b/kernel/fork.c
@@ -360,6 +360,7 @@ static struct mm_struct * mm_init(struct
 
 	if (likely(!mm_alloc_pgd(mm))) {
 		mm->def_flags = 0;
+		mmu_notifier_head_init(&mm->mmu_notifier);
 		return mm;
 	}
 	free_mm(mm);
diff --git a/mm/Kconfig b/mm/Kconfig
--- a/mm/Kconfig
+++ b/mm/Kconfig
@@ -193,3 +193,7 @@ config VIRT_TO_BUS
 config VIRT_TO_BUS
 	def_bool y
 	depends on !ARCH_NO_VIRT_TO_BUS
+
+config MMU_NOTIFIER
+	def_bool y
+	bool "MMU notifier, for paging KVM/RDMA"
diff --git a/mm/Makefile b/mm/Makefile
--- a/mm/Makefile
+++ b/mm/Makefile
@@ -30,4 +30,5 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_MIGRATION) += migrate.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_MIGRATION) += migrate.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_SMP) += allocpercpu.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_QUICKLIST) += quicklist.o
+obj-$(CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER) += mmu_notifier.o
 
diff --git a/mm/hugetlb.c b/mm/hugetlb.c
--- a/mm/hugetlb.c
+++ b/mm/hugetlb.c
@@ -756,6 +756,7 @@ void __unmap_hugepage_range(struct vm_ar
 		if (pte_none(pte))
 			continue;
 
+		mmu_notifier(invalidate_page, mm, address);
 		page = pte_page(pte);
 		if (pte_dirty(pte))
 			set_page_dirty(page);
diff --git a/mm/memory.c b/mm/memory.c
--- a/mm/memory.c
+++ b/mm/memory.c
@@ -494,6 +494,7 @@ static int copy_pte_range(struct mm_stru
 	spinlock_t *src_ptl, *dst_ptl;
 	int progress = 0;
 	int rss[2];
+	unsigned long start;
 
 again:
 	rss[1] = rss[0] = 0;
@@ -505,6 +506,7 @@ again:
 	spin_lock_nested(src_ptl, SINGLE_DEPTH_NESTING);
 	arch_enter_lazy_mmu_mode();
 
+	start = addr;
 	do {
 		/*
 		 * We are holding two locks at this point - either of them
@@ -525,6 +527,8 @@ again:
 	} while (dst_pte++, src_pte++, addr += PAGE_SIZE, addr != end);
 
 	arch_leave_lazy_mmu_mode();
+	if (is_cow_mapping(vma->vm_flags))
+		mmu_notifier(invalidate_pages, vma->vm_mm, start, addr);
 	spin_unlock(src_ptl);
 	pte_unmap_nested(src_pte - 1);
 	add_mm_rss(dst_mm, rss[0], rss[1]);
@@ -660,6 +664,7 @@ static unsigned long zap_pte_range(struc
 			}
 			ptent = ptep_get_and_clear_full(mm, addr, pte,
 							tlb->fullmm);
+			mmu_notifier(invalidate_page, mm, addr);
 			tlb_remove_tlb_entry(tlb, pte, addr);
 			if (unlikely(!page))
 				continue;
@@ -1248,6 +1253,7 @@ static int remap_pte_range(struct mm_str
 {
 	pte_t *pte;
 	spinlock_t *ptl;
+	unsigned long start = addr;
 
 	pte = pte_alloc_map_lock(mm, pmd, addr, &ptl);
 	if (!pte)
@@ -1259,6 +1265,7 @@ static int remap_pte_range(struct mm_str
 		pfn++;
 	} while (pte++, addr += PAGE_SIZE, addr != end);
 	arch_leave_lazy_mmu_mode();
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_pages, mm, start, addr);
 	pte_unmap_unlock(pte - 1, ptl);
 	return 0;
 }
diff --git a/mm/mmap.c b/mm/mmap.c
--- a/mm/mmap.c
+++ b/mm/mmap.c
@@ -2044,6 +2044,7 @@ void exit_mmap(struct mm_struct *mm)
 	vm_unacct_memory(nr_accounted);
 	free_pgtables(&tlb, vma, FIRST_USER_ADDRESS, 0);
 	tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, 0, end);
+	mmu_notifier_release(mm);
 
 	/*
 	 * Walk the list again, actually closing and freeing it,
diff --git a/mm/mmu_notifier.c b/mm/mmu_notifier.c
new file mode 100644
--- /dev/null
+++ b/mm/mmu_notifier.c
@@ -0,0 +1,73 @@
+/*
+ *  linux/mm/mmu_notifier.c
+ *
+ *  Copyright (C) 2008  Qumranet, Inc.
+ *  Copyright (C) 2008  SGI
+ *             Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>
+ *
+ *  This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2. See
+ *  the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
+ */
+
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
+#include <linux/module.h>
+#include <linux/rcupdate.h>
+
+/*
+ * No synchronization. This function can only be called when only a single
+ * process remains that performs teardown.
+ */
+void mmu_notifier_release(struct mm_struct *mm)
+{
+	struct mmu_notifier *mn;
+	struct hlist_node *n, *tmp;
+
+	if (unlikely(!hlist_empty(&mm->mmu_notifier.head))) {
+		hlist_for_each_entry_safe(mn, n, tmp,
+					  &mm->mmu_notifier.head, hlist) {
+			hlist_del(&mn->hlist);
+			if (mn->ops->release)
+				mn->ops->release(mn, mm);
+		}
+	}
+}
+
+/*
+ * If no young bitflag is supported by the hardware, ->age_page can
+ * unmap the address and return 1 or 0 depending if the mapping previously
+ * existed or not.
+ */
+int mmu_notifier_age_page(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long address)
+{
+	struct mmu_notifier *mn;
+	struct hlist_node *n;
+	int young = 0;
+
+	if (unlikely(!hlist_empty(&mm->mmu_notifier.head))) {
+		rcu_read_lock();
+		hlist_for_each_entry_rcu(mn, n,
+					 &mm->mmu_notifier.head, hlist) {
+			if (mn->ops->age_page)
+				young |= mn->ops->age_page(mn, mm, address);
+		}
+		rcu_read_unlock();
+	}
+
+	return young;
+}
+
+void mmu_notifier_register(struct mmu_notifier *mn, struct mm_struct *mm)
+{
+	spin_lock(&mm->mmu_notifier.lock);
+	hlist_add_head_rcu(&mn->hlist, &mm->mmu_notifier.head);
+	spin_unlock(&mm->mmu_notifier.lock);
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(mmu_notifier_register);
+
+void mmu_notifier_unregister(struct mmu_notifier *mn, struct mm_struct *mm)
+{
+	spin_lock(&mm->mmu_notifier.lock);
+	hlist_del_rcu(&mn->hlist);
+	spin_unlock(&mm->mmu_notifier.lock);
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(mmu_notifier_unregister);
diff --git a/mm/mprotect.c b/mm/mprotect.c
--- a/mm/mprotect.c
+++ b/mm/mprotect.c
@@ -32,6 +32,7 @@ static void change_pte_range(struct mm_s
 {
 	pte_t *pte, oldpte;
 	spinlock_t *ptl;
+	unsigned long start = addr;
 
 	pte = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, addr, &ptl);
 	arch_enter_lazy_mmu_mode();
@@ -71,6 +72,7 @@ static void change_pte_range(struct mm_s
 
 	} while (pte++, addr += PAGE_SIZE, addr != end);
 	arch_leave_lazy_mmu_mode();
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_pages, mm, start, addr);
 	pte_unmap_unlock(pte - 1, ptl);
 }
 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
                       ` (2 preceding siblings ...)
  2008-02-16 19:21     ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-17  5:04     ` Doug Maxey
  3 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Doug Maxey @ 2008-02-17  5:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity,
	Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise,
	Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm,
	daniel.blueman, Ben Herrenschmidt, Jan-Bernd Themann


On Fri, 15 Feb 2008 19:37:19 PST, Andrew Morton wrote:
> Which other potential clients have been identified and how important it it
> to those?

The powerpc ehea utilizes its own mmu.  Not sure about the importance 
to the driver. (But will investigate :)

++doug


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-17  3:01       ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-17 12:24         ` Robin Holt
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-02-17 12:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Andrew Morton, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity,
	Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise,
	Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm,
	daniel.blueman

On Sun, Feb 17, 2008 at 04:01:20AM +0100, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 16, 2008 at 11:21:07AM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > On Fri, 15 Feb 2008, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > 
> > > What is the status of getting infiniband to use this facility?
> > 
> > Well we are talking about this it seems.
> 
> It seems the IB folks think allowing RDMA over virtual memory is not
> interesting, their argument seem to be that RDMA is only interesting
> on RAM (and they seem not interested in allowing RDMA over a ram+swap
> backed _virtual_ memory allocation). They've just to decide if
> ram+swap allocation for RDMA is useful or not.

I don't think that is a completely fair characterization.  It would be
more fair to say that the changes required to their library/user api
would be too significant to allow an adaptation to any scheme which
allowed removal of physical memory below a virtual mapping.

I agree with the IB folks when they say it is impossible with their
current scheme.  The fact that any consumer of their endpoint identifier
can use any identifier without notifying the kernel prior to its use
certainly makes any implementation under any scheme impossible.

I guess we could possibly make things work for IB if we did some heavy
work.  Let's assume, instead of passing around the physical endpoint
identifiers, they passed around a handle.  In order for any IB endpoint
to commuicate, it would need to request the kernel translate a handle
into an endpoint identifier.  In order for the kernel to put a TLB
entry into the processes address space allowing the process access to
the _CARD_, it would need to ensure all the current endpoint identifiers
for this process were "active" meaning we have verified with the other
endpoint that all pages are faulted and TLB/PFN information is in the
owning card's TLB/PFN tables.  Once all of a processes endoints are
"active" we would drop in the PFN for the adapter into the pages tables.
Any time pages are being revoked from under an active handle, we would
shoot-down the IB adapter card TLB entries for all the remote users of
this handle and quiesce the cards state to ensure transfers are either
complete or terminated.  When their are no active transfers, we would
respond back to the owner and they could complete the source process
page table cleaning.  Any time all of the pages for a handle can not be
mapped from virtual to physical, the remote process would be SIGBUS'd
instead of having it IB adapter TLB installed.

This is essentially how XPMEM does it except we have the benefit of
working on individual pages.

Again, not knowing what I am talking about, but under the assumption that
MPI IB use is contained to a library, I would hope the changes could be
contained under the MPI-to-IB library interface and would not need any
changes at the MPI-user library interface.

We do keep track of the virtual address ranges within a handle that
are being used.  I assume the IB folks will find that helpful as well.
Otherwise, I think they could make things operate this way.  XPMEM has
the advantage of not needing to have virtual-to-physical at all times,
but otherwise it is essentially the same.

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 3/6] mmu_notifier: invalidate_page callbacks
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-16 11:07     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-16 19:22     ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-18  1:51     ` Nick Piggin
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-02-18  1:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity,
	Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise,
	Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm,
	daniel.blueman

On Saturday 16 February 2008 14:37, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Thu, 14 Feb 2008 22:49:02 -0800 Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com> 
wrote:
> > Two callbacks to remove individual pages as done in rmap code
> >
> > 	invalidate_page()
> >
> > Called from the inner loop of rmap walks to invalidate pages.
> >
> > 	age_page()
> >
> > Called for the determination of the page referenced status.
> >
> > If we do not care about page referenced status then an age_page callback
> > may be be omitted. PageLock and pte lock are held when either of the
> > functions is called.
>
> The age_page mystery shallows.

BTW. can this callback be called mmu_notifier_clear_flush_young? To
match the core VM.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [PATCH] KVM swapping with MMU Notifiers V7
  2008-02-16 11:08   ` Andrew Morton
@ 2008-02-18 12:17     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-18 12:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Sat, Feb 16, 2008 at 03:08:17AM -0800, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Sat, 16 Feb 2008 11:48:27 +0100 Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com> wrote:
> 
> > +void kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_range_end(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> > +					   struct mm_struct *mm,
> > +					   unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
> > +					   int lock)
> > +{
> > +	for (; start < end; start += PAGE_SIZE)
> > +		kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_page(mn, mm, start);
> > +}
> > +
> > +static const struct mmu_notifier_ops kvm_mmu_notifier_ops = {
> > +	.invalidate_page	= kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_page,
> > +	.age_page		= kvm_mmu_notifier_age_page,
> > +	.invalidate_range_end	= kvm_mmu_notifier_invalidate_range_end,
> > +};
> 
> So this doesn't implement ->invalidate_range_start().

Correct. range_start is needed by subsystems that don't pin the pages
(so they've to drop the secondary mmu mappings on the physical page
before the page is released by the linux VM).

> By what means does it prevent new mappings from being established in the
> range after core mm has tried to call ->invalidate_rande_start()?
> mmap_sem, I assume?

No, populate range only takes the mmap_sem in read mode and the kvm page
fault also is of course taking it only in read mode.

What makes it safe, is that invalidate_range_end is called _after_ the
linux pte is clear. The kvm page fault, if it triggers, it will call
into get_user_pages again to re-establish the linux pte _before_
establishing the spte.

It's the same reason why it's safe to flush the tlb after clearing the
linux pte. sptes are like a secondary tlb.

> > +			/* set userspace_addr atomically for kvm_hva_to_rmapp */
> > +			spin_lock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
> > +			memslot->userspace_addr = userspace_addr;
> > +			spin_unlock(&kvm->mmu_lock);
> 
> are you sure?  kvm_unmap_hva() and kvm_age_hva() read ->userspace_addr a
> single time and it doesn't immediately look like there's a need to take the
> lock here?

gcc will always write it with a movq but this is to be
C-specs-compliant and because this is by far not a performance
critical path I thought it was simpler than some other atomic move in
a single insn.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [PATCH] KVM swapping with MMU Notifiers V7
  2008-02-16 11:51   ` Robin Holt
@ 2008-02-18 12:35     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-18 12:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Robin Holt
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, akpm, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Sat, Feb 16, 2008 at 05:51:38AM -0600, Robin Holt wrote:
> I am doing this in xpmem with a stack-based structure in the function
> calling get_user_pages.  That structure describes the start and
> end address of the range we are doing the get_user_pages on.  If an
> invalidate_range_begin comes in while we are off to the kernel doing
> the get_user_pages, the invalidate_range_begin marks that structure
> indicating an invalidate came in.  When the get_user_pages gets the
> structures relocked, it checks that flag (really a generation counter)
> and if it is set, retries the get_user_pages.  After 3 retries, it
> returns -EAGAIN and the fault is started over from the remote side.

A seqlock sounds a good optimization for the non-swapping fast path, a
per-VM-guest seqlock number can allow us to know when we need to worry
to call get_user_pages a second time, but won't be really a retry like
in 99% of seqlock usages for the reader side, but just a second
get_user_pages to trigger a minor fault. Then if the page is different
in the second run, we'll really retry (so not in function of the
seqlock but in function of the get_user_pages page array), and there's
no risk of livelocks because get_user_pages returning a different page
won't be the common case. The seqlock should be increased first before
the invalidate and a second time once the invalidate is over.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
@ 2008-02-18 22:33   ` Roland Dreier
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Roland Dreier @ 2008-02-18 22:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

It seems that we've come up with two reasonable cases where it makes
sense to use these notifiers for InfiniBand/RDMA:

First, the ability to safely to DMA to/from userspace memory with the
memory regions mlock()ed but the pages not pinned.  In this case the
notifiers here would seem to suit us well:

 > +	void (*invalidate_range_begin)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
 > +				 struct mm_struct *mm,
 > +				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
 > +				 int atomic);
 > +
 > +	void (*invalidate_range_end)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
 > +				 struct mm_struct *mm,
 > +				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
 > +				 int atomic);

If I understand correctly, the IB stack would have to get the hardware
driver to shoot down translation entries and suspend access to the
region when an invalidate_range_begin notifier is called, and wait for
the invalidate_range_end notifier to repopulate the adapter
translation tables.  This will probably work OK as long as the
interval between the invalidate_range_begin and invalidate_range_end
calls is not "too long."

Also, using this effectively requires us to figure out how we want to
mlock() regions that are going to be used for RDMA.  We could require
userspace to do it, but it's not clear to me that we're safe in the
case where userspace decides not to... what happens if some pages get
swapped out after the invalidate_range_begin notifier?

The second case where some form of notifiers are useful is for
userspace to know when a memory registration is still valid, ie Pete
Wyckoff's work:

    http://www.osc.edu/~pw/papers/wyckoff-memreg-ccgrid05.pdf
    http://www.osc.edu/~pw/dreg/

however these MMU notifiers seem orthogonal to that: the registration
cache is concerned with address spaces, not page mapping, and hence
the existing vma operations seem to be a better fit.

 - R.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 3/6] mmu_notifier: invalidate_page callbacks
  2008-02-16 19:22     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-16 19:54       ` Avi Kivity
@ 2008-02-19  8:46       ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-19 13:30         ` Andrea Arcangeli
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-02-19  8:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Andrew Morton, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity,
	Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise,
	Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm,
	daniel.blueman

On Sunday 17 February 2008 06:22, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Fri, 15 Feb 2008, Andrew Morton wrote:

> > >  		flush_cache_page(vma, address, pte_pfn(*pte));
> > >  		entry = ptep_clear_flush(vma, address, pte);
> > > +		mmu_notifier(invalidate_page, mm, address);
> >
> > I just don't see how ths can be done if the callee has another thread in
> > the middle of establishing IO against this region of memory.
> > ->invalidate_page() _has_ to be able to block.  Confused.
>
> The page lock is held and that holds off I/O?

I think the actual answer is that "it doesn't matter".

ptes are not exactly the entity via which IO gets established, so
all we really care about here is that after the callback finishes,
we will not get any more reads or writes to the page via the
external mapping.

As far as holding off local IO goes, that is the job of the core
VM. (And no, page lock does not necessarily hold it off FYI -- it
can be writeback IO or even IO directly via buffers).

Holding off IO via the external references I guess is a job for
the notifier driver.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
@ 2008-02-19  8:54   ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-19 13:34     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-19 23:08   ` Nick Piggin
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-02-19  8:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Friday 15 February 2008 17:49, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> The invalidation of address ranges in a mm_struct needs to be
> performed when pages are removed or permissions etc change.
>
> If invalidate_range_begin() is called with locks held then we
> pass a flag into invalidate_range() to indicate that no sleeping is
> possible. Locks are only held for truncate and huge pages.
>
> In two cases we use invalidate_range_begin/end to invalidate
> single pages because the pair allows holding off new references
> (idea by Robin Holt).
>
> do_wp_page(): We hold off new references while we update the pte.
>
> xip_unmap: We are not taking the PageLock so we cannot
> use the invalidate_page mmu_rmap_notifier. invalidate_range_begin/end
> stands in.

This whole thing would be much better if you didn't rely on the page
lock at all, but either a) used the same locking as Linux does for its
ptes/tlbs, or b) have some locking that is private to the mmu notifier
code. Then there is not all this new stuff that has to be understood in
the core VM.

Also, why do you have to "invalidate" ranges when switching to a
_more_ permissive state? This stuff should basically be the same as
(a subset of) the TLB flushing API AFAIKS. Anything more is a pretty
big burden to put in the core VM.

See my alternative patch I posted -- I can't see why it won't work
just like a TLB.

As far as sleeping inside callbacks goes... I think there are big
problems with the patch (the sleeping patch and the external rmap
patch). I don't think it is workable in its current state. Either
we have to make some big changes to the core VM, or we have to turn
some locks into sleeping locks to do it properly AFAIKS. Neither
one is good.

But anyway, I don't really think the two approaches (Andrea's
notifiers vs sleeping/xrmap) should be tangled up too much. I
think Andrea's can possibly be quite unintrusive and useful very
soon.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 3/6] mmu_notifier: invalidate_page callbacks
  2008-02-19  8:46       ` Nick Piggin
@ 2008-02-19 13:30         ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-19 13:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Andrew Morton, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity,
	Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise,
	Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm,
	daniel.blueman

On Tue, Feb 19, 2008 at 07:46:10PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> On Sunday 17 February 2008 06:22, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > On Fri, 15 Feb 2008, Andrew Morton wrote:
> 
> > > >  		flush_cache_page(vma, address, pte_pfn(*pte));
> > > >  		entry = ptep_clear_flush(vma, address, pte);
> > > > +		mmu_notifier(invalidate_page, mm, address);
> > >
> > > I just don't see how ths can be done if the callee has another thread in
> > > the middle of establishing IO against this region of memory.
> > > ->invalidate_page() _has_ to be able to block.  Confused.
> >
> > The page lock is held and that holds off I/O?
> 
> I think the actual answer is that "it doesn't matter".

Agreed. The PG_lock itself taken when invalidate_page is called, is
used to serialized the VM against the VM, not the VM against I/O.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-19  8:54   ` Nick Piggin
@ 2008-02-19 13:34     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-27 22:23       ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-19 13:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Tue, Feb 19, 2008 at 07:54:14PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> As far as sleeping inside callbacks goes... I think there are big
> problems with the patch (the sleeping patch and the external rmap
> patch). I don't think it is workable in its current state. Either
> we have to make some big changes to the core VM, or we have to turn
> some locks into sleeping locks to do it properly AFAIKS. Neither
> one is good.

Agreed.

The thing is quite simple, the moment we support xpmem the complexity
in the mmu notifier patch start and there are hacks, duplicated
functionality through the same xpmem callbacks etc... GRU can already
be 100% supported (infact simpler and safer) with my patch.

> But anyway, I don't really think the two approaches (Andrea's
> notifiers vs sleeping/xrmap) should be tangled up too much. I
> think Andrea's can possibly be quite unintrusive and useful very
> soon.

Yes, that's why I kept maintaining my patch and I posted the last
revision to Andrew. I use pte/tlb locking of the core VM, it's
unintrusive and obviously safe. Furthermore it can be extended with
Christoph's stuff in a 100% backwards compatible fashion later if needed.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
  2008-02-19  8:54   ` Nick Piggin
@ 2008-02-19 23:08   ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-20  1:00     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-27 22:35     ` Christoph Lameter
  2 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-02-19 23:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Friday 15 February 2008 17:49, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> The invalidation of address ranges in a mm_struct needs to be
> performed when pages are removed or permissions etc change.
>
> If invalidate_range_begin() is called with locks held then we
> pass a flag into invalidate_range() to indicate that no sleeping is
> possible. Locks are only held for truncate and huge pages.

You can't sleep inside rcu_read_lock()!

I must say that for a patch that is up to v8 or whatever and is
posted twice a week to such a big cc list, it is kind of slack to
not even test it and expect other people to review it.

Also, what we are going to need here are not skeleton drivers
that just do all the *easy* bits (of registering their callbacks),
but actual fully working examples that do everything that any
real driver will need to do. If not for the sanity of the driver
writer, then for the sanity of the VM developers (I don't want
to have to understand xpmem or infiniband in order to understand
how the VM works).



> In two cases we use invalidate_range_begin/end to invalidate
> single pages because the pair allows holding off new references
> (idea by Robin Holt).
>
> do_wp_page(): We hold off new references while we update the pte.
>
> xip_unmap: We are not taking the PageLock so we cannot
> use the invalidate_page mmu_rmap_notifier. invalidate_range_begin/end
> stands in.
>
> Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com>
> Signed-off-by: Robin Holt <holt@sgi.com>
> Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>
>
> ---
>  mm/filemap_xip.c |    5 +++++
>  mm/fremap.c      |    3 +++
>  mm/hugetlb.c     |    3 +++
>  mm/memory.c      |   35 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------
>  mm/mmap.c        |    2 ++
>  mm/mprotect.c    |    3 +++
>  mm/mremap.c      |    7 ++++++-
>  7 files changed, 51 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)
>
> Index: linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c
> ===================================================================
> --- linux-2.6.orig/mm/fremap.c	2008-02-14 18:43:31.000000000 -0800
> +++ linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c	2008-02-14 18:45:07.000000000 -0800
> @@ -15,6 +15,7 @@
>  #include <linux/rmap.h>
>  #include <linux/module.h>
>  #include <linux/syscalls.h>
> +#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
>
>  #include <asm/mmu_context.h>
>  #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
> @@ -214,7 +215,9 @@ asmlinkage long sys_remap_file_pages(uns
>  		spin_unlock(&mapping->i_mmap_lock);
>  	}
>
> +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, start + size, 0);
>  	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
> +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, start + size, 0);
>  	if (!err && !(flags & MAP_NONBLOCK)) {
>  		if (unlikely(has_write_lock)) {
>  			downgrade_write(&mm->mmap_sem);
> Index: linux-2.6/mm/memory.c
> ===================================================================
> --- linux-2.6.orig/mm/memory.c	2008-02-14 18:43:31.000000000 -0800
> +++ linux-2.6/mm/memory.c	2008-02-14 18:45:07.000000000 -0800
> @@ -51,6 +51,7 @@
>  #include <linux/init.h>
>  #include <linux/writeback.h>
>  #include <linux/memcontrol.h>
> +#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
>
>  #include <asm/pgalloc.h>
>  #include <asm/uaccess.h>
> @@ -611,6 +612,9 @@ int copy_page_range(struct mm_struct *ds
>  	if (is_vm_hugetlb_page(vma))
>  		return copy_hugetlb_page_range(dst_mm, src_mm, vma);
>
> +	if (is_cow_mapping(vma->vm_flags))
> +		mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, src_mm, addr, end, 0);
> +
>  	dst_pgd = pgd_offset(dst_mm, addr);
>  	src_pgd = pgd_offset(src_mm, addr);
>  	do {
> @@ -621,6 +625,11 @@ int copy_page_range(struct mm_struct *ds
>  						vma, addr, next))
>  			return -ENOMEM;
>  	} while (dst_pgd++, src_pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
> +
> +	if (is_cow_mapping(vma->vm_flags))
> +		mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, src_mm,
> +						vma->vm_start, end, 0);
> +
>  	return 0;
>  }
>
> @@ -893,13 +902,16 @@ unsigned long zap_page_range(struct vm_a
>  	struct mmu_gather *tlb;
>  	unsigned long end = address + size;
>  	unsigned long nr_accounted = 0;
> +	int atomic = details ? (details->i_mmap_lock != 0) : 0;
>
>  	lru_add_drain();
>  	tlb = tlb_gather_mmu(mm, 0);
>  	update_hiwater_rss(mm);
> +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, address, end, atomic);
>  	end = unmap_vmas(&tlb, vma, address, end, &nr_accounted, details);
>  	if (tlb)
>  		tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, address, end);
> +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, address, end, atomic);
>  	return end;
>  }
>

Where do you invalidate for munmap()?

Also, how to you resolve the case where you are not allowed to sleep?
I would have thought either you have to handle it, in which case nobody
needs to sleep; or you can't handle it, in which case the code is
broken.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem) Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
@ 2008-02-19 23:55   ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-20  3:12     ` Robin Holt
  2008-02-27 22:43     ` Christoph Lameter
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-02-19 23:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Friday 15 February 2008 17:49, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> These special additional callbacks are required because XPmem (and likely
> other mechanisms) do use their own rmap (multiple processes on a series
> of remote Linux instances may be accessing the memory of a process).
> F.e. XPmem may have to send out notifications to remote Linux instances
> and receive confirmation before a page can be freed.
>
> So we handle this like an additional Linux reverse map that is walked after
> the existing rmaps have been walked. We leave the walking to the driver
> that is then able to use something else than a spinlock to walk its reverse
> maps. So we can actually call the driver without holding spinlocks while we
> hold the Pagelock.

I don't know how this is supposed to solve anything. The sleeping
problem happens I guess mostly in truncate. And all you are doing
is putting these rmap callbacks in page_mkclean and try_to_unmap.


> However, we cannot determine the mm_struct that a page belongs to at
> that point. The mm_struct can only be determined from the rmaps by the
> device driver.
>
> We add another pageflag (PageExternalRmap) that is set if a page has
> been remotely mapped (f.e. by a process from another Linux instance).
> We can then only perform the callbacks for pages that are actually in
> remote use.
>
> Rmap notifiers need an extra page bit and are only available
> on 64 bit platforms. This functionality is not available on 32 bit!
>
> A notifier that uses the reverse maps callbacks does not need to provide
> the invalidate_page() method that is called when locks are held.

That doesn't seem right. To start with, the new callbacks aren't
even called in the places where invalidate_page isn't allowed to
sleep.

The problem is unmap_mapping_range, right? And unmap_mapping_range
must walk the rmaps with the mmap lock held, which is why it can't
sleep. And it can't hold any mmap_sem so it cannot prevent address
space modifications of the processes in question between the time
you unmap them from the linux ptes with unmap_mapping_range, and the
time that you unmap them from your driver.

So in the meantime, you could have eg. a fault come in and set up a
new page for one of the processes, and that page might even get
exported via the same external driver. And now you have a totally
inconsistent view.

Preventing new mappings from being set up until the old mapping is
completely flushed is basically what we need to ensure for any sane
TLB as far as I can tell. To do that, you'll need to make the mmap
lock sleep, and either take mmap_sem inside it (which is a
deadlock condition at the moment), or make ptl sleep as well. These
are simply the locks we use to prevent that from happening, so I
can't see how you can possibly hope to have a coherent TLB without
invalidating inside those locks.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-19 23:08   ` Nick Piggin
@ 2008-02-20  1:00     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-20  3:00       ` Robin Holt
  2008-02-27 22:39       ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-27 22:35     ` Christoph Lameter
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-20  1:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 10:08:49AM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> You can't sleep inside rcu_read_lock()!
> 
> I must say that for a patch that is up to v8 or whatever and is
> posted twice a week to such a big cc list, it is kind of slack to
> not even test it and expect other people to review it.

Well, xpmem requirements are complex. As as side effect of the
simplicity of my approach, my patch is 100% safe since #v1. Now it
also works for GRU and it cluster invalidates.

> Also, what we are going to need here are not skeleton drivers
> that just do all the *easy* bits (of registering their callbacks),
> but actual fully working examples that do everything that any
> real driver will need to do. If not for the sanity of the driver

I've a fully working scenario for my patch, infact I didn't post the
mmu notifier patch until I got KVM to swap 100% reliably to be sure I
would post something that works well. mmu notifiers are already used
in KVM for:

1) 100% reliable and efficient swapping of guest physical memory
2) copy-on-writes of writeprotect faults after ksm page sharing of guest
   physical memory
3) ballooning using madvise to give the guest memory back to the host

My implementation is the most handy because it requires zero changes
to the ksm code too (no explicit mmu notifier calls after
ptep_clear_flush) and it's also 100% safe (no mess with schedules over
rcu_read_lock), no "atomic" parameters, and it doesn't open a window
where sptes have a view on older pages and linux pte has view on newer
pages (this can happen with remap_file_pages with my KVM swapping
patch to use V8 Christoph's patch).

> Also, how to you resolve the case where you are not allowed to sleep?
> I would have thought either you have to handle it, in which case nobody
> needs to sleep; or you can't handle it, in which case the code is
> broken.

I also asked exactly this, glad you reasked this too.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-20  1:00     ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-20  3:00       ` Robin Holt
  2008-02-20  3:11         ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-27 22:39       ` Christoph Lameter
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-02-20  3:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, Christoph Lameter, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity,
	Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise,
	Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm,
	daniel.blueman

On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 02:00:38AM +0100, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 10:08:49AM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > You can't sleep inside rcu_read_lock()!
> > 
> > I must say that for a patch that is up to v8 or whatever and is
> > posted twice a week to such a big cc list, it is kind of slack to
> > not even test it and expect other people to review it.
> 
> Well, xpmem requirements are complex. As as side effect of the
> simplicity of my approach, my patch is 100% safe since #v1. Now it
> also works for GRU and it cluster invalidates.
> 
> > Also, what we are going to need here are not skeleton drivers
> > that just do all the *easy* bits (of registering their callbacks),
> > but actual fully working examples that do everything that any
> > real driver will need to do. If not for the sanity of the driver
> 
> I've a fully working scenario for my patch, infact I didn't post the
> mmu notifier patch until I got KVM to swap 100% reliably to be sure I
> would post something that works well. mmu notifiers are already used
> in KVM for:
> 
> 1) 100% reliable and efficient swapping of guest physical memory
> 2) copy-on-writes of writeprotect faults after ksm page sharing of guest
>    physical memory
> 3) ballooning using madvise to give the guest memory back to the host
> 
> My implementation is the most handy because it requires zero changes
> to the ksm code too (no explicit mmu notifier calls after
> ptep_clear_flush) and it's also 100% safe (no mess with schedules over
> rcu_read_lock), no "atomic" parameters, and it doesn't open a window
> where sptes have a view on older pages and linux pte has view on newer
> pages (this can happen with remap_file_pages with my KVM swapping
> patch to use V8 Christoph's patch).
> 
> > Also, how to you resolve the case where you are not allowed to sleep?
> > I would have thought either you have to handle it, in which case nobody
> > needs to sleep; or you can't handle it, in which case the code is
> > broken.
> 
> I also asked exactly this, glad you reasked this too.

Currently, we BUG_ON having a PFN in our tables and not being able
to sleep.  These are mappings which MPT has never supported in the past
and XPMEM was already not allowing page faults for VMAs which are not
anonymous so it should never happen.  If the file-backed operations can
ever get changed to allow for sleeping and a customer has a need for it,
we would need to change XPMEM to allow those types of faults to succeed.

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-20  3:00       ` Robin Holt
@ 2008-02-20  3:11         ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-20  3:19           ` Robin Holt
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-02-20  3:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Robin Holt
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Christoph Lameter, akpm, Avi Kivity,
	Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise,
	Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm,
	daniel.blueman

On Wednesday 20 February 2008 14:00, Robin Holt wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 02:00:38AM +0100, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> > On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 10:08:49AM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:

> > > Also, how to you resolve the case where you are not allowed to sleep?
> > > I would have thought either you have to handle it, in which case nobody
> > > needs to sleep; or you can't handle it, in which case the code is
> > > broken.
> >
> > I also asked exactly this, glad you reasked this too.
>
> Currently, we BUG_ON having a PFN in our tables and not being able
> to sleep.  These are mappings which MPT has never supported in the past
> and XPMEM was already not allowing page faults for VMAs which are not
> anonymous so it should never happen.  If the file-backed operations can
> ever get changed to allow for sleeping and a customer has a need for it,
> we would need to change XPMEM to allow those types of faults to succeed.

Do you really want to be able to swap, or are you just interested
in keeping track of unmaps / prot changes?


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-19 23:55   ` Nick Piggin
@ 2008-02-20  3:12     ` Robin Holt
  2008-02-20  3:51       ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-27 22:43     ` Christoph Lameter
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-02-20  3:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt,
	Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general,
	Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 10:55:20AM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> On Friday 15 February 2008 17:49, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > These special additional callbacks are required because XPmem (and likely
> > other mechanisms) do use their own rmap (multiple processes on a series
> > of remote Linux instances may be accessing the memory of a process).
> > F.e. XPmem may have to send out notifications to remote Linux instances
> > and receive confirmation before a page can be freed.
> >
> > So we handle this like an additional Linux reverse map that is walked after
> > the existing rmaps have been walked. We leave the walking to the driver
> > that is then able to use something else than a spinlock to walk its reverse
> > maps. So we can actually call the driver without holding spinlocks while we
> > hold the Pagelock.
> 
> I don't know how this is supposed to solve anything. The sleeping
> problem happens I guess mostly in truncate. And all you are doing
> is putting these rmap callbacks in page_mkclean and try_to_unmap.
> 
> 
> > However, we cannot determine the mm_struct that a page belongs to at
> > that point. The mm_struct can only be determined from the rmaps by the
> > device driver.
> >
> > We add another pageflag (PageExternalRmap) that is set if a page has
> > been remotely mapped (f.e. by a process from another Linux instance).
> > We can then only perform the callbacks for pages that are actually in
> > remote use.
> >
> > Rmap notifiers need an extra page bit and are only available
> > on 64 bit platforms. This functionality is not available on 32 bit!
> >
> > A notifier that uses the reverse maps callbacks does not need to provide
> > the invalidate_page() method that is called when locks are held.
> 
> That doesn't seem right. To start with, the new callbacks aren't
> even called in the places where invalidate_page isn't allowed to
> sleep.
> 
> The problem is unmap_mapping_range, right? And unmap_mapping_range
> must walk the rmaps with the mmap lock held, which is why it can't
> sleep. And it can't hold any mmap_sem so it cannot prevent address
> space modifications of the processes in question between the time
> you unmap them from the linux ptes with unmap_mapping_range, and the
> time that you unmap them from your driver.
> 
> So in the meantime, you could have eg. a fault come in and set up a
> new page for one of the processes, and that page might even get
> exported via the same external driver. And now you have a totally
> inconsistent view.
> 
> Preventing new mappings from being set up until the old mapping is
> completely flushed is basically what we need to ensure for any sane
> TLB as far as I can tell. To do that, you'll need to make the mmap
> lock sleep, and either take mmap_sem inside it (which is a
> deadlock condition at the moment), or make ptl sleep as well. These
> are simply the locks we use to prevent that from happening, so I
> can't see how you can possibly hope to have a coherent TLB without
> invalidating inside those locks.

All of that is correct.  For XPMEM, we do not currently allow file backed
mapping pages from being exported so we should never reach this condition.
It has been an issue since day 1.  We have operated with that assumption
for 6 years and have not had issues with that assumption.  The user of
xpmem is MPT and it controls the communication buffers so it is reasonable
to expect this type of behavior.

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-20  3:11         ` Nick Piggin
@ 2008-02-20  3:19           ` Robin Holt
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-02-20  3:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: Robin Holt, Andrea Arcangeli, Christoph Lameter, akpm,
	Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general,
	Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 02:11:41PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> On Wednesday 20 February 2008 14:00, Robin Holt wrote:
> > On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 02:00:38AM +0100, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> > > On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 10:08:49AM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> 
> > > > Also, how to you resolve the case where you are not allowed to sleep?
> > > > I would have thought either you have to handle it, in which case nobody
> > > > needs to sleep; or you can't handle it, in which case the code is
> > > > broken.
> > >
> > > I also asked exactly this, glad you reasked this too.
> >
> > Currently, we BUG_ON having a PFN in our tables and not being able
> > to sleep.  These are mappings which MPT has never supported in the past
> > and XPMEM was already not allowing page faults for VMAs which are not
> > anonymous so it should never happen.  If the file-backed operations can
> > ever get changed to allow for sleeping and a customer has a need for it,
> > we would need to change XPMEM to allow those types of faults to succeed.
> 
> Do you really want to be able to swap, or are you just interested
> in keeping track of unmaps / prot changes?

I would rather not swap, but we do have one customer that would like
swapout to work for certain circumstances.  Additionally, we have
many customers that would rather that their system not die under I/O
termination.

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-20  3:12     ` Robin Holt
@ 2008-02-20  3:51       ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-20  9:00         ` Robin Holt
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-02-20  3:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Robin Holt
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Avi Kivity,
	Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise,
	Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm,
	daniel.blueman

On Wednesday 20 February 2008 14:12, Robin Holt wrote:
> For XPMEM, we do not currently allow file backed
> mapping pages from being exported so we should never reach this condition.
> It has been an issue since day 1.  We have operated with that assumption
> for 6 years and have not had issues with that assumption.  The user of
> xpmem is MPT and it controls the communication buffers so it is reasonable
> to expect this type of behavior.

OK, that makes things simpler.

So why can't you export a device from your xpmem driver, which
can be mmap()ed to give out "anonymous" memory pages to be used
for these communication buffers?

I guess you may also want an "munmap/mprotect" callback, which
we don't have in the kernel right now... but at least you could
prototype it easily by having an ioctl to be called before
munmapping or mprotecting (eg. the ioctl could prevent new TLB
setup for the region, and shoot down existing ones).

This is actually going to be much faster for you if you use any
threaded applications, because you will be able to do all the
shootdown round trips outside mmap_sem, and so you will be able
to have other threads faulting and even mmap()ing / munmaping
at the same time as the shootdown is happening.

I guess there is some catch...


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-20  3:51       ` Nick Piggin
@ 2008-02-20  9:00         ` Robin Holt
  2008-02-20  9:05           ` Robin Holt
  2008-02-21  4:20           ` Nick Piggin
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-02-20  9:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: Robin Holt, Christoph Lameter, akpm, Andrea Arcangeli,
	Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general,
	Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 02:51:45PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> On Wednesday 20 February 2008 14:12, Robin Holt wrote:
> > For XPMEM, we do not currently allow file backed
> > mapping pages from being exported so we should never reach this condition.
> > It has been an issue since day 1.  We have operated with that assumption
> > for 6 years and have not had issues with that assumption.  The user of
> > xpmem is MPT and it controls the communication buffers so it is reasonable
> > to expect this type of behavior.
> 
> OK, that makes things simpler.
> 
> So why can't you export a device from your xpmem driver, which
> can be mmap()ed to give out "anonymous" memory pages to be used
> for these communication buffers?

Because we need to have heap and stack available as well.  MPT does
not control all the communication buffer areas.  I haven't checked, but
this is the same problem that IB will have.  I believe they are actually
allowing any memory region be accessible, but I am not sure of that.

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-20  9:00         ` Robin Holt
@ 2008-02-20  9:05           ` Robin Holt
  2008-02-21  4:20           ` Nick Piggin
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-02-20  9:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: Robin Holt, Christoph Lameter, akpm, Andrea Arcangeli,
	Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general,
	Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 03:00:36AM -0600, Robin Holt wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 02:51:45PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > On Wednesday 20 February 2008 14:12, Robin Holt wrote:
> > > For XPMEM, we do not currently allow file backed
> > > mapping pages from being exported so we should never reach this condition.
> > > It has been an issue since day 1.  We have operated with that assumption
> > > for 6 years and have not had issues with that assumption.  The user of
> > > xpmem is MPT and it controls the communication buffers so it is reasonable
> > > to expect this type of behavior.
> > 
> > OK, that makes things simpler.
> > 
> > So why can't you export a device from your xpmem driver, which
> > can be mmap()ed to give out "anonymous" memory pages to be used
> > for these communication buffers?
> 
> Because we need to have heap and stack available as well.  MPT does
> not control all the communication buffer areas.  I haven't checked, but
> this is the same problem that IB will have.  I believe they are actually
> allowing any memory region be accessible, but I am not sure of that.

I should have read my work email first.  I had gotten an email from
one of our MPT developers saying they would love it if they could share
file backed memory areas as well as it would help them with their MPI-IO
functions which currently need to do multiple copy steps.  Not sure how
high of a priority I am going to be able to make that.


Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-20  9:00         ` Robin Holt
  2008-02-20  9:05           ` Robin Holt
@ 2008-02-21  4:20           ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-21 10:58             ` Robin Holt
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-02-21  4:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Robin Holt
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Avi Kivity,
	Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise,
	Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm,
	daniel.blueman

On Wednesday 20 February 2008 20:00, Robin Holt wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 02:51:45PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > On Wednesday 20 February 2008 14:12, Robin Holt wrote:
> > > For XPMEM, we do not currently allow file backed
> > > mapping pages from being exported so we should never reach this
> > > condition. It has been an issue since day 1.  We have operated with
> > > that assumption for 6 years and have not had issues with that
> > > assumption.  The user of xpmem is MPT and it controls the communication
> > > buffers so it is reasonable to expect this type of behavior.
> >
> > OK, that makes things simpler.
> >
> > So why can't you export a device from your xpmem driver, which
> > can be mmap()ed to give out "anonymous" memory pages to be used
> > for these communication buffers?
>
> Because we need to have heap and stack available as well.  MPT does
> not control all the communication buffer areas.  I haven't checked, but
> this is the same problem that IB will have.  I believe they are actually
> allowing any memory region be accessible, but I am not sure of that.

Then you should create a driver that the user program can register
and unregister regions of their memory with. The driver can do a
get_user_pages to get the pages, and then you'd just need to set up
some kind of mapping so that userspace can unmap pages / won't leak
memory (and an exit_mm notifier I guess).

Because you don't need to swap, you don't need coherency, and you
are in control of the areas, then this seems like the best choice.
It would allow you to use heap, stack, file-backed, anything.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-21  4:20           ` Nick Piggin
@ 2008-02-21 10:58             ` Robin Holt
  2008-02-26  6:11               ` Nick Piggin
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-02-21 10:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: Robin Holt, Christoph Lameter, akpm, Andrea Arcangeli,
	Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general,
	Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Thu, Feb 21, 2008 at 03:20:02PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > > So why can't you export a device from your xpmem driver, which
> > > can be mmap()ed to give out "anonymous" memory pages to be used
> > > for these communication buffers?
> >
> > Because we need to have heap and stack available as well.  MPT does
> > not control all the communication buffer areas.  I haven't checked, but
> > this is the same problem that IB will have.  I believe they are actually
> > allowing any memory region be accessible, but I am not sure of that.
> 
> Then you should create a driver that the user program can register
> and unregister regions of their memory with. The driver can do a
> get_user_pages to get the pages, and then you'd just need to set up
> some kind of mapping so that userspace can unmap pages / won't leak
> memory (and an exit_mm notifier I guess).

OK.  You need to explain this better to me.  How would this driver
supposedly work?  What we have is an MPI library.  It gets invoked at
process load time to establish its rank-to-rank communication regions.
It then turns control over to the processes main().  That is allowed to
run until it hits the
	MPI_Init(&argc, &argv);

The process is then totally under the users control until:
	MPI_Send(intmessage, m_size, MPI_INT, my_rank+half, tag, MPI_COMM_WORLD);
	MPI_Recv(intmessage, m_size, MPI_INT, my_rank+half,tag, MPI_COMM_WORLD, &status);

That is it.  That is all our allowed interaction with the users process.
Are you saying at the time of the MPI_Send, we should:

	down_write(&current->mm->mmap_sem);
	Find all the VMAs that describe this region and record their
vm_ops structure.
	Find all currently inserted page table information.
	Create new VMAs that describe the same regions as before.
	Insert our special fault handler which merely calls their old
fault handler and then exports the page then returns the page to the
kernel.
	Take an extra reference count on the page for each possible
remote rank we are exporting this to.


That doesn't seem too unreasonable, except when you compare it to how the
driver currently works.  Remember, this is done from a library which has
no insight into what the user has done to its own virtual address space.
As a result, each MPI_Send() would result in a system call (or we would
need to have a set of callouts for changes to a processes VMAs) which
would be a significant increase in communication overhead.

Maybe I am missing what you intend to do, but what we need is a means of
tracking one processes virtual address space changes so other processes
can do direct memory accesses without the need for a system call on each
communication event.

> Because you don't need to swap, you don't need coherency, and you
> are in control of the areas, then this seems like the best choice.
> It would allow you to use heap, stack, file-backed, anything.

You are missing one point here.  The MPI specifications that have
been out there for decades do not require the process use a library
for allocating the buffer.  I realize that is a horrible shortcoming,
but that is the world we live in.  Even if we could change that spec,
we would still need to support the existing specs.  As a result, the
user can change their virtual address space as they need and still expect
communications be cheap.

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-21 10:58             ` Robin Holt
@ 2008-02-26  6:11               ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-26  7:21                 ` [ofa-general] " Gleb Natapov
  2008-02-26 12:29                 ` Robin Holt
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-02-26  6:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Robin Holt
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Avi Kivity,
	Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise,
	Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm,
	daniel.blueman

On Thursday 21 February 2008 21:58, Robin Holt wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 21, 2008 at 03:20:02PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > > > So why can't you export a device from your xpmem driver, which
> > > > can be mmap()ed to give out "anonymous" memory pages to be used
> > > > for these communication buffers?
> > >
> > > Because we need to have heap and stack available as well.  MPT does
> > > not control all the communication buffer areas.  I haven't checked, but
> > > this is the same problem that IB will have.  I believe they are
> > > actually allowing any memory region be accessible, but I am not sure of
> > > that.
> >
> > Then you should create a driver that the user program can register
> > and unregister regions of their memory with. The driver can do a
> > get_user_pages to get the pages, and then you'd just need to set up
> > some kind of mapping so that userspace can unmap pages / won't leak
> > memory (and an exit_mm notifier I guess).
>
> OK.  You need to explain this better to me.  How would this driver
> supposedly work?  What we have is an MPI library.  It gets invoked at
> process load time to establish its rank-to-rank communication regions.
> It then turns control over to the processes main().  That is allowed to
> run until it hits the
> 	MPI_Init(&argc, &argv);
>
> The process is then totally under the users control until:
> 	MPI_Send(intmessage, m_size, MPI_INT, my_rank+half, tag, MPI_COMM_WORLD);
> 	MPI_Recv(intmessage, m_size, MPI_INT, my_rank+half,tag, MPI_COMM_WORLD,
> &status);
>
> That is it.  That is all our allowed interaction with the users process.

OK, when you said something along the lines of "the MPT library has
control of the comm buffer", then I assumed it was an area of virtual
memory which is set up as part of initialization, rather than during
runtime. I guess I jumped to conclusions.


> That doesn't seem too unreasonable, except when you compare it to how the
> driver currently works.  Remember, this is done from a library which has
> no insight into what the user has done to its own virtual address space.
> As a result, each MPI_Send() would result in a system call (or we would
> need to have a set of callouts for changes to a processes VMAs) which
> would be a significant increase in communication overhead.
>
> Maybe I am missing what you intend to do, but what we need is a means of
> tracking one processes virtual address space changes so other processes
> can do direct memory accesses without the need for a system call on each
> communication event.

Yeah it's tricky. BTW. what is the performance difference between
having a system call or no?


> > Because you don't need to swap, you don't need coherency, and you
> > are in control of the areas, then this seems like the best choice.
> > It would allow you to use heap, stack, file-backed, anything.
>
> You are missing one point here.  The MPI specifications that have
> been out there for decades do not require the process use a library
> for allocating the buffer.  I realize that is a horrible shortcoming,
> but that is the world we live in.  Even if we could change that spec,

Can you change the spec? Are you working on it?


> we would still need to support the existing specs.  As a result, the
> user can change their virtual address space as they need and still expect
> communications be cheap.

That's true. How has it been supported up to now? Are you using
these kind of notifiers in patched kernels?


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [ofa-general] Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-26  6:11               ` Nick Piggin
@ 2008-02-26  7:21                 ` Gleb Natapov
  2008-02-26  8:52                   ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-26 12:29                 ` Robin Holt
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Gleb Natapov @ 2008-02-26  7:21 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: Robin Holt, steiner, Andrea Arcangeli, Peter Zijlstra, linux-mm,
	Izik Eidus, Kanoj Sarcar, Roland Dreier, linux-kernel,
	Avi Kivity, kvm-devel, daniel.blueman, general, akpm,
	Christoph Lameter

On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 05:11:32PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > You are missing one point here.  The MPI specifications that have
> > been out there for decades do not require the process use a library
> > for allocating the buffer.  I realize that is a horrible shortcoming,
> > but that is the world we live in.  Even if we could change that spec,
> 
> Can you change the spec?
Not really. It will break all existing codes. MPI-2 provides a call for
memory allocation (and it's beneficial to use this call for some interconnects),
but many (most?) applications are still written for MPI-1 and those that
are written for MPI-2 mostly uses the old habit of allocating memory by malloc(),
or even use stack or BSS memory for communication buffer purposes.

--
			Gleb.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [ofa-general] Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-26  7:21                 ` [ofa-general] " Gleb Natapov
@ 2008-02-26  8:52                   ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-26  9:38                     ` Gleb Natapov
  2008-02-26 12:28                     ` Robin Holt
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-02-26  8:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Gleb Natapov
  Cc: Robin Holt, steiner, Andrea Arcangeli, Peter Zijlstra, linux-mm,
	Izik Eidus, Kanoj Sarcar, Roland Dreier, linux-kernel,
	Avi Kivity, kvm-devel, daniel.blueman, general, akpm,
	Christoph Lameter

On Tuesday 26 February 2008 18:21, Gleb Natapov wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 05:11:32PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > > You are missing one point here.  The MPI specifications that have
> > > been out there for decades do not require the process use a library
> > > for allocating the buffer.  I realize that is a horrible shortcoming,
> > > but that is the world we live in.  Even if we could change that spec,
> >
> > Can you change the spec?
>
> Not really. It will break all existing codes.

I meant as in eg. submit changes to MPI-3


> MPI-2 provides a call for 
> memory allocation (and it's beneficial to use this call for some
> interconnects), but many (most?) applications are still written for MPI-1
> and those that are written for MPI-2 mostly uses the old habit of
> allocating memory by malloc(), or even use stack or BSS memory for
> communication buffer purposes.

OK, so MPI-2 already has some way to do that... I'm not saying that we
can now completely dismiss the idea of using notifiers for this, but it
is just a good data point to know.

Thanks,
Nick


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [ofa-general] Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-26  8:52                   ` Nick Piggin
@ 2008-02-26  9:38                     ` Gleb Natapov
  2008-02-26  9:52                       ` KOSAKI Motohiro
  2008-02-26 12:28                     ` Robin Holt
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Gleb Natapov @ 2008-02-26  9:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: Robin Holt, steiner, Andrea Arcangeli, Peter Zijlstra, linux-mm,
	Izik Eidus, Kanoj Sarcar, Roland Dreier, linux-kernel,
	Avi Kivity, kvm-devel, daniel.blueman, general, akpm,
	Christoph Lameter

On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 07:52:41PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> On Tuesday 26 February 2008 18:21, Gleb Natapov wrote:
> > On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 05:11:32PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > > > You are missing one point here.  The MPI specifications that have
> > > > been out there for decades do not require the process use a library
> > > > for allocating the buffer.  I realize that is a horrible shortcoming,
> > > > but that is the world we live in.  Even if we could change that spec,
> > >
> > > Can you change the spec?
> >
> > Not really. It will break all existing codes.
> 
> I meant as in eg. submit changes to MPI-3
MPI spec tries to be backward compatible. And MPI-2 spec is 10 years
old, but MPI-1 is still in a wider use. HPC is moving fast in terms of HW
technology, but slow in terms of SW. Fortran is still hot there :)

--
			Gleb.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [ofa-general] Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-26  9:38                     ` Gleb Natapov
@ 2008-02-26  9:52                       ` KOSAKI Motohiro
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: KOSAKI Motohiro @ 2008-02-26  9:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Gleb Natapov
  Cc: kosaki.motohiro, Nick Piggin, Robin Holt, steiner,
	Andrea Arcangeli, Peter Zijlstra, linux-mm, Izik Eidus,
	Kanoj Sarcar, Roland Dreier, linux-kernel, Avi Kivity, kvm-devel,
	daniel.blueman, general, akpm, Christoph Lameter

> > > > Can you change the spec?
> > >
> > > Not really. It will break all existing codes.
> > 
> > I meant as in eg. submit changes to MPI-3
>
> MPI spec tries to be backward compatible. And MPI-2 spec is 10 years
> old, but MPI-1 is still in a wider use. HPC is moving fast in terms of HW
> technology, but slow in terms of SW. Fortran is still hot there :)

Agreed.
many many people dislike incompatible specification change.

We should accept real world spec.


- kosaki



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [ofa-general] Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-26  8:52                   ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-26  9:38                     ` Gleb Natapov
@ 2008-02-26 12:28                     ` Robin Holt
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-02-26 12:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: Gleb Natapov, Robin Holt, steiner, Andrea Arcangeli,
	Peter Zijlstra, linux-mm, Izik Eidus, Kanoj Sarcar,
	Roland Dreier, linux-kernel, Avi Kivity, kvm-devel,
	daniel.blueman, general, akpm, Christoph Lameter

On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 07:52:41PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> On Tuesday 26 February 2008 18:21, Gleb Natapov wrote:
> > On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 05:11:32PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > > > You are missing one point here.  The MPI specifications that have
> > > > been out there for decades do not require the process use a library
> > > > for allocating the buffer.  I realize that is a horrible shortcoming,
> > > > but that is the world we live in.  Even if we could change that spec,
> > >
> > > Can you change the spec?
> >
> > Not really. It will break all existing codes.
> 
> I meant as in eg. submit changes to MPI-3
> 
> 
> > MPI-2 provides a call for 
> > memory allocation (and it's beneficial to use this call for some
> > interconnects), but many (most?) applications are still written for MPI-1
> > and those that are written for MPI-2 mostly uses the old habit of
> > allocating memory by malloc(), or even use stack or BSS memory for
> > communication buffer purposes.
> 
> OK, so MPI-2 already has some way to do that... I'm not saying that we
> can now completely dismiss the idea of using notifiers for this, but it
> is just a good data point to know.

It is in MPI-2, but MPI-2 does not prohibit communication from regions
not allocated by the MPI call.

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-26  6:11               ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-26  7:21                 ` [ofa-general] " Gleb Natapov
@ 2008-02-26 12:29                 ` Robin Holt
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-02-26 12:29 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: Robin Holt, Christoph Lameter, akpm, Andrea Arcangeli,
	Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general,
	Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman

> > That is it.  That is all our allowed interaction with the users process.
> 
> OK, when you said something along the lines of "the MPT library has
> control of the comm buffer", then I assumed it was an area of virtual
> memory which is set up as part of initialization, rather than during
> runtime. I guess I jumped to conclusions.

There are six regions the MPT library typically makes.  The most basic
one is a fixed size.  It describes the MPT internal buffers, the stack,
the heap, the application text, and finally the entire address space.
That last region is seldom used.  MPT only has control over the first
two.

> > That doesn't seem too unreasonable, except when you compare it to how the
> > driver currently works.  Remember, this is done from a library which has
> > no insight into what the user has done to its own virtual address space.
> > As a result, each MPI_Send() would result in a system call (or we would
> > need to have a set of callouts for changes to a processes VMAs) which
> > would be a significant increase in communication overhead.
> >
> > Maybe I am missing what you intend to do, but what we need is a means of
> > tracking one processes virtual address space changes so other processes
> > can do direct memory accesses without the need for a system call on each
> > communication event.
> 
> Yeah it's tricky. BTW. what is the performance difference between
> having a system call or no?

The system call takes many microseconds and still requires the same
latency of the communication.  Without it, our latency is
usually below two microseconds.

> > > Because you don't need to swap, you don't need coherency, and you
> > > are in control of the areas, then this seems like the best choice.
> > > It would allow you to use heap, stack, file-backed, anything.
> >
> > You are missing one point here.  The MPI specifications that have
> > been out there for decades do not require the process use a library
> > for allocating the buffer.  I realize that is a horrible shortcoming,
> > but that is the world we live in.  Even if we could change that spec,
> 
> Can you change the spec? Are you working on it?

Even if we changed the spec, the old specs will continue to be
supported.  I personally am not involved.  Not sure if anybody else is
working this issue.

> > we would still need to support the existing specs.  As a result, the
> > user can change their virtual address space as they need and still expect
> > communications be cheap.
> 
> That's true. How has it been supported up to now? Are you using
> these kind of notifiers in patched kernels?

At fault time, we check to see if it is an anon or mspec vma.  We pin
the page an insert them.  The remote OS then losses synchronicity with
the owning processes page tables.  If an unmap, madvise, etc occurs the
page tables are updated without regard to our references.  Fork or exit
(fork is caught using an LD_PRELOAD library) cause the user pages to be
recalled from the remote side and put_page returns them to the kernel.
We have documented that this loss of synchronicity is due to their
action and not supported.  Essentially, we rely upon the application
being well behaved.  To this point, that has remainded true.

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-19 13:34     ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-27 22:23       ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-27 23:57         ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-27 22:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Tue, 19 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> Yes, that's why I kept maintaining my patch and I posted the last
> revision to Andrew. I use pte/tlb locking of the core VM, it's
> unintrusive and obviously safe. Furthermore it can be extended with
> Christoph's stuff in a 100% backwards compatible fashion later if needed.

How would that work? You rely on the pte locking. Thus calls are all in an 
atomic context. I think we need a general scheme that allows sleeping when 
references are invalidates. Even the GRU has performance issues when using 
the KVM patch.


 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-19 23:08   ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-20  1:00     ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-27 22:35     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-27 22:42       ` Jack Steiner
                         ` (3 more replies)
  1 sibling, 4 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-27 22:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, 20 Feb 2008, Nick Piggin wrote:

> On Friday 15 February 2008 17:49, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > The invalidation of address ranges in a mm_struct needs to be
> > performed when pages are removed or permissions etc change.
> >
> > If invalidate_range_begin() is called with locks held then we
> > pass a flag into invalidate_range() to indicate that no sleeping is
> > possible. Locks are only held for truncate and huge pages.
> 
> You can't sleep inside rcu_read_lock()!

Could you be specific? This refers to page migration? Hmmm... Guess we 
would need to inc the refcount there instead?

> I must say that for a patch that is up to v8 or whatever and is
> posted twice a week to such a big cc list, it is kind of slack to
> not even test it and expect other people to review it.

It was tested with the GRU and XPmem. Andrea also reported success.
 
> Also, what we are going to need here are not skeleton drivers
> that just do all the *easy* bits (of registering their callbacks),
> but actual fully working examples that do everything that any
> real driver will need to do. If not for the sanity of the driver
> writer, then for the sanity of the VM developers (I don't want
> to have to understand xpmem or infiniband in order to understand
> how the VM works).

There are 3 different drivers that can already use it but the code is 
complex and not easy to review. Skeletons are easy to allow people to get 
started with it.

> >  	lru_add_drain();
> >  	tlb = tlb_gather_mmu(mm, 0);
> >  	update_hiwater_rss(mm);
> > +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, address, end, atomic);
> >  	end = unmap_vmas(&tlb, vma, address, end, &nr_accounted, details);
> >  	if (tlb)
> >  		tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, address, end);
> > +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, address, end, atomic);
> >  	return end;
> >  }
> >
> 
> Where do you invalidate for munmap()?

zap_page_range() called from unmap_vmas().

> Also, how to you resolve the case where you are not allowed to sleep?
> I would have thought either you have to handle it, in which case nobody
> needs to sleep; or you can't handle it, in which case the code is
> broken.

That can be done in a variety of ways:

1. Change VM locking

2. Not handle file backed mappings (XPmem could work mostly in such a 
config)

3. Keep the refcount elevated until pages are freed in another execution 
context.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-20  1:00     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-20  3:00       ` Robin Holt
@ 2008-02-27 22:39       ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-28  0:38         ` Andrea Arcangeli
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-27 22:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, 20 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> Well, xpmem requirements are complex. As as side effect of the
> simplicity of my approach, my patch is 100% safe since #v1. Now it
> also works for GRU and it cluster invalidates.

The patch has to satisfy RDMA, XPMEM, GRU and KVM. I keep hearing that we 
have a KVM only solution that works 100% (which makes me just switch 
ignore the rest of the argument because 100% solutions usually do not 
exist).


> rcu_read_lock), no "atomic" parameters, and it doesn't open a window
> where sptes have a view on older pages and linux pte has view on newer
> pages (this can happen with remap_file_pages with my KVM swapping
> patch to use V8 Christoph's patch).

Ok so you are now getting away from keeping the refcount elevated? That 
was your design decision....


> > Also, how to you resolve the case where you are not allowed to sleep?
> > I would have thought either you have to handle it, in which case nobody
> > needs to sleep; or you can't handle it, in which case the code is
> > broken.
> 
> I also asked exactly this, glad you reasked this too.

It would have helped if you would have repeated my answers that you had 
already gotten before. You knew I was on vacation....


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-27 22:35     ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-27 22:42       ` Jack Steiner
  2008-02-28  0:10       ` Christoph Lameter
                         ` (2 subsequent siblings)
  3 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Jack Steiner @ 2008-02-27 22:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity,
	Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise,
	Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, linux-kernel, linux-mm,
	daniel.blueman

>  
> > Also, what we are going to need here are not skeleton drivers
> > that just do all the *easy* bits (of registering their callbacks),
> > but actual fully working examples that do everything that any
> > real driver will need to do. If not for the sanity of the driver
> > writer, then for the sanity of the VM developers (I don't want
> > to have to understand xpmem or infiniband in order to understand
> > how the VM works).
> 
> There are 3 different drivers that can already use it but the code is 
> complex and not easy to review. Skeletons are easy to allow people to get 
> started with it.


I posted the full GRU driver late last week. It is a lot of
code & somewhat difficult to understand w/o access to full chip
specs (sorry). The code is fairly well commented &  the
parts related to TLB management should be understandable.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-19 23:55   ` Nick Piggin
  2008-02-20  3:12     ` Robin Holt
@ 2008-02-27 22:43     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-28  0:42       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-27 22:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, 20 Feb 2008, Nick Piggin wrote:

> I don't know how this is supposed to solve anything. The sleeping
> problem happens I guess mostly in truncate. And all you are doing
> is putting these rmap callbacks in page_mkclean and try_to_unmap.

truncate is handled by the range invalidates. This is special code to deal 
with the unnap/clean of an individual page.

> That doesn't seem right. To start with, the new callbacks aren't
> even called in the places where invalidate_page isn't allowed to
> sleep.
> 
> The problem is unmap_mapping_range, right? And unmap_mapping_range
> must walk the rmaps with the mmap lock held, which is why it can't
> sleep. And it can't hold any mmap_sem so it cannot prevent address

Nope. unmap_mapping_range is already handled by the range callbacks.

> So in the meantime, you could have eg. a fault come in and set up a
> new page for one of the processes, and that page might even get
> exported via the same external driver. And now you have a totally
> inconsistent view.

The situation that you are imagining has already been dealt with by the 
earlier patches. This is only to allow sleeping while unmapping individual 
pages.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-27 22:23       ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-27 23:57         ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-27 23:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 02:23:29PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> How would that work? You rely on the pte locking. Thus calls are all in an 

I don't rely on the pte locking in #v7, exactly to satisfy GRU
(so far purely theoretical) performance complains.

> atomic context. I think we need a general scheme that allows sleeping when 

Calls are still in atomic context until we change the i_mmap_lock to a
mutex under a CONFIG_XPMEM, or unless we boost mm_users, drop the lock
and restart the loop at every different mm. In any case those changes
should be under CONFIG_XPMEM IMHO given desktop users definitely don't
need this (regular non-blocking mmu notifiers in my patch are all what
a desktop user need as far as I can tell).

> references are invalidates. Even the GRU has performance issues when using 
> the KVM patch.

GRU will perform the same with #v7 or V8.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-27 22:35     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-27 22:42       ` Jack Steiner
@ 2008-02-28  0:10       ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-28  0:11       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-03-03  5:11       ` Nick Piggin
  3 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-28  0:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, 27 Feb 2008, Christoph Lameter wrote:

> Could you be specific? This refers to page migration? Hmmm... Guess we 
> would need to inc the refcount there instead?

Argh. No its the callback list scanning. Yuck. No one noticed.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-27 22:35     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-27 22:42       ` Jack Steiner
  2008-02-28  0:10       ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-28  0:11       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-28  0:14         ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-03-03  5:11       ` Nick Piggin
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-28  0:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 02:35:59PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> Could you be specific? This refers to page migration? Hmmm... Guess we 

If the reader schedule, the synchronize_rcu will return in the other
cpu and the objects in the list will be freed and overwritten, and
when the task is scheduled back in, it'll follow dangling pointers...
You can't use RCU if you want any of your invalidate methods to
schedule. Otherwise it's like having zero locking.

> 2. Not handle file backed mappings (XPmem could work mostly in such a 
> config)

IMHO that fits under your definition of "hacking something in now and
then having to modify it later".

> 3. Keep the refcount elevated until pages are freed in another execution 
> context.

Page refcount is not enough (the mmu_notifier_release will run in
another cpu the moment after i_mmap_lock is unlocked) but mm_users may
prevent us to change the i_mmap_lock to a mutex, but it'll slowdown
truncate as it'll have to drop the lock and restart the radix tree
walk every time so a change like this better fits as a separate
CONFIG_XPMEM IMHO.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-28  0:11       ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-28  0:14         ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-28  0:52           ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-28  0:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Thu, 28 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> > 3. Keep the refcount elevated until pages are freed in another execution 
> > context.
> 
> Page refcount is not enough (the mmu_notifier_release will run in
> another cpu the moment after i_mmap_lock is unlocked) but mm_users may
> prevent us to change the i_mmap_lock to a mutex, but it'll slowdown
> truncate as it'll have to drop the lock and restart the radix tree
> walk every time so a change like this better fits as a separate
> CONFIG_XPMEM IMHO.

Erm. This would also be needed by RDMA etc.

 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-27 22:39       ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-28  0:38         ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-28  0:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 02:39:46PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Wed, 20 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> 
> > Well, xpmem requirements are complex. As as side effect of the
> > simplicity of my approach, my patch is 100% safe since #v1. Now it
> > also works for GRU and it cluster invalidates.
> 
> The patch has to satisfy RDMA, XPMEM, GRU and KVM. I keep hearing that we 
> have a KVM only solution that works 100% (which makes me just switch 
> ignore the rest of the argument because 100% solutions usually do not 
> exist).

I only said 100% safe, I didn't imply anything other than it won't
crash the kernel ;).

#v6 and #v7 only leaves XPMEM out AFIK, and that can be supported
later with a CONFIG_XPMEM that purely changes some VM locking. #v7
also provides maximum performance to GRU.

> > rcu_read_lock), no "atomic" parameters, and it doesn't open a window
> > where sptes have a view on older pages and linux pte has view on newer
> > pages (this can happen with remap_file_pages with my KVM swapping
> > patch to use V8 Christoph's patch).
> 
> Ok so you are now getting away from keeping the refcount elevated? That 
> was your design decision....

No, I'm not getting away from it. If I would get away from it, I would
be forced to implement invalidate_range_begin. However even if I don't
get away from it, the fact I only implement invalidate_range_end, and
that's called after the PT lock is dropped, opens a little window with
lost coherency (which may not be detectable by userland anyway). But this
little window is fine for KVM and it doesn't impose any security
risk. But clearly proving the locking safe becomes a bit more complex
in #v7 than in #v6.

> It would have helped if you would have repeated my answers that you had 
> already gotten before. You knew I was on vacation....

I didn't remember the BUG_ON crystal clear sorry, but not sure why you
think it was your call, this was a lowlevel XPMEM question and Robin
promptly answered/reminded about it infact.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-27 22:43     ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-28  0:42       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-28  1:01         ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-28  0:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 02:43:41PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> Nope. unmap_mapping_range is already handled by the range callbacks.

But they're called with atomic=1 on anything but anonymous memory. I
understood Andrew asked to remove the atomic param and to allow
sleeping for all kind of vmas. I also understood certain XPMEM
customers asked to use XPMEM on something more than anonymous memory.

> The situation that you are imagining has already been dealt with [..]

I guess there's some misunderstanding, I think Nick was referring to
the above problem.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-28  0:14         ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-28  0:52           ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-28  1:03             ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-28 10:53             ` Robin Holt
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-28  0:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 04:14:08PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> Erm. This would also be needed by RDMA etc.

The only RDMA I know is Quadrics, and Quadrics apparently doesn't need
to schedule inside the invalidate methods AFIK, so I doubt the above
is true. It'd be interesting to know if IB is like Quadrics and it
also doesn't require blocking to invalidate certain remote mappings.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem)
  2008-02-28  0:42       ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-28  1:01         ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-28  1:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Thu, 28 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 02:43:41PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > Nope. unmap_mapping_range is already handled by the range callbacks.
> 
> But they're called with atomic=1 on anything but anonymous memory. I
> understood Andrew asked to remove the atomic param and to allow
> sleeping for all kind of vmas. I also understood certain XPMEM
> customers asked to use XPMEM on something more than anonymous memory.

Yes but the patch that is discussed here does not handle that situation.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-28  0:52           ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-28  1:03             ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-28  1:10               ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-28 10:53             ` Robin Holt
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-28  1:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Thu, 28 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 04:14:08PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > Erm. This would also be needed by RDMA etc.
> 
> The only RDMA I know is Quadrics, and Quadrics apparently doesn't need
> to schedule inside the invalidate methods AFIK, so I doubt the above
> is true. It'd be interesting to know if IB is like Quadrics and it
> also doesn't require blocking to invalidate certain remote mappings.

RDMA works across a network and I would assume that it needs confirmation 
that a connection has been torn down before pages can be unmapped.
 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-28  1:03             ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-28  1:10               ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-28 18:43                 ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-28  1:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 05:03:21PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> RDMA works across a network and I would assume that it needs confirmation 
> that a connection has been torn down before pages can be unmapped.

Depends on the latency of the network, for example with page pinning
it can even try to reduce the wait time, by tearing down the mapping
in range_begin and spin waiting the ack only later in range_end.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-28  0:52           ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-28  1:03             ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-28 10:53             ` Robin Holt
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-02-28 10:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity,
	Izik Eidus, kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise,
	Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm,
	daniel.blueman

On Thu, Feb 28, 2008 at 01:52:50AM +0100, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 04:14:08PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > Erm. This would also be needed by RDMA etc.
> 
> The only RDMA I know is Quadrics, and Quadrics apparently doesn't need
> to schedule inside the invalidate methods AFIK, so I doubt the above
> is true. It'd be interesting to know if IB is like Quadrics and it
> also doesn't require blocking to invalidate certain remote mappings.

We got an answer from the IB guys already.  They do not track which of
their handles are being used by remote processes so neither approach
will work for their purposes with the exception of straight unmaps.  In
that case, they could use the callout to remove TLB information and rely
on the lack of page table information to kill the users process.
Without changes to their library spec, I don't believe anything further
is possible.  If they did change their library spec, I believe they
could get things to work the same way that XPMEM has gotten things to
work, where a message is sent to the remote side for TLB clearing and
that will require sleeping.

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-28  1:10               ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-28 18:43                 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-29  0:55                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-28 18:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Thu, 28 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 05:03:21PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > RDMA works across a network and I would assume that it needs confirmation 
> > that a connection has been torn down before pages can be unmapped.
> 
> Depends on the latency of the network, for example with page pinning
> it can even try to reduce the wait time, by tearing down the mapping
> in range_begin and spin waiting the ack only later in range_end.

What about invalidate_page()?
 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-28 18:43                 ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-29  0:55                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-29  0:59                     ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-29  0:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Thu, Feb 28, 2008 at 10:43:54AM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> What about invalidate_page()?

That would just spin waiting an ack (just like the smp-tlb-flushing
invalidates in numa already does).

Thinking more about this, we could also parallelize it with an
invalidate_page_before/end. If it takes 1usec to flush remotely,
scheduling would be overkill, but spending 1usec in a while loop isn't
nice if we can parallelize that 1usec with the ipi-tlb-flush. Not sure
if it makes sense... it certainly would be quick to add it (especially
thanks to _notify ;).

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-29  0:55                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-29  0:59                     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-29 13:13                       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-29  0:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> On Thu, Feb 28, 2008 at 10:43:54AM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > What about invalidate_page()?
> 
> That would just spin waiting an ack (just like the smp-tlb-flushing
> invalidates in numa already does).

And thus the device driver may stop receiving data on a UP system? It will 
never get the ack.
 
> Thinking more about this, we could also parallelize it with an
> invalidate_page_before/end. If it takes 1usec to flush remotely,
> scheduling would be overkill, but spending 1usec in a while loop isn't
> nice if we can parallelize that 1usec with the ipi-tlb-flush. Not sure
> if it makes sense... it certainly would be quick to add it (especially
> thanks to _notify ;).

invalidate_page_before/end could be realized as an 
invalidate_range_begin/end on a page sized range?

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-29  0:59                     ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-29 13:13                       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-29 19:55                         ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-29 13:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Thu, Feb 28, 2008 at 04:59:59PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> And thus the device driver may stop receiving data on a UP system? It will 
> never get the ack.

Not sure to follow, sorry.

My idea was:

   post the invalidate in the mmio region of the device
   smp_call_function()
   while (mmio device wait-bitflag is on);

Instead of the current:

   smp_call_function()
   post the invalidate in the mmio region of the device
   while (mmio device wait-bitflag is on);

To decrease the wait loop time.

> invalidate_page_before/end could be realized as an 
> invalidate_range_begin/end on a page sized range?

If we go this route, once you add support to xpmem, you'll have to
make the anon_vma lock a mutex too, that would be fine with me
though. The main reason invalidate_page exists, is to allow you to
leave it as non-sleep-capable even after you make invalidate_range
sleep capable, and to implement the mmu_rmap_notifiers sleep capable
in all the paths that invalidate_page would be called. That was the
strategy you had in your patch. I'll try to drop invalidate_page. I
wonder if then you won't need the mmu_rmap_notifiers anymore.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-29 13:13                       ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-29 19:55                         ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-29 20:17                           ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-29 19:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> On Thu, Feb 28, 2008 at 04:59:59PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > And thus the device driver may stop receiving data on a UP system? It will 
> > never get the ack.
> 
> Not sure to follow, sorry.
> 
> My idea was:
> 
>    post the invalidate in the mmio region of the device
>    smp_call_function()
>    while (mmio device wait-bitflag is on);

So the device driver on UP can only operate through interrupts? If you are 
hogging the only cpu then driver operations may not be possible.

> > invalidate_page_before/end could be realized as an 
> > invalidate_range_begin/end on a page sized range?
> 
> If we go this route, once you add support to xpmem, you'll have to
> make the anon_vma lock a mutex too, that would be fine with me
> though. The main reason invalidate_page exists, is to allow you to
> leave it as non-sleep-capable even after you make invalidate_range
> sleep capable, and to implement the mmu_rmap_notifiers sleep capable
> in all the paths that invalidate_page would be called. That was the
> strategy you had in your patch. I'll try to drop invalidate_page. I
> wonder if then you won't need the mmu_rmap_notifiers anymore.

I am mainly concerned with making the mmu notifier a generally useful 
feature for multiple users. Xpmem is one example of a different user. It 
should be considered as one example of a different type of callback user. 
It is not the gold standard that you make it to be. RDMA is another and 
there are likely scores of others (DMA engines etc) once it becomes clear 
that such a feature is available. In general the mmu notifier will allows 
us to fix the problems caused by memory pinning and mlock by various 
devices and other mechanisms that need to directly access memory. 

And yes I would like to get rid of the mmu_rmap_notifiers altogether. It 
would be much cleaner with just one mmu_notifier that can sleep in all 
functions.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-29 19:55                         ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-29 20:17                           ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-29 21:03                             ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-29 20:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 11:55:17AM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> >    post the invalidate in the mmio region of the device
> >    smp_call_function()
> >    while (mmio device wait-bitflag is on);
> 
> So the device driver on UP can only operate through interrupts? If you are 
> hogging the only cpu then driver operations may not be possible.

There was no irq involved in the above pseudocode, the irq if
something would run in the remote system. Still irqs can run fine
during the while loop like they run fine on top of
smp_call_function. The send-irq and the following spin-on-a-bitflag
works exactly as smp_call_function except this isn't a numa-CPU to
invalidate.

> And yes I would like to get rid of the mmu_rmap_notifiers altogether. It 
> would be much cleaner with just one mmu_notifier that can sleep in all 
> functions.

Agreed. I just thought xpmem needed an invalidate-by-page, but
I'm glad if xpmem can go in sync with the KVM/GRU/DRI model in this
regard.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-29 20:17                           ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-29 21:03                             ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-29 21:23                               ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-29 21:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> Agreed. I just thought xpmem needed an invalidate-by-page, but
> I'm glad if xpmem can go in sync with the KVM/GRU/DRI model in this
> regard.

That means we need both the anon_vma locks and the i_mmap_lock to become 
semaphores. I think semaphores are better than mutexes. Rik and Lee saw 
some performance improvements because list can be traversed in parallel 
when the anon_vma lock is switched to be a rw lock.

Sounds like we get to a conceptually clean version here?


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-29 21:03                             ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-29 21:23                               ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-29 21:29                                 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-29 21:34                                 ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-29 21:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 01:03:16PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> That means we need both the anon_vma locks and the i_mmap_lock to become 
> semaphores. I think semaphores are better than mutexes. Rik and Lee saw 
> some performance improvements because list can be traversed in parallel 
> when the anon_vma lock is switched to be a rw lock.

The improvement was with a rw spinlock IIRC, so I don't see how it's
related to this.

Perhaps the rwlock spinlock can be changed to a rw semaphore without
measurable overscheduling in the fast path. However theoretically
speaking the rw_lock spinlock is more efficient than a rw semaphore in
case of a little contention during the page fault fast path because
the critical section is just a list_add so it'd be overkill to
schedule while waiting. That's why currently it's a spinlock (or rw
spinlock).

> Sounds like we get to a conceptually clean version here?

I don't have a strong opinion if it should become a semaphore
unconditionally or only with a CONFIG_XPMEM=y. But keep in mind
preempt-rt runs quite a bit slower, or we could rip spinlocks out of
the kernel in the first place ;)

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-29 21:23                               ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-29 21:29                                 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-29 21:34                                 ` Christoph Lameter
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-29 21:29 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> I don't have a strong opinion if it should become a semaphore
> unconditionally or only with a CONFIG_XPMEM=y. But keep in mind
> preempt-rt runs quite a bit slower, or we could rip spinlocks out of
> the kernel in the first place ;)

D you just skip comments of people on the mmu_notifier? It took me to 
remind you about Andrew's comments to note those. And I just responded on 
the XPmem issue in the morning.
 
Again for the gazillionth time: There will be no CONFIG_XPMEM because the 
functionality needs to be generic and not XPMEM specific.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-29 21:23                               ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-29 21:29                                 ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-29 21:34                                 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-29 21:48                                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-29 21:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 01:03:16PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > That means we need both the anon_vma locks and the i_mmap_lock to become 
> > semaphores. I think semaphores are better than mutexes. Rik and Lee saw 
> > some performance improvements because list can be traversed in parallel 
> > when the anon_vma lock is switched to be a rw lock.
> 
> The improvement was with a rw spinlock IIRC, so I don't see how it's
> related to this.

AFAICT The rw semaphore fastpath is similar in performance to a rw 
spinlock. 
 
> Perhaps the rwlock spinlock can be changed to a rw semaphore without
> measurable overscheduling in the fast path. However theoretically

Overscheduling? You mean overhead?

> speaking the rw_lock spinlock is more efficient than a rw semaphore in
> case of a little contention during the page fault fast path because
> the critical section is just a list_add so it'd be overkill to
> schedule while waiting. That's why currently it's a spinlock (or rw
> spinlock).

On the other hand a semaphore puts the process to sleep and may actually 
improve performance because there is less time spend in a busy loop. 
Other processes may do something useful and we stay off the contended 
cacheline reducing traffic on the interconnect.
 
> preempt-rt runs quite a bit slower, or we could rip spinlocks out of
> the kernel in the first place ;)

The question is why that is the case and it seesm that there are issues 
with interrupt on/off that are important here and particularly significant 
with the SLAB allocator (significant hacks there to deal with that issue). 
The fastpath that we have in the works for SLUB may address a large 
part of that issue because it no longer relies on disabling interrupts.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-29 21:34                                 ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-29 21:48                                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-02-29 22:12                                     ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-29 21:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 01:34:34PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> 
> > On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 01:03:16PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > > That means we need both the anon_vma locks and the i_mmap_lock to become 
> > > semaphores. I think semaphores are better than mutexes. Rik and Lee saw 
> > > some performance improvements because list can be traversed in parallel 
> > > when the anon_vma lock is switched to be a rw lock.
> > 
> > The improvement was with a rw spinlock IIRC, so I don't see how it's
> > related to this.
> 
> AFAICT The rw semaphore fastpath is similar in performance to a rw 
> spinlock. 

read side is taken in the slow path.

write side is taken in the fast path.

pagefault is fast path, VM during swapping is slow path.

> > Perhaps the rwlock spinlock can be changed to a rw semaphore without
> > measurable overscheduling in the fast path. However theoretically
> 
> Overscheduling? You mean overhead?

The only possible overhead that a rw semaphore could ever generate vs
a rw lock is overscheduling.

> > speaking the rw_lock spinlock is more efficient than a rw semaphore in
> > case of a little contention during the page fault fast path because
> > the critical section is just a list_add so it'd be overkill to
> > schedule while waiting. That's why currently it's a spinlock (or rw
> > spinlock).
> 
> On the other hand a semaphore puts the process to sleep and may actually 
> improve performance because there is less time spend in a busy loop. 
> Other processes may do something useful and we stay off the contended 
> cacheline reducing traffic on the interconnect.

Yes, that's the positive side, the negative side is that you'll put
the task in uninterruptible sleep and call schedule() and require a
wakeup, because a list_add taking <1usec is running in the
other cpu. No other downside. But that's the only reason it's a
spinlock right now, infact there can't be any other reason.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-29 21:48                                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-02-29 22:12                                     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-02-29 22:41                                       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-29 22:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> > AFAICT The rw semaphore fastpath is similar in performance to a rw 
> > spinlock. 
> 
> read side is taken in the slow path.

Slowpath meaning VM slowpath or lock slow path? Its seems that the rwsem 
read side path is pretty efficient:

static inline void __down_read(struct rw_semaphore *sem)
{
        __asm__ __volatile__(
                "# beginning down_read\n\t"
LOCK_PREFIX     "  incl      (%%eax)\n\t" /* adds 0x00000001, returns the old value */
                "  jns        1f\n"
                "  call call_rwsem_down_read_failed\n"
                "1:\n\t"
                "# ending down_read\n\t"
                : "+m" (sem->count)
                : "a" (sem)
                : "memory", "cc");
}



> 
> write side is taken in the fast path.
> 
> pagefault is fast path, VM during swapping is slow path.

Not sure what you are saying here. A pagefault should be considered as a 
fast path and swapping is not performance critical?

> > > Perhaps the rwlock spinlock can be changed to a rw semaphore without
> > > measurable overscheduling in the fast path. However theoretically
> > 
> > Overscheduling? You mean overhead?
> 
> The only possible overhead that a rw semaphore could ever generate vs
> a rw lock is overscheduling.

Ok too many calls to schedule() because the slow path (of the semaphore) 
is taken?

> > On the other hand a semaphore puts the process to sleep and may actually 
> > improve performance because there is less time spend in a busy loop. 
> > Other processes may do something useful and we stay off the contended 
> > cacheline reducing traffic on the interconnect.
> 
> Yes, that's the positive side, the negative side is that you'll put
> the task in uninterruptible sleep and call schedule() and require a
> wakeup, because a list_add taking <1usec is running in the
> other cpu. No other downside. But that's the only reason it's a
> spinlock right now, infact there can't be any other reason.

But that is only happening for the contended case. Certainly a spinlock is 
better for 2p system but the more processors content for the lock (and 
the longer the hold off is, typical for the processors with 4p or 8p or 
more) the better a semaphore will work.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-29 22:12                                     ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-29 22:41                                       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-02-29 22:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Nick Piggin, akpm, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier, Kanoj Sarcar,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 02:12:57PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> 
> > > AFAICT The rw semaphore fastpath is similar in performance to a rw 
> > > spinlock. 
> > 
> > read side is taken in the slow path.
> 
> Slowpath meaning VM slowpath or lock slow path? Its seems that the rwsem 

With slow path I meant the VM. Sorry if that was confusing given locks
also have fast paths (no contention) and slow paths (contention).

> read side path is pretty efficient:

Yes. The assembly doesn't worry me at all.

> > pagefault is fast path, VM during swapping is slow path.
> 
> Not sure what you are saying here. A pagefault should be considered as a 
> fast path and swapping is not performance critical?

Yes, swapping is I/O bound and it rarely becomes CPU hog in the common
case.

There are corner case workloads (including OOM) where swapping can
become cpu bound (that's also where rwlock helps). But certainly the
speed of fork() and a page fault, is critical for _everyone_, not just
a few workloads and setups.

> Ok too many calls to schedule() because the slow path (of the semaphore) 
> is taken?

Yes, that's the only possible worry when converting a spinlock to
mutex.

> But that is only happening for the contended case. Certainly a spinlock is 
> better for 2p system but the more processors content for the lock (and 
> the longer the hold off is, typical for the processors with 4p or 8p or 
> more) the better a semaphore will work.

Sure. That's also why the PT lock switches for >4way compiles. Config
option helps to keep the VM optimal for everyone. Here it is possible
it won't be necessary but I can't be sure given both i_mmap_lock and
anon-vma lock are used in some many places. Some TPC comparison would
be nice before making a default switch IMHO.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-27 22:35     ` Christoph Lameter
                         ` (2 preceding siblings ...)
  2008-02-28  0:11       ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-03-03  5:11       ` Nick Piggin
  2008-03-03 19:28         ` Christoph Lameter
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-03-03  5:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Thursday 28 February 2008 09:35, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Wed, 20 Feb 2008, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > On Friday 15 February 2008 17:49, Christoph Lameter wrote:

> > Also, what we are going to need here are not skeleton drivers
> > that just do all the *easy* bits (of registering their callbacks),
> > but actual fully working examples that do everything that any
> > real driver will need to do. If not for the sanity of the driver
> > writer, then for the sanity of the VM developers (I don't want
> > to have to understand xpmem or infiniband in order to understand
> > how the VM works).
>
> There are 3 different drivers that can already use it but the code is
> complex and not easy to review. Skeletons are easy to allow people to get
> started with it.

Your skeleton is just registering notifiers and saying

/* you fill the hard part in */

If somebody needs a skeleton in order just to register the notifiers,
then almost by definition they are unqualified to write the hard
part ;)


> > >  	lru_add_drain();
> > >  	tlb = tlb_gather_mmu(mm, 0);
> > >  	update_hiwater_rss(mm);
> > > +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, address, end, atomic);
> > >  	end = unmap_vmas(&tlb, vma, address, end, &nr_accounted, details);
> > >  	if (tlb)
> > >  		tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, address, end);
> > > +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, address, end, atomic);
> > >  	return end;
> > >  }
> >
> > Where do you invalidate for munmap()?
>
> zap_page_range() called from unmap_vmas().

But it is not allowed to sleep. Where do you call the sleepable one
from?


> > Also, how to you resolve the case where you are not allowed to sleep?
> > I would have thought either you have to handle it, in which case nobody
> > needs to sleep; or you can't handle it, in which case the code is
> > broken.
>
> That can be done in a variety of ways:
>
> 1. Change VM locking
>
> 2. Not handle file backed mappings (XPmem could work mostly in such a
> config)
>
> 3. Keep the refcount elevated until pages are freed in another execution
> context.

OK, there are ways to solve it or hack around it. But this is exactly
why I think the implementations should be kept seperate. Andrea's
notifiers are coherent, work on all types of mappings, and will
hopefully match closely the regular TLB invalidation sequence in the
Linux VM (at the moment it is quite close, but I hope to make it a
bit closer) so that it requires almost no changes to the mm.

All the other things to try to make it sleep are either hacking holes
in it (eg by removing coherency). So I don't think it is reasonable to
require that any patch handle all cases. I actually think Andrea's
patch is quite nice and simple itself, wheras I am against the patches
that you posted.

What about a completely different approach... XPmem runs over NUMAlink,
right? Why not provide some non-sleeping way to basically IPI remote
nodes over the NUMAlink where they can process the invalidation? If you
intra-node cache coherency has to run over this link anyway, then
presumably it is capable.

Or another idea, why don't you LD_PRELOAD in the MPT library to also
intercept munmap, mprotect, mremap etc as well as just fork()? That
would give you similarly "good enough" coherency as the mmu notifier
patches except that you can't swap (which Robin said was not a big
problem).


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-03-03  5:11       ` Nick Piggin
@ 2008-03-03 19:28         ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-03-03 19:50           ` Nick Piggin
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-03-03 19:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Mon, 3 Mar 2008, Nick Piggin wrote:

> Your skeleton is just registering notifiers and saying
> 
> /* you fill the hard part in */
> 
> If somebody needs a skeleton in order just to register the notifiers,
> then almost by definition they are unqualified to write the hard
> part ;)

Its also providing a locking scheme.

> OK, there are ways to solve it or hack around it. But this is exactly
> why I think the implementations should be kept seperate. Andrea's
> notifiers are coherent, work on all types of mappings, and will
> hopefully match closely the regular TLB invalidation sequence in the
> Linux VM (at the moment it is quite close, but I hope to make it a
> bit closer) so that it requires almost no changes to the mm.

Then put it into the arch code for TLB invalidation. Paravirt ops gives 
good examples on how to do that.

> What about a completely different approach... XPmem runs over NUMAlink,
> right? Why not provide some non-sleeping way to basically IPI remote
> nodes over the NUMAlink where they can process the invalidation? If you
> intra-node cache coherency has to run over this link anyway, then
> presumably it is capable.

There is another Linux instance at the remote end that first has to 
remove its own ptes. Also would not work for Inifiniband and other 
solutions. All the approaches that require evictions in an atomic context 
are limiting the approach and do not allow the generic functionality that 
we want in order to not add alternate APIs for this.

> Or another idea, why don't you LD_PRELOAD in the MPT library to also
> intercept munmap, mprotect, mremap etc as well as just fork()? That
> would give you similarly "good enough" coherency as the mmu notifier
> patches except that you can't swap (which Robin said was not a big
> problem).

The good enough solution right now is to pin pages by elevating 
refcounts.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-03-03 19:28         ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-03-03 19:50           ` Nick Piggin
  2008-03-04 18:58             ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-03-03 19:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Tuesday 04 March 2008 06:28, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Mon, 3 Mar 2008, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > Your skeleton is just registering notifiers and saying
> >
> > /* you fill the hard part in */
> >
> > If somebody needs a skeleton in order just to register the notifiers,
> > then almost by definition they are unqualified to write the hard
> > part ;)
>
> Its also providing a locking scheme.

Not the full locking scheme. If you have a look at the real code
required to do it, it is non trivial.


> > OK, there are ways to solve it or hack around it. But this is exactly
> > why I think the implementations should be kept seperate. Andrea's
> > notifiers are coherent, work on all types of mappings, and will
> > hopefully match closely the regular TLB invalidation sequence in the
> > Linux VM (at the moment it is quite close, but I hope to make it a
> > bit closer) so that it requires almost no changes to the mm.
>
> Then put it into the arch code for TLB invalidation. Paravirt ops gives
> good examples on how to do that.

Put what into arch code?


> > What about a completely different approach... XPmem runs over NUMAlink,
> > right? Why not provide some non-sleeping way to basically IPI remote
> > nodes over the NUMAlink where they can process the invalidation? If you
> > intra-node cache coherency has to run over this link anyway, then
> > presumably it is capable.
>
> There is another Linux instance at the remote end that first has to
> remove its own ptes.

Yeah, what's the problem?


> Also would not work for Inifiniband and other 
> solutions.

infiniband doesn't want it. Other solutions is just handwaving,
because if we don't know what the other soloutions are, then we can't
make any sort of informed choices.


> All the approaches that require evictions in an atomic context 
> are limiting the approach and do not allow the generic functionality that
> we want in order to not add alternate APIs for this.

The only generic way to do this that I have seen (and the only proposed
way that doesn't add alternate APIs for that matter) is turning VM locks
into sleeping locks. In which case, Andrea's notifiers will work just
fine (except for relatively minor details like rcu list scanning).

So I don't see what you're arguing for. There is no requirement that we
support sleeping notifiers in the same patch as non-sleeping ones.
Considering the simplicity of the non-sleeping notifiers and the
problems with sleeping ones, I think it is pretty clear that they are
different beasts (unless VM locking is changed).


> > Or another idea, why don't you LD_PRELOAD in the MPT library to also
> > intercept munmap, mprotect, mremap etc as well as just fork()? That
> > would give you similarly "good enough" coherency as the mmu notifier
> > patches except that you can't swap (which Robin said was not a big
> > problem).
>
> The good enough solution right now is to pin pages by elevating
> refcounts.

Which kind of leads to the question of why do you need any further
kernel patches if that is good enough?


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-03-03 19:50           ` Nick Piggin
@ 2008-03-04 18:58             ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-03-05  0:52               ` Nick Piggin
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-03-04 18:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nick Piggin
  Cc: akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Tue, 4 Mar 2008, Nick Piggin wrote:

> > Then put it into the arch code for TLB invalidation. Paravirt ops gives
> > good examples on how to do that.
> 
> Put what into arch code?

The mmu notifier code.

> > > What about a completely different approach... XPmem runs over NUMAlink,
> > > right? Why not provide some non-sleeping way to basically IPI remote
> > > nodes over the NUMAlink where they can process the invalidation? If you
> > > intra-node cache coherency has to run over this link anyway, then
> > > presumably it is capable.
> >
> > There is another Linux instance at the remote end that first has to
> > remove its own ptes.
> 
> Yeah, what's the problem?

The remote end has to invalidate the page which involves locking etc.

> > Also would not work for Inifiniband and other 
> > solutions.
> 
> infiniband doesn't want it. Other solutions is just handwaving,
> because if we don't know what the other soloutions are, then we can't
> make any sort of informed choices.

We need a solution in general to avoid the pinning problems. Infiniband 
has those too.

> > All the approaches that require evictions in an atomic context 
> > are limiting the approach and do not allow the generic functionality that
> > we want in order to not add alternate APIs for this.
> 
> The only generic way to do this that I have seen (and the only proposed
> way that doesn't add alternate APIs for that matter) is turning VM locks
> into sleeping locks. In which case, Andrea's notifiers will work just
> fine (except for relatively minor details like rcu list scanning).

No they wont. As you pointed out the callback need RCU locking.

> > The good enough solution right now is to pin pages by elevating
> > refcounts.
> 
> Which kind of leads to the question of why do you need any further
> kernel patches if that is good enough?

Well its good enough with severe problems during reclaim, livelocks etc. 
One could improve on that scheme through Rik's work trying to add a new 
page flag that mark pinned pages and then keep them off the LRUs and 
limiting their number. Having pinned page would limit the ability to 
reclaim by the VM and make page migration, memory unplug etc impossible. 
It is better to have notifier scheme that allows to tell a device driver 
to free up the memory it has mapped.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-03-04 18:58             ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-03-05  0:52               ` Nick Piggin
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2008-03-05  0:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: akpm, Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	kvm-devel, Peter Zijlstra, general, Steve Wise, Roland Dreier,
	Kanoj Sarcar, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

On Wednesday 05 March 2008 05:58, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Tue, 4 Mar 2008, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > > Then put it into the arch code for TLB invalidation. Paravirt ops gives
> > > good examples on how to do that.
> >
> > Put what into arch code?
>
> The mmu notifier code.

It isn't arch specific.


> > > > What about a completely different approach... XPmem runs over
> > > > NUMAlink, right? Why not provide some non-sleeping way to basically
> > > > IPI remote nodes over the NUMAlink where they can process the
> > > > invalidation? If you intra-node cache coherency has to run over this
> > > > link anyway, then presumably it is capable.
> > >
> > > There is another Linux instance at the remote end that first has to
> > > remove its own ptes.
> >
> > Yeah, what's the problem?
>
> The remote end has to invalidate the page which involves locking etc.

I don't see what the problem is.


> > > Also would not work for Inifiniband and other
> > > solutions.
> >
> > infiniband doesn't want it. Other solutions is just handwaving,
> > because if we don't know what the other soloutions are, then we can't
> > make any sort of informed choices.
>
> We need a solution in general to avoid the pinning problems. Infiniband
> has those too.
>
> > > All the approaches that require evictions in an atomic context
> > > are limiting the approach and do not allow the generic functionality
> > > that we want in order to not add alternate APIs for this.
> >
> > The only generic way to do this that I have seen (and the only proposed
> > way that doesn't add alternate APIs for that matter) is turning VM locks
> > into sleeping locks. In which case, Andrea's notifiers will work just
> > fine (except for relatively minor details like rcu list scanning).
>
> No they wont. As you pointed out the callback need RCU locking.

That can be fixed easily.


> > > The good enough solution right now is to pin pages by elevating
> > > refcounts.
> >
> > Which kind of leads to the question of why do you need any further
> > kernel patches if that is good enough?
>
> Well its good enough with severe problems during reclaim, livelocks etc.
> One could improve on that scheme through Rik's work trying to add a new
> page flag that mark pinned pages and then keep them off the LRUs and
> limiting their number. Having pinned page would limit the ability to
> reclaim by the VM and make page migration, memory unplug etc impossible.

Well not impossible. You could have a callback to invalidate the remote
TLB and drop the pin on a given page.


> It is better to have notifier scheme that allows to tell a device driver
> to free up the memory it has mapped.

Yeah, it would be nice for those people with clusters of Altixes. Doesn't
mean it has to go upstream, though.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-02-08 22:06 [patch 0/6] MMU Notifiers V6 Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-02-08 22:06 ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-02-08 22:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: akpm
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, kvm-devel,
	Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman

[-- Attachment #1: mmu_invalidate_range_callbacks --]
[-- Type: text/plain, Size: 11235 bytes --]

The invalidation of address ranges in a mm_struct needs to be
performed when pages are removed or permissions etc change.

If invalidate_range_begin() is called with locks held then we
pass a flag into invalidate_range() to indicate that no sleeping is
possible. Locks are only held for truncate and huge pages.

In two cases we use invalidate_range_begin/end to invalidate
single pages because the pair allows holding off new references
(idea by Robin Holt).

do_wp_page(): We hold off new references while we update the pte.

xip_unmap: We are not taking the PageLock so we cannot
use the invalidate_page mmu_rmap_notifier. invalidate_range_begin/end
stands in.

Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com>
Signed-off-by: Robin Holt <holt@sgi.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>

---
 mm/filemap_xip.c |    5 +++++
 mm/fremap.c      |    3 +++
 mm/hugetlb.c     |    3 +++
 mm/memory.c      |   35 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------
 mm/mmap.c        |    2 ++
 mm/mprotect.c    |    3 +++
 mm/mremap.c      |    7 ++++++-
 7 files changed, 51 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)

Index: linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/fremap.c	2008-02-08 13:18:58.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c	2008-02-08 13:25:22.000000000 -0800
@@ -15,6 +15,7 @@
 #include <linux/rmap.h>
 #include <linux/module.h>
 #include <linux/syscalls.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/mmu_context.h>
 #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
@@ -214,7 +215,9 @@ asmlinkage long sys_remap_file_pages(uns
 		spin_unlock(&mapping->i_mmap_lock);
 	}
 
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, start + size, 0);
 	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, start + size, 0);
 	if (!err && !(flags & MAP_NONBLOCK)) {
 		if (unlikely(has_write_lock)) {
 			downgrade_write(&mm->mmap_sem);
Index: linux-2.6/mm/memory.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/memory.c	2008-02-08 13:22:14.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/memory.c	2008-02-08 13:25:22.000000000 -0800
@@ -51,6 +51,7 @@
 #include <linux/init.h>
 #include <linux/writeback.h>
 #include <linux/memcontrol.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/pgalloc.h>
 #include <asm/uaccess.h>
@@ -611,6 +612,9 @@ int copy_page_range(struct mm_struct *ds
 	if (is_vm_hugetlb_page(vma))
 		return copy_hugetlb_page_range(dst_mm, src_mm, vma);
 
+	if (is_cow_mapping(vma->vm_flags))
+		mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, src_mm, addr, end, 0);
+
 	dst_pgd = pgd_offset(dst_mm, addr);
 	src_pgd = pgd_offset(src_mm, addr);
 	do {
@@ -621,6 +625,11 @@ int copy_page_range(struct mm_struct *ds
 						vma, addr, next))
 			return -ENOMEM;
 	} while (dst_pgd++, src_pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
+
+	if (is_cow_mapping(vma->vm_flags))
+		mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, src_mm,
+						vma->vm_start, end, 0);
+
 	return 0;
 }
 
@@ -893,13 +902,16 @@ unsigned long zap_page_range(struct vm_a
 	struct mmu_gather *tlb;
 	unsigned long end = address + size;
 	unsigned long nr_accounted = 0;
+	int atomic = details ? (details->i_mmap_lock != 0) : 0;
 
 	lru_add_drain();
 	tlb = tlb_gather_mmu(mm, 0);
 	update_hiwater_rss(mm);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, address, end, atomic);
 	end = unmap_vmas(&tlb, vma, address, end, &nr_accounted, details);
 	if (tlb)
 		tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, address, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, address, end, atomic);
 	return end;
 }
 
@@ -1337,7 +1349,7 @@ int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struc
 {
 	pgd_t *pgd;
 	unsigned long next;
-	unsigned long end = addr + PAGE_ALIGN(size);
+	unsigned long start = addr, end = addr + PAGE_ALIGN(size);
 	struct mm_struct *mm = vma->vm_mm;
 	int err;
 
@@ -1371,6 +1383,7 @@ int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struc
 	pfn -= addr >> PAGE_SHIFT;
 	pgd = pgd_offset(mm, addr);
 	flush_cache_range(vma, addr, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, end, 0);
 	do {
 		next = pgd_addr_end(addr, end);
 		err = remap_pud_range(mm, pgd, addr, next,
@@ -1378,6 +1391,7 @@ int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struc
 		if (err)
 			break;
 	} while (pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, end, 0);
 	return err;
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL(remap_pfn_range);
@@ -1461,10 +1475,11 @@ int apply_to_page_range(struct mm_struct
 {
 	pgd_t *pgd;
 	unsigned long next;
-	unsigned long end = addr + size;
+	unsigned long start = addr, end = addr + size;
 	int err;
 
 	BUG_ON(addr >= end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, end, 0);
 	pgd = pgd_offset(mm, addr);
 	do {
 		next = pgd_addr_end(addr, end);
@@ -1472,6 +1487,7 @@ int apply_to_page_range(struct mm_struct
 		if (err)
 			break;
 	} while (pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, end, 0);
 	return err;
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(apply_to_page_range);
@@ -1612,8 +1628,10 @@ static int do_wp_page(struct mm_struct *
 			page_table = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address,
 							 &ptl);
 			page_cache_release(old_page);
-			if (!pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte))
-				goto unlock;
+			if (!pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte)) {
+				pte_unmap_unlock(page_table, ptl);
+				goto check_dirty;
+			}
 
 			page_mkwrite = 1;
 		}
@@ -1629,7 +1647,8 @@ static int do_wp_page(struct mm_struct *
 		if (ptep_set_access_flags(vma, address, page_table, entry,1))
 			update_mmu_cache(vma, address, entry);
 		ret |= VM_FAULT_WRITE;
-		goto unlock;
+		pte_unmap_unlock(page_table, ptl);
+		goto check_dirty;
 	}
 
 	/*
@@ -1651,6 +1670,8 @@ gotten:
 	if (mem_cgroup_charge(new_page, mm, GFP_KERNEL))
 		goto oom_free_new;
 
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, address,
+				address + PAGE_SIZE, 0);
 	/*
 	 * Re-check the pte - we dropped the lock
 	 */
@@ -1689,8 +1710,10 @@ gotten:
 		page_cache_release(new_page);
 	if (old_page)
 		page_cache_release(old_page);
-unlock:
 	pte_unmap_unlock(page_table, ptl);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm,
+				address, address + PAGE_SIZE, 0);
+check_dirty:
 	if (dirty_page) {
 		if (vma->vm_file)
 			file_update_time(vma->vm_file);
Index: linux-2.6/mm/mmap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/mmap.c	2008-02-08 13:25:21.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/mmap.c	2008-02-08 13:25:22.000000000 -0800
@@ -1748,11 +1748,13 @@ static void unmap_region(struct mm_struc
 	lru_add_drain();
 	tlb = tlb_gather_mmu(mm, 0);
 	update_hiwater_rss(mm);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, end, 0);
 	unmap_vmas(&tlb, vma, start, end, &nr_accounted, NULL);
 	vm_unacct_memory(nr_accounted);
 	free_pgtables(&tlb, vma, prev? prev->vm_end: FIRST_USER_ADDRESS,
 				 next? next->vm_start: 0);
 	tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, start, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, end, 0);
 }
 
 /*
Index: linux-2.6/mm/hugetlb.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/hugetlb.c	2008-02-08 13:22:14.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/hugetlb.c	2008-02-08 13:25:22.000000000 -0800
@@ -14,6 +14,7 @@
 #include <linux/mempolicy.h>
 #include <linux/cpuset.h>
 #include <linux/mutex.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/page.h>
 #include <asm/pgtable.h>
@@ -753,6 +754,7 @@ void __unmap_hugepage_range(struct vm_ar
 	BUG_ON(start & ~HPAGE_MASK);
 	BUG_ON(end & ~HPAGE_MASK);
 
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, end, 1);
 	spin_lock(&mm->page_table_lock);
 	for (address = start; address < end; address += HPAGE_SIZE) {
 		ptep = huge_pte_offset(mm, address);
@@ -773,6 +775,7 @@ void __unmap_hugepage_range(struct vm_ar
 	}
 	spin_unlock(&mm->page_table_lock);
 	flush_tlb_range(vma, start, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, end, 1);
 	list_for_each_entry_safe(page, tmp, &page_list, lru) {
 		list_del(&page->lru);
 		put_page(page);
Index: linux-2.6/mm/filemap_xip.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/filemap_xip.c	2008-02-08 13:22:14.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/filemap_xip.c	2008-02-08 13:25:22.000000000 -0800
@@ -13,6 +13,7 @@
 #include <linux/module.h>
 #include <linux/uio.h>
 #include <linux/rmap.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 #include <linux/sched.h>
 #include <asm/tlbflush.h>
 
@@ -190,6 +191,8 @@ __xip_unmap (struct address_space * mapp
 		address = vma->vm_start +
 			((pgoff - vma->vm_pgoff) << PAGE_SHIFT);
 		BUG_ON(address < vma->vm_start || address >= vma->vm_end);
+		mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, address,
+					address + PAGE_SIZE, 1);
 		pte = page_check_address(page, mm, address, &ptl);
 		if (pte) {
 			/* Nuke the page table entry. */
@@ -201,6 +204,8 @@ __xip_unmap (struct address_space * mapp
 			pte_unmap_unlock(pte, ptl);
 			page_cache_release(page);
 		}
+		mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm,
+				address, address + PAGE_SIZE, 1);
 	}
 	spin_unlock(&mapping->i_mmap_lock);
 }
Index: linux-2.6/mm/mremap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/mremap.c	2008-02-08 13:18:58.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/mremap.c	2008-02-08 13:25:22.000000000 -0800
@@ -18,6 +18,7 @@
 #include <linux/highmem.h>
 #include <linux/security.h>
 #include <linux/syscalls.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/uaccess.h>
 #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
@@ -124,12 +125,15 @@ unsigned long move_page_tables(struct vm
 		unsigned long old_addr, struct vm_area_struct *new_vma,
 		unsigned long new_addr, unsigned long len)
 {
-	unsigned long extent, next, old_end;
+	unsigned long extent, next, old_start, old_end;
 	pmd_t *old_pmd, *new_pmd;
 
+	old_start = old_addr;
 	old_end = old_addr + len;
 	flush_cache_range(vma, old_addr, old_end);
 
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, vma->vm_mm,
+					old_addr, old_end, 0);
 	for (; old_addr < old_end; old_addr += extent, new_addr += extent) {
 		cond_resched();
 		next = (old_addr + PMD_SIZE) & PMD_MASK;
@@ -150,6 +154,7 @@ unsigned long move_page_tables(struct vm
 		move_ptes(vma, old_pmd, old_addr, old_addr + extent,
 				new_vma, new_pmd, new_addr);
 	}
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, vma->vm_mm, old_start, old_end, 0);
 
 	return len + old_addr - old_end;	/* how much done */
 }
Index: linux-2.6/mm/mprotect.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/mprotect.c	2008-02-08 13:18:58.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/mprotect.c	2008-02-08 13:25:22.000000000 -0800
@@ -21,6 +21,7 @@
 #include <linux/syscalls.h>
 #include <linux/swap.h>
 #include <linux/swapops.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 #include <asm/uaccess.h>
 #include <asm/pgtable.h>
 #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
@@ -198,10 +199,12 @@ success:
 		dirty_accountable = 1;
 	}
 
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_begin, mm, start, end, 0);
 	if (is_vm_hugetlb_page(vma))
 		hugetlb_change_protection(vma, start, end, vma->vm_page_prot);
 	else
 		change_protection(vma, start, end, vma->vm_page_prot, dirty_accountable);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range_end, mm, start, end, 0);
 	vm_stat_account(mm, oldflags, vma->vm_file, -nrpages);
 	vm_stat_account(mm, newflags, vma->vm_file, nrpages);
 	return 0;

-- 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30 23:52                           ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-31  0:01                             ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-31  0:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Thu, 31 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> > -	void (*invalidate_range)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> > +	void (*invalidate_range_begin)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> >  				 struct mm_struct *mm,
> > -				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
> >  				 int lock);
> > +
> > +	void (*invalidate_range_end)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> > +				 struct mm_struct *mm,
> > +				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end);
> >  };
> 
> start/finish/begin/end/before/after? ;)

Well lets pick one and then stick to it.

> I'd drop the 'int lock', you should skip the before/after if
> i_mmap_lock isn't null and offload it to the caller before taking the
> lock. At least for the "after" call that looks a few liner change,
> didn't figure out the "before" yet.

How we offload that? Before the scan of the rmaps we do not have the 
mmstruct. So we'd need another notifier_rmap_callback.

> Given the amount of changes that are going on in design terms to cover
> both XPMEM and GRE, can we split the minimal invalidate_page that
> provides an obviously safe and feature complete mmu notifier code for
> KVM, and merge that first patch that will cover KVM 100%, it will

The obvious solution does not scale. You will have a callback for every 
page and there may be a million of those if you have a 4GB process.

> made so that are extendible in backwards compatible way. I think
> invalidate_page inside ptep_clear_flush is the first fundamental block
> of the mmu notifiers. Then once the fundamental is in and obviously
> safe and feature complete for KVM, the rest can be added very easily
> with incremental patches as far as I can tell. That would be my
> preferred route ;)

We need to have a coherent notifier solution that works for multiple 
scenarios. I think a working invalidate_range would also be required for 
KVM. KVM and GRUB are very similar so they should be able to use the same 
mechanisms and we need to properly document how that mechanism is safe. 
Either both take a page refcount or none.




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30 19:50                         ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-30 22:18                           ` Robin Holt
@ 2008-01-30 23:52                           ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-31  0:01                             ` Christoph Lameter
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-30 23:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, Jan 30, 2008 at 11:50:26AM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> Then we have 
> 
> invalidate_range_start(mm)
> 
> and
> 
> invalidate_range_finish(mm, start, end)
> 
> in addition to the invalidate rmap_notifier?
> 
> ---
>  include/linux/mmu_notifier.h |    7 +++++--
>  1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
> 
> Index: linux-2.6/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h
> ===================================================================
> --- linux-2.6.orig/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h	2008-01-30 11:49:02.000000000 -0800
> +++ linux-2.6/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h	2008-01-30 11:49:57.000000000 -0800
> @@ -69,10 +69,13 @@ struct mmu_notifier_ops {
>  	/*
>  	 * lock indicates that the function is called under spinlock.
>  	 */
> -	void (*invalidate_range)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> +	void (*invalidate_range_begin)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
>  				 struct mm_struct *mm,
> -				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
>  				 int lock);
> +
> +	void (*invalidate_range_end)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
> +				 struct mm_struct *mm,
> +				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end);
>  };

start/finish/begin/end/before/after? ;)

I'd drop the 'int lock', you should skip the before/after if
i_mmap_lock isn't null and offload it to the caller before taking the
lock. At least for the "after" call that looks a few liner change,
didn't figure out the "before" yet.

Given the amount of changes that are going on in design terms to cover
both XPMEM and GRE, can we split the minimal invalidate_page that
provides an obviously safe and feature complete mmu notifier code for
KVM, and merge that first patch that will cover KVM 100%, it will
cover GRE 90%, and then we add invalidate_range_before/after in a
separate patch and we close the remaining 10% for GRE covering
ptep_get_and_clear or whatever else ptep_*?  The mmu notifiers are
made so that are extendible in backwards compatible way. I think
invalidate_page inside ptep_clear_flush is the first fundamental block
of the mmu notifiers. Then once the fundamental is in and obviously
safe and feature complete for KVM, the rest can be added very easily
with incremental patches as far as I can tell. That would be my
preferred route ;)

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30 19:50                         ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-30 22:18                           ` Robin Holt
  2008-01-30 23:52                           ` Andrea Arcangeli
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-01-30 22:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	Nick Piggin, kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, Jan 30, 2008 at 11:50:26AM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> 
> > XPMEM requires with invalidate_range (sleepy) +
> > before_invalidate_range (sleepy). invalidate_all should also be called
> > before_release (both sleepy).
> > 
> > It sounds we need full overlap of information provided by
> > invalidate_page and invalidate_range to fit all three models (the
> > opposite of the zero objective that current V3 is taking). And the
> > swap will be handled only by invalidate_page either through linux rmap
> > or external rmap (with the latter that can sleep so it's ok for you,
> > the former not). GRU can safely use the either the linux rmap notifier
> > or the external rmap notifier equally well, because when try_to_unmap
> > is called the page is locked and obviously pinned by the VM itself.
> 
> So put the invalidate_page() callbacks in everywhere.

The way I am envisioning it, we essentially drop back to Andrea's original
patch.  We then introduce a invalidate_range_begin (I was really thinking
of it as invalidate_and_lock_range()) and an invalidate_range_end (again
I was thinking of unlock_range).

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30 20:29                           ` Jack Steiner
@ 2008-01-30 20:55                             ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-30 20:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Jack Steiner
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	Nick Piggin, kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra,
	linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Jack Steiner wrote:

> > Seems that we cannot rely on the invalidate_ranges for correctness at all?
> > We need to have invalidate_page() always. invalidate_range() is only an 
> > optimization.
> > 
> 
> I don't understand your point "an optimization". How would invalidate_range
> as currently defined be correctly used?

We are changing definitions. The original patch by Andrea calls 
invalidate_page for each pte that is cleared. So strictly you would not 
need an invalidate_range.

> It _looks_ like it would work only if xpmem/gru/etc takes a refcnt on
> the page & drops it when invalidate_range is called. That may work (not sure)
> for xpmem but not for the GRU.

The refcount is not necessary if we adopt Andrea's approach of a callback 
on the clearing of each pte. At that point the page is still guaranteed to 
exist. If we do the range_invalidate later (as in V3) then the page may 
have been released (see sys_remap_file_pages() f.e.) before we zap the GRU 
ptes. So there will be a time when the GRU may write to a page that has 
been freed and used for another purpose.

Taking a refcount on the page defers the free until the range_invalidate 
runs.

I would prefer a solution that does not require taking refcounts (pins) 
for establishing an external pte and for release (like what the GRU does).

If we could effectively determine that there are no external ptes in a 
range then the invalidate_page() call may return immediately. Maybe it is 
then effective to do these gazillions of invalidate_page() calls when a 
process terminates or an remap is performed.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30 19:41                         ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-30 20:29                           ` Jack Steiner
  2008-01-30 20:55                             ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Jack Steiner @ 2008-01-30 20:29 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	Nick Piggin, kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra,
	linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, Jan 30, 2008 at 11:41:29AM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Jack Steiner wrote:
> 
> > I see what you mean. I need to review to mail to see why this changed
> > but in the original discussions with Christoph, the invalidate_range
> > callouts were suppose to be made BEFORE the pages were put on the freelist.
> 
> Seems that we cannot rely on the invalidate_ranges for correctness at all?
> We need to have invalidate_page() always. invalidate_range() is only an 
> optimization.
> 

I don't understand your point "an optimization". How would invalidate_range
as currently defined be correctly used?

It _looks_ like it would work only if xpmem/gru/etc takes a refcnt on
the page & drops it when invalidate_range is called. That may work (not sure)
for xpmem but not for the GRU.

--- jack


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30 18:25                       ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-30 19:50                         ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-30 22:18                           ` Robin Holt
  2008-01-30 23:52                           ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-30 19:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> XPMEM requires with invalidate_range (sleepy) +
> before_invalidate_range (sleepy). invalidate_all should also be called
> before_release (both sleepy).
> 
> It sounds we need full overlap of information provided by
> invalidate_page and invalidate_range to fit all three models (the
> opposite of the zero objective that current V3 is taking). And the
> swap will be handled only by invalidate_page either through linux rmap
> or external rmap (with the latter that can sleep so it's ok for you,
> the former not). GRU can safely use the either the linux rmap notifier
> or the external rmap notifier equally well, because when try_to_unmap
> is called the page is locked and obviously pinned by the VM itself.

So put the invalidate_page() callbacks in everywhere.

Then we have 

invalidate_range_start(mm)

and

invalidate_range_finish(mm, start, end)

in addition to the invalidate rmap_notifier?

---
 include/linux/mmu_notifier.h |    7 +++++--
 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

Index: linux-2.6/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h	2008-01-30 11:49:02.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h	2008-01-30 11:49:57.000000000 -0800
@@ -69,10 +69,13 @@ struct mmu_notifier_ops {
 	/*
 	 * lock indicates that the function is called under spinlock.
 	 */
-	void (*invalidate_range)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+	void (*invalidate_range_begin)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
 				 struct mm_struct *mm,
-				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
 				 int lock);
+
+	void (*invalidate_range_end)(struct mmu_notifier *mn,
+				 struct mm_struct *mm,
+				 unsigned long start, unsigned long end);
 };
 
 struct mmu_rmap_notifier_ops;

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30 14:43                       ` Jack Steiner
@ 2008-01-30 19:41                         ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-30 20:29                           ` Jack Steiner
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-30 19:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Jack Steiner
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	Nick Piggin, kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra,
	linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Jack Steiner wrote:

> I see what you mean. I need to review to mail to see why this changed
> but in the original discussions with Christoph, the invalidate_range
> callouts were suppose to be made BEFORE the pages were put on the freelist.

Seems that we cannot rely on the invalidate_ranges for correctness at all?
We need to have invalidate_page() always. invalidate_range() is only an 
optimization.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30 16:11                 ` Robin Holt
  2008-01-30 17:04                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-30 19:35                   ` Christoph Lameter
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-30 19:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Robin Holt
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Robin Holt wrote:

> I think I need to straighten this discussion out in my head a little bit.
> Am I correct in assuming Andrea's original patch set did not have any SMP
> race conditions for KVM?  If so, then we need to start looking at how to
> implement Christoph's and my changes in a safe fashion.  Andrea, I agree
> complete that our introduction of the range callouts have introduced
> SMP races.

The original patch drew the clearing of the sptes into ptep_clear_flush(). 
So the invalidate_page was called for each page regardless if we had been 
doing an invalidate range before or not. It seems that the the 
invalidate_range() was just there for optimization.
 
> The three issues we need to simultaneously solve is revoking the remote
> page table/tlb information while still in a sleepable context and not
> having the remote faulters become out of sync with the granting process.
> Currently, I don't see a way to do that cleanly with a single callout.

You could use the invalidate_page callouts to set a flag that no 
additional rmap entries may be added until the invalidate_range has 
occurred? We could add back all the original invalidate_pages() and pass
a flag that specifies that an invalidate range will follow. The notifier 
can then decide what to do with that information. If its okay to defer 
then do nothing and wait for the range_invalidate. XPmem could stop 
allowing external references to be established until the invalidate_range 
was successful.

Jack had a concern that multiple callouts for the same pte could cause 
problems.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30 17:30                     ` Robin Holt
@ 2008-01-30 18:25                       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-30 19:50                         ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-30 18:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Robin Holt
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin,
	kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner,
	linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, Jan 30, 2008 at 11:30:09AM -0600, Robin Holt wrote:
> I don't think I saw the answer to my original question.  I assume your
> original patch, extended in a way similar to what Christoph has done,
> can be made to work to cover both the KVM and GRU (Jack's) case.

Yes, I think so.

> XPMEM, however, does not look to be solvable due to the three simultaneous
> issues above.  To address that, I think I am coming to the conclusion
> that we need an accompanying but seperate pair of callouts.  The first

The mmu_rmap_notifiers are already one separate pair of callouts and
we can add more of them of course.

> will ensure the remote page tables and TLBs are cleared and all page
> information is returned back to the process that is granting access to
> its address space.  That will include an implicit block on the address
> range so no further faults will be satisfied by the remote accessor
> (forgot the KVM name for this, sorry).  Any faults will be held off
> and only the processes page tables/TLBs are in play.  Once the normal

Good, this "block" is how you close the race condition, and you need
the second callout to "unblock" (this is why it could hardly work well
before with a single invalidate_range).

> processing of the kernel is complete, an unlock callout would be made
> for the range and then faulting may occur on behalf of the process again.

This sounds good.

> Currently, this is the only direct solution that I can see as a
> possibility.  My question is two fold.  Does this seem like a reasonable
> means to solve the three simultaneous issues above and if so, does it
> seem like the most reasonable means?

Yes.

KVM can deal with both invalidate_page (atomic) and invalidate_range (sleepy)

GRU can only deal with invalidate_page (atomic)

XPMEM requires with invalidate_range (sleepy) +
before_invalidate_range (sleepy). invalidate_all should also be called
before_release (both sleepy).

It sounds we need full overlap of information provided by
invalidate_page and invalidate_range to fit all three models (the
opposite of the zero objective that current V3 is taking). And the
swap will be handled only by invalidate_page either through linux rmap
or external rmap (with the latter that can sleep so it's ok for you,
the former not). GRU can safely use the either the linux rmap notifier
or the external rmap notifier equally well, because when try_to_unmap
is called the page is locked and obviously pinned by the VM itself.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30 17:04                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-30 17:30                     ` Robin Holt
  2008-01-30 18:25                       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-01-30 17:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Christoph Lameter, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	Nick Piggin, kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, Jan 30, 2008 at 06:04:52PM +0100, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 30, 2008 at 10:11:24AM -0600, Robin Holt wrote:
...
> > The three issues we need to simultaneously solve is revoking the remote
> > page table/tlb information while still in a sleepable context and not
> > having the remote faulters become out of sync with the granting process.
...
> > Could we consider doing a range-based recall and lock callout before
> > clearing the processes page tables/TLBs, then use the _page or _range
> > callouts from Andrea's patch to clear the mappings,  finally make a
> > range-based unlock callout.  The mmu_notifier user would usually use ops
> > for either the recall+lock/unlock family of callouts or the _page/_range
> > family of callouts.
> 
> invalidate_page/age_page can return inside ptep_clear_flush/young and
> Jack will need that too. Infact Jack will need an invalidate_page also
> inside ptep_get_and_clear. And the range callout will be done always
> in a sleeping context and it'll relay on the page-pin to be safe (when
> details->i_mmap_lock != NULL invalidate_range it shouldn't be called
> inside zap_page_range but before returning from
> unmap_mapping_range_vma before cond_resched). This will make
> everything a bit simpler and less prone to breakage IMHO, plus it'll
> have a chance to work for Jack w/o page-pin without additional
> cluttering of mm/*.c.

I don't think I saw the answer to my original question.  I assume your
original patch, extended in a way similar to what Christoph has done,
can be made to work to cover both the KVM and GRU (Jack's) case.

XPMEM, however, does not look to be solvable due to the three simultaneous
issues above.  To address that, I think I am coming to the conclusion
that we need an accompanying but seperate pair of callouts.  The first
will ensure the remote page tables and TLBs are cleared and all page
information is returned back to the process that is granting access to
its address space.  That will include an implicit block on the address
range so no further faults will be satisfied by the remote accessor
(forgot the KVM name for this, sorry).  Any faults will be held off
and only the processes page tables/TLBs are in play.  Once the normal
processing of the kernel is complete, an unlock callout would be made
for the range and then faulting may occur on behalf of the process again.

Currently, this is the only direct solution that I can see as a
possibility.  My question is two fold.  Does this seem like a reasonable
means to solve the three simultaneous issues above and if so, does it
seem like the most reasonable means?

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30 16:11                 ` Robin Holt
@ 2008-01-30 17:04                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-30 17:30                     ` Robin Holt
  2008-01-30 19:35                   ` Christoph Lameter
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-30 17:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Robin Holt
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin,
	kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner,
	linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, Jan 30, 2008 at 10:11:24AM -0600, Robin Holt wrote:
> > Robin, if you don't mind, could you please post or upload somewhere
> > your GPLv2 code that registers itself in Christoph's V2 notifiers? Or
> > is it top secret? I wouldn't mind to have a look so I can better
> > understand what's the exact reason you're sleeping besides attempting
> > GFP_KERNEL allocations. Thanks!
> 
> Dean is still actively working on updating the xpmem patch posted
> here a few months ago reworked for the mmu_notifiers.  I am sure
> we can give you a early look, but it is in a really rough state.
> 
> http://marc.info/?l=linux-mm&w=2&r=1&s=xpmem&q=t
> 
> The need to sleep comes from the fact that these PFNs are sent to other
> hosts on the same NUMA fabric which have direct access to the pages
> and then placed into remote process's page tables and then filled into
> their TLBs.  Our only means of communicating the recall is async.
> 
> I think I need to straighten this discussion out in my head a little bit.
> Am I correct in assuming Andrea's original patch set did not have any SMP
> race conditions for KVM?  If so, then we need to start looking at how to

Yes my last patch was SMP safe, stable and feature complete for KVM. I
tested it for 1 week on my smp workstation with real desktop load and
everything loaded, with 3G non-linux guest running on 2G of ram.

Now for whatever reason I adapted the KVM side to Christoph's V2/V3
and it hangs the moment it hits swap. However in the meantime I
changed test hardware, upgraded host to 2.6.24-hg, and upgraded kvm
kernel and userland. all patches applied cleanly (with a minor nit in
a .h include in V2 on top of current git). Swapping of regular tasks
on the test system is 100% solid or I wouldn't even wasting time
mentioning this. By code inspection I didn't expect a stability
regression or I wouldn't have chanced all variables at the same time
(taking the opportunity to move everything to bleeding edge while
moving to V2 turned out to be a bad idea). I already audited the mmu
notifiers a few times, infact I already went back to call
invalidate_page and age_page inside ptep_clear_flush/young in case the
page-pin wasn't enough to prevent the page to change under the sptes,
as I thought yesterday.

Christoph's V3 notably still misses the needed range flushes in mremap
for example, but that's not my problem.  (Jack instead will certainly
kernel crash due to the missing invalidate_page after ptep_clear_flush
in mremap, such an invalidate_page wasn't missing with my last patch)

I'm now going to run the same binaries that still are stable on my
workstation on the test system too, to rule out timings and hardware
differences.

> implement Christoph's and my changes in a safe fashion.  Andrea, I agree
> complete that our introduction of the range callouts have introduced
> SMP races.

I think for KVM basic swapping both V2 and V3 should be safe. V2 had
race conditions that would later break KSM yes, I fixed it and V3
should be already ok and I'm not testing KSM. This is all thanks to the
pin of the page in get_user_page that KVM does for every page mapped
in any spte.

> The three issues we need to simultaneously solve is revoking the remote
> page table/tlb information while still in a sleepable context and not
> having the remote faulters become out of sync with the granting process.
> Currently, I don't see a way to do that cleanly with a single callout.

Agreed.

> Could we consider doing a range-based recall and lock callout before
> clearing the processes page tables/TLBs, then use the _page or _range
> callouts from Andrea's patch to clear the mappings,  finally make a
> range-based unlock callout.  The mmu_notifier user would usually use ops
> for either the recall+lock/unlock family of callouts or the _page/_range
> family of callouts.

invalidate_page/age_page can return inside ptep_clear_flush/young and
Jack will need that too. Infact Jack will need an invalidate_page also
inside ptep_get_and_clear. And the range callout will be done always
in a sleeping context and it'll relay on the page-pin to be safe (when
details->i_mmap_lock != NULL invalidate_range it shouldn't be called
inside zap_page_range but before returning from
unmap_mapping_range_vma before cond_resched). This will make
everything a bit simpler and less prone to breakage IMHO, plus it'll
have a chance to work for Jack w/o page-pin without additional
cluttering of mm/*.c.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30  0:00               ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-30  0:05                 ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-30  0:20                 ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-30 16:11                 ` Robin Holt
  2008-01-30 17:04                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-30 19:35                   ` Christoph Lameter
  2 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Robin Holt @ 2008-01-30 16:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli, Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	Nick Piggin, kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra,
	steiner, linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

> Robin, if you don't mind, could you please post or upload somewhere
> your GPLv2 code that registers itself in Christoph's V2 notifiers? Or
> is it top secret? I wouldn't mind to have a look so I can better
> understand what's the exact reason you're sleeping besides attempting
> GFP_KERNEL allocations. Thanks!

Dean is still actively working on updating the xpmem patch posted
here a few months ago reworked for the mmu_notifiers.  I am sure
we can give you a early look, but it is in a really rough state.

http://marc.info/?l=linux-mm&w=2&r=1&s=xpmem&q=t

The need to sleep comes from the fact that these PFNs are sent to other
hosts on the same NUMA fabric which have direct access to the pages
and then placed into remote process's page tables and then filled into
their TLBs.  Our only means of communicating the recall is async.

I think I need to straighten this discussion out in my head a little bit.
Am I correct in assuming Andrea's original patch set did not have any SMP
race conditions for KVM?  If so, then we need to start looking at how to
implement Christoph's and my changes in a safe fashion.  Andrea, I agree
complete that our introduction of the range callouts have introduced
SMP races.

The three issues we need to simultaneously solve is revoking the remote
page table/tlb information while still in a sleepable context and not
having the remote faulters become out of sync with the granting process.
Currently, I don't see a way to do that cleanly with a single callout.

Could we consider doing a range-based recall and lock callout before
clearing the processes page tables/TLBs, then use the _page or _range
callouts from Andrea's patch to clear the mappings,  finally make a
range-based unlock callout.  The mmu_notifier user would usually use ops
for either the recall+lock/unlock family of callouts or the _page/_range
family of callouts.

Thanks,
Robin

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30 13:37                     ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-30 14:43                       ` Jack Steiner
  2008-01-30 19:41                         ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Jack Steiner @ 2008-01-30 14:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	Nick Piggin, kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra,
	linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, Jan 30, 2008 at 02:37:20PM +0100, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 06:28:05PM -0600, Jack Steiner wrote:
> > On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 04:20:50PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > > On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> > > 
> > > > > invalidate_range after populate allows access to memory for which ptes 
> > > > > were zapped and the refcount was released.
> > > > 
> > > > The last refcount is released by the invalidate_range itself.
> > > 
> > > That is true for your implementation and to address Robin's issues. Jack: 
> > > Is that true for the GRU?
> > 
> > I'm not sure I understand the question. The GRU never (currently) takes
> > a reference on a page. It has no mechanism for tracking pages that
> > were exported to the external TLBs.
> 
> If you don't have a pin, then things like invalidate_range in
> remap_file_pages can't be safe as writes through the external TLBs can
> keep going on pages in the freelist. For you to be safe w/o a
> page-pin, you need to return in the direction of invalidate_page
> inside ptep_clear_flush (or anyway before
> page_cache_release/__free_page/put_page...). You're generally not safe
> with any invalidate_range that may run after the page pointed by the
> pte has been freed (or can be freed by the VM anytime because of being
> unpinned cache).

Yuck....

I see what you mean. I need to review to mail to see why this changed
but in the original discussions with Christoph, the invalidate_range
callouts were suppose to be made BEFORE the pages were put on the freelist.


--- jack

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30  0:28                   ` Jack Steiner
  2008-01-30  0:35                     ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-30 13:37                     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-30 14:43                       ` Jack Steiner
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-30 13:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Jack Steiner
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	Nick Piggin, kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra,
	linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 06:28:05PM -0600, Jack Steiner wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 04:20:50PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> > 
> > > > invalidate_range after populate allows access to memory for which ptes 
> > > > were zapped and the refcount was released.
> > > 
> > > The last refcount is released by the invalidate_range itself.
> > 
> > That is true for your implementation and to address Robin's issues. Jack: 
> > Is that true for the GRU?
> 
> I'm not sure I understand the question. The GRU never (currently) takes
> a reference on a page. It has no mechanism for tracking pages that
> were exported to the external TLBs.

If you don't have a pin, then things like invalidate_range in
remap_file_pages can't be safe as writes through the external TLBs can
keep going on pages in the freelist. For you to be safe w/o a
page-pin, you need to return in the direction of invalidate_page
inside ptep_clear_flush (or anyway before
page_cache_release/__free_page/put_page...). You're generally not safe
with any invalidate_range that may run after the page pointed by the
pte has been freed (or can be freed by the VM anytime because of being
unpinned cache).

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30  0:59                     ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-30  8:26                       ` Peter Zijlstra
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Peter Zijlstra @ 2008-01-30  8:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Christoph Lameter, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	Nick Piggin, kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, steiner,
	linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins


On Wed, 2008-01-30 at 01:59 +0100, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 04:22:46PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> > That is only partially true. pte are created wronly in order to track 
> > dirty state these days. The first write will lead to a fault that switches 
> > the pte to writable. When the page undergoes writeback the page again 
> > becomes write protected. Thus our need to effectively deal with 
> > page_mkclean.
> 
> Well I was talking about anonymous memory.

Just to be absolutely clear on this (I lost track of what exactly we are
talking about here), nonlinear mappings no not do the dirty accounting,
and are not allowed on a backing store that would require dirty
accounting.




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30  2:29 [patch 0/6] [RFC] MMU Notifiers V3 Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-30  2:29 ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-30  2:29 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

[-- Attachment #1: mmu_invalidate_range_callbacks --]
[-- Type: text/plain, Size: 4641 bytes --]

The invalidation of address ranges in a mm_struct needs to be
performed when pages are removed or permissions etc change.
Most of the VM address space changes can use the range invalidate
callback.

invalidate_range() is generally called with mmap_sem held but
no spinlocks are active. If invalidate_range() is called with
locks held then we pass a flag into invalidate_range()

Comments state that mmap_sem must be held for
remap_pfn_range() but various drivers do not seem to do this.

Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com>
Signed-off-by: Robin Holt <holt@sgi.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>

---
 mm/fremap.c  |    2 ++
 mm/hugetlb.c |    2 ++
 mm/memory.c  |   11 +++++++++--
 mm/mmap.c    |    1 +
 4 files changed, 14 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

Index: linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/fremap.c	2008-01-29 16:56:33.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c	2008-01-29 16:59:24.000000000 -0800
@@ -15,6 +15,7 @@
 #include <linux/rmap.h>
 #include <linux/module.h>
 #include <linux/syscalls.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/mmu_context.h>
 #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
@@ -212,6 +213,7 @@ asmlinkage long sys_remap_file_pages(uns
 	}
 
 	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, start + size, 0);
 	if (!err && !(flags & MAP_NONBLOCK)) {
 		if (unlikely(has_write_lock)) {
 			downgrade_write(&mm->mmap_sem);
Index: linux-2.6/mm/memory.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/memory.c	2008-01-29 16:56:33.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/memory.c	2008-01-29 16:59:24.000000000 -0800
@@ -50,6 +50,7 @@
 #include <linux/delayacct.h>
 #include <linux/init.h>
 #include <linux/writeback.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/pgalloc.h>
 #include <asm/uaccess.h>
@@ -891,6 +892,8 @@ unsigned long zap_page_range(struct vm_a
 	end = unmap_vmas(&tlb, vma, address, end, &nr_accounted, details);
 	if (tlb)
 		tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, address, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address, end,
+		(details ? (details->i_mmap_lock != NULL)  : 0));
 	return end;
 }
 
@@ -1319,7 +1322,7 @@ int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struc
 {
 	pgd_t *pgd;
 	unsigned long next;
-	unsigned long end = addr + PAGE_ALIGN(size);
+	unsigned long start = addr, end = addr + PAGE_ALIGN(size);
 	struct mm_struct *mm = vma->vm_mm;
 	int err;
 
@@ -1360,6 +1363,7 @@ int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struc
 		if (err)
 			break;
 	} while (pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, end, 0);
 	return err;
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL(remap_pfn_range);
@@ -1443,7 +1447,7 @@ int apply_to_page_range(struct mm_struct
 {
 	pgd_t *pgd;
 	unsigned long next;
-	unsigned long end = addr + size;
+	unsigned long start = addr, end = addr + size;
 	int err;
 
 	BUG_ON(addr >= end);
@@ -1454,6 +1458,7 @@ int apply_to_page_range(struct mm_struct
 		if (err)
 			break;
 	} while (pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, end, 0);
 	return err;
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(apply_to_page_range);
@@ -1669,6 +1674,8 @@ gotten:
 		page_cache_release(old_page);
 unlock:
 	pte_unmap_unlock(page_table, ptl);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
+				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
 	if (dirty_page) {
 		if (vma->vm_file)
 			file_update_time(vma->vm_file);
Index: linux-2.6/mm/mmap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/mmap.c	2008-01-29 16:56:36.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/mmap.c	2008-01-29 16:58:15.000000000 -0800
@@ -1748,6 +1748,7 @@ static void unmap_region(struct mm_struc
 	free_pgtables(&tlb, vma, prev? prev->vm_end: FIRST_USER_ADDRESS,
 				 next? next->vm_start: 0);
 	tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, start, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, end, 0);
 }
 
 /*
Index: linux-2.6/mm/hugetlb.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/hugetlb.c	2008-01-29 16:56:33.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/hugetlb.c	2008-01-29 16:58:15.000000000 -0800
@@ -14,6 +14,7 @@
 #include <linux/mempolicy.h>
 #include <linux/cpuset.h>
 #include <linux/mutex.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/page.h>
 #include <asm/pgtable.h>
@@ -763,6 +764,7 @@ void __unmap_hugepage_range(struct vm_ar
 	}
 	spin_unlock(&mm->page_table_lock);
 	flush_tlb_range(vma, start, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, end, 1);
 	list_for_each_entry_safe(page, tmp, &page_list, lru) {
 		list_del(&page->lru);
 		put_page(page);

-- 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30  0:22                   ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-30  0:59                     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-30  8:26                       ` Peter Zijlstra
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-30  0:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 04:22:46PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> That is only partially true. pte are created wronly in order to track 
> dirty state these days. The first write will lead to a fault that switches 
> the pte to writable. When the page undergoes writeback the page again 
> becomes write protected. Thus our need to effectively deal with 
> page_mkclean.

Well I was talking about anonymous memory.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30  0:28                   ` Jack Steiner
@ 2008-01-30  0:35                     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-30 13:37                     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-30  0:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Jack Steiner
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	Nick Piggin, kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra,
	linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, 29 Jan 2008, Jack Steiner wrote:

> > That is true for your implementation and to address Robin's issues. Jack: 
> > Is that true for the GRU?
> 
> I'm not sure I understand the question. The GRU never (currently) takes
> a reference on a page. It has no mechanism for tracking pages that
> were exported to the external TLBs.

Thats what I was looking for. Thanks. KVM takes a refcount and so does 
XPmem.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 23:43                 ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-30  0:34                   ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-30  0:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> > A user space spinlock plays into this??? That is irrelevant to the kernel. 
> > And we are discussing "your" placement of the invalidate_range not mine.
> 
> With "my" code, invalidate_range wasn't placed there at all, my
> modification to ptep_clear_flush already covered it in a automatic
> way, grep from the word fremap in my latest patch you won't find it,
> like you won't find any change to do_wp_page. Not sure why you keep
> thinking I added those invalidate_range when infact you did.

Well you moved the code at minimum. Hmmm... according 
http://marc.info/?l=linux-kernel&m=120114755620891&w=2 it was Robin.

> The user space spinlock plays also in declaring rdtscp unworkable to
> provide a monotone vgettimeofday w/o kernel locking.

No idea what you are talking about.

> My patch by calling invalidate_page inside ptep_clear_flush guaranteed
> that both the thread writing through sptes and the thread writing
> through linux ptes, couldn't possibly simultaneously write to two
> different physical pages.

But then the ptep_clear_flush will issue invalidate_page() for ranges 
that were already covered by invalidate_range(). There are multiple calls 
to clear the same spte.
>
> Your patch allows the thread writing through linux-pte to write to a
> new populated page while the old thread writing through sptes still
> writes to the old page. Is that safe? I don't know for sure. The fact
> the physical page backing the virtual address could change back and
> forth, perhaps invalidates the theory that somebody could possibly do
> some useful locking out of it relaying on all threads seeing the same
> physical page at the same time.

This is referrring to the remap issue not do_wp_page right?

> Actually above I was describing remap_file_pages not do_wp_page.

Ok.

The serialization of remap_file_pages does not seem that critical since we 
only take a read lock on mmap_sem here. There may already be concurrent 
access to pages from other processors while the ptes are remapped. So 
there is already some overlap.

We could take mmap_sem there writably and keep it writably for the case 
that we have an mmu notifier in the mm.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30  0:20                 ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-30  0:28                   ` Jack Steiner
  2008-01-30  0:35                     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-30 13:37                     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Jack Steiner @ 2008-01-30  0:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Andrea Arcangeli, Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus,
	Nick Piggin, kvm-devel, Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra,
	linux-kernel, linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 04:20:50PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> 
> > > invalidate_range after populate allows access to memory for which ptes 
> > > were zapped and the refcount was released.
> > 
> > The last refcount is released by the invalidate_range itself.
> 
> That is true for your implementation and to address Robin's issues. Jack: 
> Is that true for the GRU?

I'm not sure I understand the question. The GRU never (currently) takes
a reference on a page. It has no mechanism for tracking pages that
were exported to the external TLBs.

--- jack

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30  0:05                 ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-30  0:22                   ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-30  0:59                     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-30  0:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> On Wed, Jan 30, 2008 at 01:00:39AM +0100, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> > get_user_pages, regular linux writes don't fault unless it's
> > explicitly writeprotect, which is mandatory in a few archs, x86 not).
> 
> actually get_user_pages doesn't fault either but it calls into
> set_page_dirty, however get_user_pages (unlike a userland-write) at
> least requires mmap_sem in read mode and the PT lock as serialization,
> userland writes don't, they just go ahead and mark the pte in hardware
> w/o faults. Anyway anonymous memory these days always mapped with
> dirty bit set regardless, even for read-faults, after Nick finally
> rightfully cleaned up the zero-page trick.

That is only partially true. pte are created wronly in order to track 
dirty state these days. The first write will lead to a fault that switches 
the pte to writable. When the page undergoes writeback the page again 
becomes write protected. Thus our need to effectively deal with 
page_mkclean.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30  0:00               ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-30  0:05                 ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-30  0:20                 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-30  0:28                   ` Jack Steiner
  2008-01-30 16:11                 ` Robin Holt
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-30  0:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, 30 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> > invalidate_range after populate allows access to memory for which ptes 
> > were zapped and the refcount was released.
> 
> The last refcount is released by the invalidate_range itself.

That is true for your implementation and to address Robin's issues. Jack: 
Is that true for the GRU?


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-30  0:00               ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-30  0:05                 ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-30  0:22                   ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-30  0:20                 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-30 16:11                 ` Robin Holt
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-30  0:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Wed, Jan 30, 2008 at 01:00:39AM +0100, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> get_user_pages, regular linux writes don't fault unless it's
> explicitly writeprotect, which is mandatory in a few archs, x86 not).

actually get_user_pages doesn't fault either but it calls into
set_page_dirty, however get_user_pages (unlike a userland-write) at
least requires mmap_sem in read mode and the PT lock as serialization,
userland writes don't, they just go ahead and mark the pte in hardware
w/o faults. Anyway anonymous memory these days always mapped with
dirty bit set regardless, even for read-faults, after Nick finally
rightfully cleaned up the zero-page trick.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 22:39             ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-30  0:00               ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-30  0:05                 ` Andrea Arcangeli
                                   ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-30  0:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 02:39:00PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> If it does not run in write mode then concurrent faults are permissible 
> while we remap pages. Weird. Maybe we better handle this like individual
> page operations? Put the invalidate_page back into zap_pte. But then there 
> would be no callback w/o lock as required by Robin. Doing the 

The Robin requirements and the need to schedule are the source of the
complications indeed.

I posted all the KVM patches using mmu notifiers, today I reposted the
ones to work with your V2 (which crashes my host unlike my last
simpler mmu notifier patch but I also changed a few other variable
besides your mmu notifier changes, so I can't yet be sure it's a bug
in your V2, and the SMP regressions I fixed so far sure can't explain
the crashes because my KVM setup could never run in do_wp_page nor
remap_file_pages so it's something else I need to find ASAP).

Robin, if you don't mind, could you please post or upload somewhere
your GPLv2 code that registers itself in Christoph's V2 notifiers? Or
is it top secret? I wouldn't mind to have a look so I can better
understand what's the exact reason you're sleeping besides attempting
GFP_KERNEL allocations. Thanks!

> invalidate_range after populate allows access to memory for which ptes 
> were zapped and the refcount was released.

The last refcount is released by the invalidate_range itself.
 
> > All pins are gone by the time invalidate_page/range returns. But there
> > is no critical section between invalidate_page and the _later_
> > ptep_clear_flush. So get_user_pages is free to run and take the PT
> > lock before the ptep_clear_flush, find the linux pte still
> > instantiated, and to create a new spte, before ptep_clear_flush runs.
> 
> Hmmm... Right. Did not consider get_user_pages. A write to the page that 
> is not marked dirty would typically require a fault that will serialize.

The pte is already marked dirty (and this is the case only for
get_user_pages, regular linux writes don't fault unless it's
explicitly writeprotect, which is mandatory in a few archs, x86 not).

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 22:55               ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-29 23:43                 ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-30  0:34                   ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-29 23:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 02:55:56PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Tue, 29 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> 
> > But now I think there may be an issue with a third thread that may
> > show unsafe the removal of invalidate_page from ptep_clear_flush.
> > 
> > A third thread writing to a page through the linux-pte and the guest
> > VM writing to the same page through the sptes, will be writing on the
> > same physical page concurrently and using an userspace spinlock w/o
> > ever entering the kernel. With your patch that invalidate_range after
> > dropping the PT lock, the third thread may start writing on the new
> > page, when the guest is still writing to the old page through the
> > sptes. While this couldn't happen with my patch.
> 
> A user space spinlock plays into this??? That is irrelevant to the kernel. 
> And we are discussing "your" placement of the invalidate_range not mine.

With "my" code, invalidate_range wasn't placed there at all, my
modification to ptep_clear_flush already covered it in a automatic
way, grep from the word fremap in my latest patch you won't find it,
like you won't find any change to do_wp_page. Not sure why you keep
thinking I added those invalidate_range when infact you did.

The user space spinlock plays also in declaring rdtscp unworkable to
provide a monotone vgettimeofday w/o kernel locking.

My patch by calling invalidate_page inside ptep_clear_flush guaranteed
that both the thread writing through sptes and the thread writing
through linux ptes, couldn't possibly simultaneously write to two
different physical pages.

Your patch allows the thread writing through linux-pte to write to a
new populated page while the old thread writing through sptes still
writes to the old page. Is that safe? I don't know for sure. The fact
the physical page backing the virtual address could change back and
forth, perhaps invalidates the theory that somebody could possibly do
some useful locking out of it relaying on all threads seeing the same
physical page at the same time.

Anyway as long as invalidate_page/range happens after ptep_clear_flush
things are mostly ok.

> This is the scenario that I described before. You just need two threads.
> One thread is in do_wp_page and the other is writing through the spte. 
> We are in do_wp_page. Meaning the page is not writable. The writer will 

Actually above I was describing remap_file_pages not do_wp_page.

> have to take fault which will properly serialize access. It a bug if the 
> spte would allow write.

In that scenario because write is forbidden (unlike remap_file_pages)
like you said things should be ok. The spte reader will eventually see
the updates happening in the new page, as long as the spte invalidate
happens after ptep_clear_flush (i.e. with my incremental fix applied
to your code, or with my latest patch).

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 22:35             ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-29 22:55               ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-29 23:43                 ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-29 22:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, 29 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> But now I think there may be an issue with a third thread that may
> show unsafe the removal of invalidate_page from ptep_clear_flush.
> 
> A third thread writing to a page through the linux-pte and the guest
> VM writing to the same page through the sptes, will be writing on the
> same physical page concurrently and using an userspace spinlock w/o
> ever entering the kernel. With your patch that invalidate_range after
> dropping the PT lock, the third thread may start writing on the new
> page, when the guest is still writing to the old page through the
> sptes. While this couldn't happen with my patch.

A user space spinlock plays into this??? That is irrelevant to the kernel. 
And we are discussing "your" placement of the invalidate_range not mine.

This is the scenario that I described before. You just need two threads.
One thread is in do_wp_page and the other is writing through the spte. 
We are in do_wp_page. Meaning the page is not writable. The writer will 
have to take fault which will properly serialize access. It a bug if the 
spte would allow write.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 22:02           ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-29 22:39             ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-30  0:00               ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-29 22:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

n Tue, 29 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> hmm, "there" where? When I said it was taken in readonly mode I meant
> for the quoted code (it would be at the top if it wasn't cut), so I
> quote below again:
> 
> > > +   mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
> > > +                           address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
> > >     page_table = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address, &ptl);
> > >     if (likely(pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte))) {
> > >             if (old_page) {
> 
> The "there" for me was do_wp_page.

Maybe we better focus on one call at a time?

> Even for the code you quoted in freemap.c, the has_write_lock is set
> to 1 _only_ for the very first time you call sys_remap_file_pages on a
> VMA. Only the transition of the VMA between linear to nonlinear
> requires the mmap in write mode. So you can be sure all freemap code
> 99% of the time is populating (overwriting) already present ptes with
> only the mmap_sem in readonly mode like do_wp_page. It would be
> unnecessary to populate the nonlinear range with the mmap in write
> mode. Only the "vma" mangling requires the mmap_sem in write mode, the
> pte modifications only requires the PT_lock + mmap_sem in read mode.
> 
> Effectively the first invocation of populate_range runs with the
> mmap_sem in write mode, I wonder why, there seem to be no good reason
> for that. I guess it's a bit that should be optimized, by calling
> downgrade_write before calling populate_range even for the first time
> the vma switches from linear to nonlinear (after the vma has been
> fully updated to the new status). But for sure all later invocations
> runs populate_range with the semaphore readonly like the rest of the
> VM does when instantiating ptes in the page faults.

If it does not run in write mode then concurrent faults are permissible 
while we remap pages. Weird. Maybe we better handle this like individual
page operations? Put the invalidate_page back into zap_pte. But then there 
would be no callback w/o lock as required by Robin. Doing the 
invalidate_range after populate allows access to memory for which ptes 
were zapped and the refcount was released.

> All pins are gone by the time invalidate_page/range returns. But there
> is no critical section between invalidate_page and the _later_
> ptep_clear_flush. So get_user_pages is free to run and take the PT
> lock before the ptep_clear_flush, find the linux pte still
> instantiated, and to create a new spte, before ptep_clear_flush runs.

Hmmm... Right. Did not consider get_user_pages. A write to the page that 
is not marked dirty would typically require a fault that will serialize.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 21:53           ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-29 22:35             ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-29 22:55               ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-29 22:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 01:53:05PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Tue, 29 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> 
> > > We invalidate the range *after* populating it? Isnt it okay to establish 
> > > references while populate_range() runs?
> > 
> > It's not ok because that function can very well overwrite existing and
> > present ptes (it's actually the nonlinear common case fast path for
> > db). With your code the sptes created between invalidate_range and
> > populate_range, will keep pointing forever to the old physical page
> > instead of the newly populated one.
> 
> Seems though that the mmap_sem is taken for regular vmas writably and will 
> hold off new mappings.

It's taken writable due to the code being inefficient the first time,
all later times remap_populate_range overwrites ptes with the mmap_sem
in readonly mode (finally rightfully so). The first remap_file_pages I
guess it's irrelevant to optimize, the whole point of nonlinear is to
call remap_file_pages zillon of times on the same vma, overwriting
present ptes the whole time, so if the first time the mutex is not
readonly it probably doesn't make a difference.

get_user_pages invoked by the kvm spte-fault, can happen between
invalidate_range and populate_range. If it can't happen, for sure
nobody pointed out a good reason why it can't happen. The kvm page
faults as well rightfully only takes the mmap_sem in readonly mode, so
get_user_pages is only called internally to gfn_to_page with the
readonly semaphore.

With my approach ptep_clear_flush was not only invalidating sptes
after ptep_clear_flush, but it was also invalidating them inside the
PT lock, so it was totally obvious there could be no race vs
get_user_pages.

> > I'm also asking myself if it's a smp race not to call
> > mmu_notifier(invalidate_page) between ptep_clear_flush and set_pte_at
> > in install_file_pte. Probably not because the guest VM running in a
> > different thread would need to serialize outside the install_file_pte
> > code with the task running install_file_pte, if it wants to be sure to
> > write either all its data to the old or the new page. Certainly doing
> > the invalidate_page inside the PT lock was obviously safe but I hope
> > this is safe and this can accommodate your needs too.
> 
> But that would be doing two invalidates on one pte. One range and one page 
> invalidate.

Yes, but it would have been micro-optimized later if you really cared,
by simply changing ptep_clear_flush to __ptep_clear_flush, no big
deal. Definitely all methods must be robust about them being called
multiple times, even if the rmap finds no spte mapping such host
virtual address.

> Hmmm... So we could only do an invalidate_page here? Drop the strange 
> invalidate_range()?

That's a question you should answer.

> > > > @@ -1676,6 +1674,8 @@ gotten:
> > > >  		page_cache_release(old_page);
> > > >  unlock:
> > > >  	pte_unmap_unlock(page_table, ptl);
> > > > +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
> > > > +				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
> > > >  	if (dirty_page) {
> > > >  		if (vma->vm_file)
> > > >  			file_update_time(vma->vm_file);
> > > 
> > > Now we invalidate the page after the transaction is complete. This means 
> > > external pte can persist while we change the pte? Possibly even dirty the 
> > > page?
> > 
> > Yes, and the only reason this can be safe is for the reason explained
> > at the top of the email, if the other cpu wants to serialize to be
> > sure to write in the "new" page, it has to serialize with the
> > page-fault but to serialize it has to wait the page fault to return
> > (example: we're not going to call futex code until the page fault
> > returns).
> 
> Serialize how? mmap_sem?

No, that's a different angle.

But now I think there may be an issue with a third thread that may
show unsafe the removal of invalidate_page from ptep_clear_flush.

A third thread writing to a page through the linux-pte and the guest
VM writing to the same page through the sptes, will be writing on the
same physical page concurrently and using an userspace spinlock w/o
ever entering the kernel. With your patch that invalidate_range after
dropping the PT lock, the third thread may start writing on the new
page, when the guest is still writing to the old page through the
sptes. While this couldn't happen with my patch.

So really at the light of the third thread, it seems your approach is
smp racey and ptep_clear_flush should invalidate_page as last thing
before returning. My patch was enforcing that ptep_clear_flush would
stop the third thread in a linux page fault, and to drop the spte,
before the new mapping could be instantiated in both the linux pte and
in the sptes. The PT lock provided the needed serialization. This
ensured the third thread and the guest VM would always write on the
same physical page even if the first thread runs a flood of
remap_file_pages on that same page moving it around the pagecache. So
it seems I found a unfixable smp race in pretending to invalidate in a
sleeping place.

Perhaps you want to change the PT lock to a mutex instead of a
spinlock, that may be your only chance to sleep while maintaining 100%
memory coherency with threads.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 21:35         ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-29 22:02           ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-29 22:39             ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-29 22:02 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 01:35:58PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Tue, 29 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> 
> > > It seems to be okay to invalidate range if you hold mmap_sem writably. In 
> > > that case no additional faults can happen that would create new ptes.
> > 
> > In that place the mmap_sem is taken but in readonly mode. I never rely
> > on the mmap_sem in the mmu notifier methods. Not invoking the notifier
> 
> Well it seems that we have to rely on mmap_sem otherwise concurrent faults 
> can occur. The mmap_sem seems to be acquired for write there.
      	     	 	  	      	       	   	 ^^^^^
> 
>               if (!has_write_lock) {
>                         up_read(&mm->mmap_sem);
>                         down_write(&mm->mmap_sem);
>                         has_write_lock = 1;
>                         goto retry;
>                 }


hmm, "there" where? When I said it was taken in readonly mode I meant
for the quoted code (it would be at the top if it wasn't cut), so I
quote below again:

> > +   mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
> > +                           address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
> >     page_table = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address, &ptl);
> >     if (likely(pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte))) {
> >             if (old_page) {

The "there" for me was do_wp_page.

Even for the code you quoted in freemap.c, the has_write_lock is set
to 1 _only_ for the very first time you call sys_remap_file_pages on a
VMA. Only the transition of the VMA between linear to nonlinear
requires the mmap in write mode. So you can be sure all freemap code
99% of the time is populating (overwriting) already present ptes with
only the mmap_sem in readonly mode like do_wp_page. It would be
unnecessary to populate the nonlinear range with the mmap in write
mode. Only the "vma" mangling requires the mmap_sem in write mode, the
pte modifications only requires the PT_lock + mmap_sem in read mode.

Effectively the first invocation of populate_range runs with the
mmap_sem in write mode, I wonder why, there seem to be no good reason
for that. I guess it's a bit that should be optimized, by calling
downgrade_write before calling populate_range even for the first time
the vma switches from linear to nonlinear (after the vma has been
fully updated to the new status). But for sure all later invocations
runs populate_range with the semaphore readonly like the rest of the
VM does when instantiating ptes in the page faults.

> > before releasing the PT lock adds quite some uncertainty on the smp
> > safety of the spte invalidates, because the pte may be unmapped and
> > remapped by a minor fault before invalidate_range is invoked, but I
> > didn't figure out a kernel crashing race yet thanks to the pin we take
> > through get_user_pages (and only thanks to it). The requirement is
> > that invalidate_range is invoked after the last ptep_clear_flush or it
> > leaks pins that's why I had to move it at the end.
>  
> So "pins" means a reference count right? I still do not get why you 

Yes.

> have refcount problems. You take a refcount when you export the page 
> through KVM and then drop the refcount in invalidate page right?

Yes.

> So you walk through the KVM ptes and drop the refcount for each spte you 
> encounter?

Yes.

All pins are gone by the time invalidate_page/range returns. But there
is no critical section between invalidate_page and the _later_
ptep_clear_flush. So get_user_pages is free to run and take the PT
lock before the ptep_clear_flush, find the linux pte still
instantiated, and to create a new spte, before ptep_clear_flush runs.

Think of why the tlb flushes are being called at the end of
ptep_clear_flush. The mmu notifier invalidate has to be called after
for the exact same reason.

Perhaps somebody else should explain this, I started exposing this
smp race the moment after I've seen the backwards ordering being
proposed in export-notifier-v1, sorry if I'm not clear enough.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 21:36         ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-29 21:53           ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-29 22:35             ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-29 21:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, 29 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> > We invalidate the range *after* populating it? Isnt it okay to establish 
> > references while populate_range() runs?
> 
> It's not ok because that function can very well overwrite existing and
> present ptes (it's actually the nonlinear common case fast path for
> db). With your code the sptes created between invalidate_range and
> populate_range, will keep pointing forever to the old physical page
> instead of the newly populated one.

Seems though that the mmap_sem is taken for regular vmas writably and will 
hold off new mappings.

> I'm also asking myself if it's a smp race not to call
> mmu_notifier(invalidate_page) between ptep_clear_flush and set_pte_at
> in install_file_pte. Probably not because the guest VM running in a
> different thread would need to serialize outside the install_file_pte
> code with the task running install_file_pte, if it wants to be sure to
> write either all its data to the old or the new page. Certainly doing
> the invalidate_page inside the PT lock was obviously safe but I hope
> this is safe and this can accommodate your needs too.

But that would be doing two invalidates on one pte. One range and one page 
invalidate.

> > > diff --git a/mm/memory.c b/mm/memory.c
> > > --- a/mm/memory.c
> > > +++ b/mm/memory.c
> > > @@ -1639,8 +1639,6 @@ gotten:
> > >  	/*
> > >  	 * Re-check the pte - we dropped the lock
> > >  	 */
> > > -	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
> > > -				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
> > >  	page_table = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address, &ptl);
> > >  	if (likely(pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte))) {
> > >  		if (old_page) {
> > 
> > What we did is to invalidate the page (?!) before taking the pte lock. In 
> > the lock we replace the pte to point to another page. This means that we 
> > need to clear stale information. So we zap it before. If another reference 
> > is established after taking the spinlock then the pte contents have 
> > changed at the cirtical section fails.
> > 
> > Before the critical section starts we have gotten an extra refcount on the 
> > original page so the page cannot vanish from under us.
> 
> The problem is the missing invalidate_page/range _after_
> ptep_clear_flush. If a spte is built between invalidate_range and
> pte_offset_map_lock, it will remain pointing to the old page
> forever. Nothing will be called to invalidate that stale spte built
> between invalidate_page/range and ptep_clear_flush. This is why for
> the last few days I kept saying the mmu notifiers have to be invoked
> _after_ ptep_clear_flush and never before (remember the export
> notifier?). No idea how you can deal with this in your code, certainly
> for KVM sptes that's backwards and unworkable ordering of operation
> (exactly as backwards are doing the tlb flush before pte_clear in
> ptep_clear_flush, think spte as a tlb, you can't flush the tlb before
> clearing/updating the pte or it's smp unsafe).

Hmmm... So we could only do an invalidate_page here? Drop the strange 
invalidate_range()?

> 
> > > @@ -1676,6 +1674,8 @@ gotten:
> > >  		page_cache_release(old_page);
> > >  unlock:
> > >  	pte_unmap_unlock(page_table, ptl);
> > > +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
> > > +				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
> > >  	if (dirty_page) {
> > >  		if (vma->vm_file)
> > >  			file_update_time(vma->vm_file);
> > 
> > Now we invalidate the page after the transaction is complete. This means 
> > external pte can persist while we change the pte? Possibly even dirty the 
> > page?
> 
> Yes, and the only reason this can be safe is for the reason explained
> at the top of the email, if the other cpu wants to serialize to be
> sure to write in the "new" page, it has to serialize with the
> page-fault but to serialize it has to wait the page fault to return
> (example: we're not going to call futex code until the page fault
> returns).

Serialize how? mmap_sem?
 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 20:30       ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-29 21:36         ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-29 21:53           ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-29 21:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 12:30:06PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> On Tue, 29 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> 
> > diff --git a/mm/fremap.c b/mm/fremap.c
> > --- a/mm/fremap.c
> > +++ b/mm/fremap.c
> > @@ -212,8 +212,8 @@ asmlinkage long sys_remap_file_pages(uns
> >  		spin_unlock(&mapping->i_mmap_lock);
> >  	}
> >  
> > +	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
> >  	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, start + size, 0);
> > -	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
> >  	if (!err && !(flags & MAP_NONBLOCK)) {
> >  		if (unlikely(has_write_lock)) {
> >  			downgrade_write(&mm->mmap_sem);
> 
> We invalidate the range *after* populating it? Isnt it okay to establish 
> references while populate_range() runs?

It's not ok because that function can very well overwrite existing and
present ptes (it's actually the nonlinear common case fast path for
db). With your code the sptes created between invalidate_range and
populate_range, will keep pointing forever to the old physical page
instead of the newly populated one.

I'm also asking myself if it's a smp race not to call
mmu_notifier(invalidate_page) between ptep_clear_flush and set_pte_at
in install_file_pte. Probably not because the guest VM running in a
different thread would need to serialize outside the install_file_pte
code with the task running install_file_pte, if it wants to be sure to
write either all its data to the old or the new page. Certainly doing
the invalidate_page inside the PT lock was obviously safe but I hope
this is safe and this can accommodate your needs too.

> > diff --git a/mm/memory.c b/mm/memory.c
> > --- a/mm/memory.c
> > +++ b/mm/memory.c
> > @@ -1639,8 +1639,6 @@ gotten:
> >  	/*
> >  	 * Re-check the pte - we dropped the lock
> >  	 */
> > -	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
> > -				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
> >  	page_table = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address, &ptl);
> >  	if (likely(pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte))) {
> >  		if (old_page) {
> 
> What we did is to invalidate the page (?!) before taking the pte lock. In 
> the lock we replace the pte to point to another page. This means that we 
> need to clear stale information. So we zap it before. If another reference 
> is established after taking the spinlock then the pte contents have 
> changed at the cirtical section fails.
> 
> Before the critical section starts we have gotten an extra refcount on the 
> original page so the page cannot vanish from under us.

The problem is the missing invalidate_page/range _after_
ptep_clear_flush. If a spte is built between invalidate_range and
pte_offset_map_lock, it will remain pointing to the old page
forever. Nothing will be called to invalidate that stale spte built
between invalidate_page/range and ptep_clear_flush. This is why for
the last few days I kept saying the mmu notifiers have to be invoked
_after_ ptep_clear_flush and never before (remember the export
notifier?). No idea how you can deal with this in your code, certainly
for KVM sptes that's backwards and unworkable ordering of operation
(exactly as backwards are doing the tlb flush before pte_clear in
ptep_clear_flush, think spte as a tlb, you can't flush the tlb before
clearing/updating the pte or it's smp unsafe).

> > @@ -1676,6 +1674,8 @@ gotten:
> >  		page_cache_release(old_page);
> >  unlock:
> >  	pte_unmap_unlock(page_table, ptl);
> > +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
> > +				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
> >  	if (dirty_page) {
> >  		if (vma->vm_file)
> >  			file_update_time(vma->vm_file);
> 
> Now we invalidate the page after the transaction is complete. This means 
> external pte can persist while we change the pte? Possibly even dirty the 
> page?

Yes, and the only reason this can be safe is for the reason explained
at the top of the email, if the other cpu wants to serialize to be
sure to write in the "new" page, it has to serialize with the
page-fault but to serialize it has to wait the page fault to return
(example: we're not going to call futex code until the page fault
returns).

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 21:17       ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-29 21:35         ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-29 22:02           ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-29 21:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, 29 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> > It seems to be okay to invalidate range if you hold mmap_sem writably. In 
> > that case no additional faults can happen that would create new ptes.
> 
> In that place the mmap_sem is taken but in readonly mode. I never rely
> on the mmap_sem in the mmu notifier methods. Not invoking the notifier

Well it seems that we have to rely on mmap_sem otherwise concurrent faults 
can occur. The mmap_sem seems to be acquired for write there.

              if (!has_write_lock) {
                        up_read(&mm->mmap_sem);
                        down_write(&mm->mmap_sem);
                        has_write_lock = 1;
                        goto retry;
                }


> before releasing the PT lock adds quite some uncertainty on the smp
> safety of the spte invalidates, because the pte may be unmapped and
> remapped by a minor fault before invalidate_range is invoked, but I
> didn't figure out a kernel crashing race yet thanks to the pin we take
> through get_user_pages (and only thanks to it). The requirement is
> that invalidate_range is invoked after the last ptep_clear_flush or it
> leaks pins that's why I had to move it at the end.
 
So "pins" means a reference count right? I still do not get why you 
have refcount problems. You take a refcount when you export the page 
through KVM and then drop the refcount in invalidate page right?

So you walk through the KVM ptes and drop the refcount for each spte you 
encounter?



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 19:55     ` Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-29 21:17       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-29 21:35         ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-29 21:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, Jan 29, 2008 at 11:55:10AM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> I am not sure. AFAICT you wrote that code.

Actually I didn't need to change a single line in do_wp_page because
ptep_clear_flush was already doing everything transparently for
me. This was the memory.c part of my last patch I posted, it only
touches zap_page_range, remap_pfn_range and apply_to_page_range.

diff --git a/mm/memory.c b/mm/memory.c
--- a/mm/memory.c
+++ b/mm/memory.c
@@ -889,6 +889,7 @@ unsigned long zap_page_range(struct vm_a
 	end = unmap_vmas(&tlb, vma, address, end, &nr_accounted, details);
 	if (tlb)
 		tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, address, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address, end);
 	return end;
 }
 
@@ -1317,7 +1318,7 @@ int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struc
 {
 	pgd_t *pgd;
 	unsigned long next;
-	unsigned long end = addr + PAGE_ALIGN(size);
+	unsigned long start = addr, end = addr + PAGE_ALIGN(size);
 	struct mm_struct *mm = vma->vm_mm;
 	int err;
 
@@ -1358,6 +1359,7 @@ int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struc
 		if (err)
 			break;
 	} while (pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, end);
 	return err;
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL(remap_pfn_range);
@@ -1441,7 +1443,7 @@ int apply_to_page_range(struct mm_struct
 {
 	pgd_t *pgd;
 	unsigned long next;
-	unsigned long end = addr + size;
+	unsigned long start = addr, end = addr + size;
 	int err;
 
 	BUG_ON(addr >= end);
@@ -1452,6 +1454,7 @@ int apply_to_page_range(struct mm_struct
 		if (err)
 			break;
 	} while (pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, end);
 	return err;
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(apply_to_page_range);

> It seems to be okay to invalidate range if you hold mmap_sem writably. In 
> that case no additional faults can happen that would create new ptes.

In that place the mmap_sem is taken but in readonly mode. I never rely
on the mmap_sem in the mmu notifier methods. Not invoking the notifier
before releasing the PT lock adds quite some uncertainty on the smp
safety of the spte invalidates, because the pte may be unmapped and
remapped by a minor fault before invalidate_range is invoked, but I
didn't figure out a kernel crashing race yet thanks to the pin we take
through get_user_pages (and only thanks to it). The requirement is
that invalidate_range is invoked after the last ptep_clear_flush or it
leaks pins that's why I had to move it at the end.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 18:28     ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-29 20:30       ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-29 21:36         ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-29 20:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, 29 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> diff --git a/mm/fremap.c b/mm/fremap.c
> --- a/mm/fremap.c
> +++ b/mm/fremap.c
> @@ -212,8 +212,8 @@ asmlinkage long sys_remap_file_pages(uns
>  		spin_unlock(&mapping->i_mmap_lock);
>  	}
>  
> +	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
>  	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, start + size, 0);
> -	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
>  	if (!err && !(flags & MAP_NONBLOCK)) {
>  		if (unlikely(has_write_lock)) {
>  			downgrade_write(&mm->mmap_sem);

We invalidate the range *after* populating it? Isnt it okay to establish 
references while populate_range() runs?

> diff --git a/mm/memory.c b/mm/memory.c
> --- a/mm/memory.c
> +++ b/mm/memory.c
> @@ -1639,8 +1639,6 @@ gotten:
>  	/*
>  	 * Re-check the pte - we dropped the lock
>  	 */
> -	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
> -				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
>  	page_table = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address, &ptl);
>  	if (likely(pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte))) {
>  		if (old_page) {

What we did is to invalidate the page (?!) before taking the pte lock. In 
the lock we replace the pte to point to another page. This means that we 
need to clear stale information. So we zap it before. If another reference 
is established after taking the spinlock then the pte contents have 
changed at the cirtical section fails.

Before the critical section starts we have gotten an extra refcount on the 
original page so the page cannot vanish from under us.

> @@ -1676,6 +1674,8 @@ gotten:
>  		page_cache_release(old_page);
>  unlock:
>  	pte_unmap_unlock(page_table, ptl);
> +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
> +				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
>  	if (dirty_page) {
>  		if (vma->vm_file)
>  			file_update_time(vma->vm_file);

Now we invalidate the page after the transaction is complete. This means 
external pte can persist while we change the pte? Possibly even dirty the 
page?




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 16:20   ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-29 18:28     ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-29 19:55     ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-29 21:17       ` Andrea Arcangeli
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-29 19:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Tue, 29 Jan 2008, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:

> > +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
> > +				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
> >  	page_table = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address, &ptl);
> >  	if (likely(pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte))) {
> >  		if (old_page) {
> 
> What's the point of invalidate_range when the size is PAGE_SIZE? And
> how can it be right to invalidate_range _before_ ptep_clear_flush?

I am not sure. AFAICT you wrote that code.

It seems to be okay to invalidate range if you hold mmap_sem writably. In 
that case no additional faults can happen that would create new ptes.




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-29 16:20   ` Andrea Arcangeli
@ 2008-01-29 18:28     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-29 20:30       ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-29 19:55     ` Christoph Lameter
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-29 18:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

Christoph, the below patch should fix the current leak of the pinned
pages. I hope the page-pin that should be dropped by the
invalidate_range op, is enough to prevent the "physical page" mapped
on that "mm+address" to change before invalidate_range returns. If
that would ever happen, there would be a coherency loss between the
guest VM writes and the writes coming from userland on the same
mm+address from a different thread (qemu, whatever). invalidate_page
before PT lock was obviously safe. Now we entirely relay on the pin to
prevent the page to change before invalidate_range returns. If the pte
is unmapped and the page is mapped back in with a minor fault that's
ok, as long as the physical page remains the same for that mm+address,
until all sptes are gone.

Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com>

diff --git a/mm/fremap.c b/mm/fremap.c
--- a/mm/fremap.c
+++ b/mm/fremap.c
@@ -212,8 +212,8 @@ asmlinkage long sys_remap_file_pages(uns
 		spin_unlock(&mapping->i_mmap_lock);
 	}
 
+	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
 	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, start + size, 0);
-	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
 	if (!err && !(flags & MAP_NONBLOCK)) {
 		if (unlikely(has_write_lock)) {
 			downgrade_write(&mm->mmap_sem);
diff --git a/mm/memory.c b/mm/memory.c
--- a/mm/memory.c
+++ b/mm/memory.c
@@ -1639,8 +1639,6 @@ gotten:
 	/*
 	 * Re-check the pte - we dropped the lock
 	 */
-	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
-				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
 	page_table = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address, &ptl);
 	if (likely(pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte))) {
 		if (old_page) {
@@ -1676,6 +1674,8 @@ gotten:
 		page_cache_release(old_page);
 unlock:
 	pte_unmap_unlock(page_table, ptl);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
+				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
 	if (dirty_page) {
 		if (vma->vm_file)
 			file_update_time(vma->vm_file);

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* Re: [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-28 20:28 ` [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-29 16:20   ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-29 18:28     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  2008-01-29 19:55     ` Christoph Lameter
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 129+ messages in thread
From: Andrea Arcangeli @ 2008-01-29 16:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christoph Lameter
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

On Mon, Jan 28, 2008 at 12:28:42PM -0800, Christoph Lameter wrote:
> Index: linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c
> ===================================================================
> --- linux-2.6.orig/mm/fremap.c	2008-01-25 19:31:05.000000000 -0800
> +++ linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c	2008-01-25 19:32:49.000000000 -0800
> @@ -15,6 +15,7 @@
>  #include <linux/rmap.h>
>  #include <linux/module.h>
>  #include <linux/syscalls.h>
> +#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
>  
>  #include <asm/mmu_context.h>
>  #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
> @@ -211,6 +212,7 @@ asmlinkage long sys_remap_file_pages(uns
>  		spin_unlock(&mapping->i_mmap_lock);
>  	}
>  
> +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, start + size, 0);
>  	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);

How can it be right to invalidate_range _before_ ptep_clear_flush?

> @@ -1634,6 +1639,8 @@ gotten:
>  	/*
>  	 * Re-check the pte - we dropped the lock
>  	 */
> +	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
> +				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
>  	page_table = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address, &ptl);
>  	if (likely(pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte))) {
>  		if (old_page) {

What's the point of invalidate_range when the size is PAGE_SIZE? And
how can it be right to invalidate_range _before_ ptep_clear_flush?

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

* [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges
  2008-01-28 20:28 [patch 0/6] [RFC] MMU Notifiers V2 Christoph Lameter
@ 2008-01-28 20:28 ` Christoph Lameter
  2008-01-29 16:20   ` Andrea Arcangeli
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 129+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Lameter @ 2008-01-28 20:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrea Arcangeli
  Cc: Robin Holt, Avi Kivity, Izik Eidus, Nick Piggin, kvm-devel,
	Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Peter Zijlstra, steiner, linux-kernel,
	linux-mm, daniel.blueman, Hugh Dickins

[-- Attachment #1: mmu_invalidate_range_callbacks --]
[-- Type: text/plain, Size: 4671 bytes --]

The invalidation of address ranges in a mm_struct needs to be
performed when pages are removed or permissions etc change.
Most of the VM address space changes can use the range invalidate
callback.

invalidate_range() is generally called with mmap_sem held but
no spinlocks are active. If invalidate_range() is called with
locks held then we pass a flag into invalidate_range()

Comments state that mmap_sem must be held for
remap_pfn_range() but various drivers do not seem to do this.

Signed-off-by: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@qumranet.com>
Signed-off-by: Robin Holt <holt@sgi.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <clameter@sgi.com>

---
 mm/fremap.c  |    2 ++
 mm/hugetlb.c |    2 ++
 mm/memory.c  |   11 +++++++++--
 mm/mmap.c    |    1 +
 4 files changed, 14 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

Index: linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/fremap.c	2008-01-25 19:31:05.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/fremap.c	2008-01-25 19:32:49.000000000 -0800
@@ -15,6 +15,7 @@
 #include <linux/rmap.h>
 #include <linux/module.h>
 #include <linux/syscalls.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/mmu_context.h>
 #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
@@ -211,6 +212,7 @@ asmlinkage long sys_remap_file_pages(uns
 		spin_unlock(&mapping->i_mmap_lock);
 	}
 
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, start + size, 0);
 	err = populate_range(mm, vma, start, size, pgoff);
 	if (!err && !(flags & MAP_NONBLOCK)) {
 		if (unlikely(has_write_lock)) {
Index: linux-2.6/mm/memory.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/memory.c	2008-01-25 19:31:05.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/memory.c	2008-01-25 19:32:49.000000000 -0800
@@ -50,6 +50,7 @@
 #include <linux/delayacct.h>
 #include <linux/init.h>
 #include <linux/writeback.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/pgalloc.h>
 #include <asm/uaccess.h>
@@ -891,6 +892,8 @@ unsigned long zap_page_range(struct vm_a
 	end = unmap_vmas(&tlb, vma, address, end, &nr_accounted, details);
 	if (tlb)
 		tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, address, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address, end,
+		(details ? (details->i_mmap_lock != NULL)  : 0));
 	return end;
 }
 
@@ -1319,7 +1322,7 @@ int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struc
 {
 	pgd_t *pgd;
 	unsigned long next;
-	unsigned long end = addr + PAGE_ALIGN(size);
+	unsigned long start = addr, end = addr + PAGE_ALIGN(size);
 	struct mm_struct *mm = vma->vm_mm;
 	int err;
 
@@ -1360,6 +1363,7 @@ int remap_pfn_range(struct vm_area_struc
 		if (err)
 			break;
 	} while (pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, end, 0);
 	return err;
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL(remap_pfn_range);
@@ -1443,7 +1447,7 @@ int apply_to_page_range(struct mm_struct
 {
 	pgd_t *pgd;
 	unsigned long next;
-	unsigned long end = addr + size;
+	unsigned long start = addr, end = addr + size;
 	int err;
 
 	BUG_ON(addr >= end);
@@ -1454,6 +1458,7 @@ int apply_to_page_range(struct mm_struct
 		if (err)
 			break;
 	} while (pgd++, addr = next, addr != end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, end, 0);
 	return err;
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(apply_to_page_range);
@@ -1634,6 +1639,8 @@ gotten:
 	/*
 	 * Re-check the pte - we dropped the lock
 	 */
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, address,
+				address + PAGE_SIZE - 1, 0);
 	page_table = pte_offset_map_lock(mm, pmd, address, &ptl);
 	if (likely(pte_same(*page_table, orig_pte))) {
 		if (old_page) {
Index: linux-2.6/mm/mmap.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/mmap.c	2008-01-25 19:31:05.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/mmap.c	2008-01-25 19:32:49.000000000 -0800
@@ -1748,6 +1748,7 @@ static void unmap_region(struct mm_struc
 	free_pgtables(&tlb, vma, prev? prev->vm_end: FIRST_USER_ADDRESS,
 				 next? next->vm_start: 0);
 	tlb_finish_mmu(tlb, start, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, end, 0);
 }
 
 /*
Index: linux-2.6/mm/hugetlb.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.orig/mm/hugetlb.c	2008-01-25 19:33:58.000000000 -0800
+++ linux-2.6/mm/hugetlb.c	2008-01-25 19:34:13.000000000 -0800
@@ -14,6 +14,7 @@
 #include <linux/mempolicy.h>
 #include <linux/cpuset.h>
 #include <linux/mutex.h>
+#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
 
 #include <asm/page.h>
 #include <asm/pgtable.h>
@@ -763,6 +764,7 @@ void __unmap_hugepage_range(struct vm_ar
 	}
 	spin_unlock(&mm->page_table_lock);
 	flush_tlb_range(vma, start, end);
+	mmu_notifier(invalidate_range, mm, start, end, 1);
 	list_for_each_entry_safe(page, tmp, &page_list, lru) {
 		list_del(&page->lru);
 		put_page(page);

-- 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 129+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2008-03-05  0:53 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 129+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2008-02-15  6:48 [patch 0/6] MMU Notifiers V7 Christoph Lameter
2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 1/6] mmu_notifier: Core code Christoph Lameter
2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
2008-02-16  8:45     ` Avi Kivity
2008-02-16  8:56       ` Andrew Morton
2008-02-16  9:21         ` Avi Kivity
2008-02-16 10:41     ` Brice Goglin
2008-02-16 10:58       ` Andrew Morton
2008-02-16 19:31         ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-16 19:21     ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-17  3:01       ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-17 12:24         ` Robin Holt
2008-02-17  5:04     ` Doug Maxey
2008-02-18 22:33   ` Roland Dreier
2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges Christoph Lameter
2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
2008-02-16 19:26     ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-19  8:54   ` Nick Piggin
2008-02-19 13:34     ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-27 22:23       ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-27 23:57         ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-19 23:08   ` Nick Piggin
2008-02-20  1:00     ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-20  3:00       ` Robin Holt
2008-02-20  3:11         ` Nick Piggin
2008-02-20  3:19           ` Robin Holt
2008-02-27 22:39       ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-28  0:38         ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-27 22:35     ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-27 22:42       ` Jack Steiner
2008-02-28  0:10       ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-28  0:11       ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-28  0:14         ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-28  0:52           ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-28  1:03             ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-28  1:10               ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-28 18:43                 ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-29  0:55                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-29  0:59                     ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-29 13:13                       ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-29 19:55                         ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-29 20:17                           ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-29 21:03                             ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-29 21:23                               ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-29 21:29                                 ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-29 21:34                                 ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-29 21:48                                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-29 22:12                                     ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-29 22:41                                       ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-28 10:53             ` Robin Holt
2008-03-03  5:11       ` Nick Piggin
2008-03-03 19:28         ` Christoph Lameter
2008-03-03 19:50           ` Nick Piggin
2008-03-04 18:58             ` Christoph Lameter
2008-03-05  0:52               ` Nick Piggin
2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 3/6] mmu_notifier: invalidate_page callbacks Christoph Lameter
2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
2008-02-16 11:07     ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-16 19:22     ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-16 19:54       ` Avi Kivity
2008-02-19  8:46       ` Nick Piggin
2008-02-19 13:30         ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-18  1:51     ` Nick Piggin
2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 4/6] mmu_notifier: Skeleton driver for a simple mmu_notifier Christoph Lameter
2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 5/6] mmu_notifier: Support for drivers with revers maps (f.e. for XPmem) Christoph Lameter
2008-02-16  3:37   ` Andrew Morton
2008-02-16 19:28     ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-19 23:55   ` Nick Piggin
2008-02-20  3:12     ` Robin Holt
2008-02-20  3:51       ` Nick Piggin
2008-02-20  9:00         ` Robin Holt
2008-02-20  9:05           ` Robin Holt
2008-02-21  4:20           ` Nick Piggin
2008-02-21 10:58             ` Robin Holt
2008-02-26  6:11               ` Nick Piggin
2008-02-26  7:21                 ` [ofa-general] " Gleb Natapov
2008-02-26  8:52                   ` Nick Piggin
2008-02-26  9:38                     ` Gleb Natapov
2008-02-26  9:52                       ` KOSAKI Motohiro
2008-02-26 12:28                     ` Robin Holt
2008-02-26 12:29                 ` Robin Holt
2008-02-27 22:43     ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-28  0:42       ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-28  1:01         ` Christoph Lameter
2008-02-15  6:49 ` [patch 6/6] mmu_rmap_notifier: Skeleton for complex driver that uses its own rmaps Christoph Lameter
2008-02-16 10:48 ` [PATCH] KVM swapping with MMU Notifiers V7 Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-16 11:08   ` Andrew Morton
2008-02-18 12:17     ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-02-16 11:51   ` Robin Holt
2008-02-18 12:35     ` Andrea Arcangeli
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2008-02-08 22:06 [patch 0/6] MMU Notifiers V6 Christoph Lameter
2008-02-08 22:06 ` [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges Christoph Lameter
2008-01-30  2:29 [patch 0/6] [RFC] MMU Notifiers V3 Christoph Lameter
2008-01-30  2:29 ` [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges Christoph Lameter
2008-01-28 20:28 [patch 0/6] [RFC] MMU Notifiers V2 Christoph Lameter
2008-01-28 20:28 ` [patch 2/6] mmu_notifier: Callbacks to invalidate address ranges Christoph Lameter
2008-01-29 16:20   ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-29 18:28     ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-29 20:30       ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-29 21:36         ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-29 21:53           ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-29 22:35             ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-29 22:55               ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-29 23:43                 ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-30  0:34                   ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-29 19:55     ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-29 21:17       ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-29 21:35         ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-29 22:02           ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-29 22:39             ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-30  0:00               ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-30  0:05                 ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-30  0:22                   ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-30  0:59                     ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-30  8:26                       ` Peter Zijlstra
2008-01-30  0:20                 ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-30  0:28                   ` Jack Steiner
2008-01-30  0:35                     ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-30 13:37                     ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-30 14:43                       ` Jack Steiner
2008-01-30 19:41                         ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-30 20:29                           ` Jack Steiner
2008-01-30 20:55                             ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-30 16:11                 ` Robin Holt
2008-01-30 17:04                   ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-30 17:30                     ` Robin Holt
2008-01-30 18:25                       ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-30 19:50                         ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-30 22:18                           ` Robin Holt
2008-01-30 23:52                           ` Andrea Arcangeli
2008-01-31  0:01                             ` Christoph Lameter
2008-01-30 19:35                   ` Christoph Lameter

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