Thread (20 messages) 20 messages, 3 authors, 2025-01-31

Re: [PATCH v1 4/4] mm/memory: document restore_exclusive_pte()

From: Simona Vetter <hidden>
Date: 2025-01-30 10:43:29
Also in: dri-devel, linux-mm, lkml, nouveau

On Thu, Jan 30, 2025 at 11:27:37AM +1100, Alistair Popple wrote:
On Wed, Jan 29, 2025 at 12:58:02PM +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote:
quoted
Let's document how this function is to be used, and why the requirement
for the folio lock might maybe be dropped in the future.
Sorry, only just catching up on your other thread. The folio lock was to ensure
the GPU got a chance to make forward progress by mapping the page. Without it
the CPU could immediately invalidate the entry before the GPU had a chance to
retry the fault.

Obviously performance wise having such thrashing is terrible, so should
really be avoided by userspace, but the lock at least allowed such programs
to complete.
Imo this is not a legit use-case. If userspace concurrently (instead of
clearly alternating) uses the same 4k page for gpu atomics and on the cpu,
it just gets to keep the fallout.

Plus there's no guarantee that we hold the folio_lock long enough for the
gpu to actually complete the atomic, so this isn't even really helping
with forward progress even if this somehow would be a legit usecase.

But this is also why thp is potentially an issue, because if thp
constantly creates pmd entries that potentially causes false sharing and
we do have thrashing that shouldn't happen.
-Sima
quoted
Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand <redacted>
---
 mm/memory.c | 25 +++++++++++++++++++++++++
 1 file changed, 25 insertions(+)
diff --git a/mm/memory.c b/mm/memory.c
index 46956994aaff..caaae8df11a9 100644
--- a/mm/memory.c
+++ b/mm/memory.c
@@ -718,6 +718,31 @@ struct folio *vm_normal_folio_pmd(struct vm_area_struct *vma,
 }
 #endif
 
+/**
+ * restore_exclusive_pte - Restore a device-exclusive entry
+ * @vma: VMA covering @address
+ * @folio: the mapped folio
+ * @page: the mapped folio page
+ * @address: the virtual address
+ * @ptep: PTE pointer into the locked page table mapping the folio page
+ * @orig_pte: PTE value at @ptep
+ *
+ * Restore a device-exclusive non-swap entry to an ordinary present PTE.
+ *
+ * The folio and the page table must be locked, and MMU notifiers must have
+ * been called to invalidate any (exclusive) device mappings. In case of
+ * fork(), MMU_NOTIFY_PROTECTION_PAGE is triggered, and in case of a page
+ * fault MMU_NOTIFY_EXCLUSIVE is triggered.
+ *
+ * Locking the folio makes sure that anybody who just converted the PTE to
+ * a device-private entry can map it into the device, before unlocking it; so
+ * the folio lock prevents concurrent conversion to device-exclusive.
I don't quite follow this - a concurrent conversion would already fail
because the GUP in make_device_exclusive_range() would most likely cause
an unexpected reference during the migration. And if a migration entry
has already been installed for the device private PTE conversion then
make_device_exclusive_range() will skip it as a non-present entry anyway.

However s/device-private/device-exclusive/ makes sense - the intent was to allow
the device to map it before a call to restore_exclusive_pte() (ie. a CPU fault)
could convert it back to a normal PTE.
quoted
+ * TODO: the folio lock does not protect against all cases of concurrent
+ * page table modifications (e.g., MADV_DONTNEED, mprotect), so device drivers
+ * must already use MMU notifiers to sync against any concurrent changes
Right. It's expected drivers are using MMU notifiers to keep page tables in
sync, same as for hmm_range_fault().
quoted
+ * Maybe the requirement for the folio lock can be dropped in the future.
+ */
 static void restore_exclusive_pte(struct vm_area_struct *vma,
 		struct folio *folio, struct page *page, unsigned long address,
 		pte_t *ptep, pte_t orig_pte)
-- 
2.48.1
-- 
Simona Vetter
Software Engineer, Intel Corporation
http://blog.ffwll.ch
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