TLDR: I want to introduce a new data type: struct phyr { phys_addr_t addr; size_t len; }; and use it to replace bio_vec as well as using it to replace the array of struct pages used by get_user_pages() and friends. --- There are two distinct problems I want to address: doing I/O to memory which does not have a struct page and efficiently doing I/O to large blobs of physically contiguous memory, regardless of whether it has a struct page. There are some other improvements which I regard as minor. There are many types of memory that one might want to do I/O to that do not have a struct page, some examples: - Memory on a graphics card (or other PCI card, but gfx seems to be the primary provider of DRAM on the PCI bus today) - DAX, or other pmem (there are some fake pages today, but this is mostly a workaround for the IO problem today) - Guest memory being accessed from the hypervisor (KVM needs to create structpages to make this happen. Xen doesn't ...) All of these kinds of memories can be addressed by the CPU and so also by a bus master. That is, there is a physical address that the CPU can use which will address this memory, and there is a way to convert that to a DMA address which can be programmed into another device. There's no intent here to support memory which can be accessed by a complex scheme like writing an address to a control register and then accessing the memory through a FIFO; this is for memory which can be accessed by DMA and CPU loads and stores. For get_user_pages() and friends, we currently fill an array of struct pages, each one representing PAGE_SIZE bytes. For an application that is using 1GB hugepages, writing 2^18 entries is a significant overhead. It also makes drivers hard to write as they have to recoalesce the struct pages, even though the VM can tell it whether those 2^18 pages are contiguous. On the minor side, struct phyr can represent any mappable chunk of memory. A bio_vec is limited to 2^32 bytes, while on 64-bit machines a phyr can represent larger than 4GB. A phyr is the same size as a bio_vec on 64 bit (16 bytes), and the same size for 32-bit with PAE (12 bytes). It is smaller for 32-bit machines without PAE (8 bytes instead of 12). Finally, it may be possible to stop using scatterlist to describe the input to the DMA-mapping operation. We may be able to get struct scatterlist down to just dma_address and dma_length, with chaining handled through an enclosing struct. I would like to see phyr replace bio_vec everywhere it's currently used. I don't have time to do that work now because I'm busy with folios. If someone else wants to take that on, I shall cheer from the sidelines. What I do intend to do is: - Add an interface to gup.c to pin/unpin N phyrs - Add a sg_map_phyrs() This will take an array of phyrs and allocate an sg for them - Whatever else I need to do to make one RDMA driver happy with this scheme At that point, I intend to stop and let others more familiar with this area of the kernel continue the conversion of drivers. P.S. If you've had the Prodigy song running through your head the whole time you've been reading this email ... I'm sorry / You're welcome. If people insist, we can rename this to phys_range or something boring, but I quite like the spelling of phyr with the pronunciation of "fire".