On Fri, Mar 10, 2017 at 05:58:28PM +0200, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: > One of the issues of current balloon is the 4k page size > assumption. For example if you free a huge page you > have to split it up and pass 4k chunks to host. > Quite often host can't free these 4k chunks at all (e.g. > when it's using huge tlb fs). > It's even sillier for architectures with base page size >4k. I completely agree with you that we should be able to pass a hugepage as a single chunk. Also we shouldn't assume that host and guest have the same page size. I think we can come up with a scheme that actually lets us encode that into a 64-bit word, something like this: bit 0 clear => bits 1-11 encode a page count, bits 12-63 encode a PFN, page size 4k. bit 0 set, bit 1 clear => bits 2-12 encode a page count, bits 13-63 encode a PFN, page size 8k bits 0+1 set, bit 2 clear => bits 3-13 for page count, bits 14-63 for PFN, page size 16k. bits 0-2 set, bit 3 clear => bits 4-14 for page count, bits 15-63 for PFN, page size 32k bits 0-3 set, bit 4 clear => bits 5-15 for page count, bits 16-63 for PFN, page size 64k That means we can always pass 2048 pages (of whatever page size) in a single chunk. And we support arbitrary power of two page sizes. I suggest something like this: u64 page_to_chunk(struct page *page) { u64 chunk = page_to_pfn(page) << PAGE_SHIFT; chunk |= (1UL << compound_order(page)) - 1; } (note this is a single page of order N, so we leave the page count bits set to 0, meaning one page). > Two things to consider: > - host should pass its base page size to guest > this can be a separate patch and for now we can fall back on 12 bit if not there With this encoding scheme, I don't think we need to do this? As long as it's *at least* 12 bit, then we're fine. > - guest should pass full huge pages to host > this should be done correctly to avoid breaking up huge pages > I would say yes let's use a single format but drop the "normal chunk" > and always use the extended one. > Also, size is in units of 4k, right? Please document that low 12 bit > are reserved, they will be handy as e.g. flags. What per-chunk flags are you thinking would be useful?