Re: [PATCH] docs: x86: Remove obsolete information about x86_64 vmalloc() faulting
From: Joerg Roedel <hidden>
Date: 2021-07-19 12:34:37
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Hi, On Fri, Jul 16, 2021 at 02:09:58AM -0400, Peilin Ye wrote:
This information is out-of-date, and it took me quite some time of
ftrace'ing before I figured it out... I think it would be beneficial to
update, or at least remove it.
As a proof that I understand what I am talking about, on my x86_64 box:
1. I allocated a vmalloc() area containing linear address `addr`;
2. I manually pagewalked `addr` in different page tables, including
`init_mm.pgd`;
3. The corresponding PGD entries for `addr` in different page tables,
they all immediately pointed at the same PUD table (my box uses
4-level paging), at the same physical address;
4. No "lazy synchronization" via page fault handling happened at all,
since it is the same PUD table pre-allocated by
preallocate_vmalloc_pages() during boot time.Yes, this is the story for x86-64, because all PUD/P4D pages for the vmalloc area are pre-allocated at boot. So no faulting or synchronization needs to happen. On x86-32 this is a bit different. Pre-allocation of PMD/PTE pages is not an option there (even less when 4MB large-pages with 2-level paging come into the picture). So what happens there is that vmalloc related changes to the init_mm.pgd are synchronized to all page-tables in the system. But this synchronization is subject to race conditions in a way that another CPU might vmalloc an area below a PMD which is not fully synchronized yet. When this happens there is a fault, which is handled as a vmalloc() fault on x86-32 just as before. So vmalloc faults still exist on 32-bit, they are just less likely as they used to be. Regards, Joerg