On 1/23/23 16:18, Kirill A. Shutemov wrote: > On Mon, Jan 23, 2023 at 03:03:45PM +0100, Vlastimil Babka wrote: >> On 12/22/22 01:37, Huang, Kai wrote: >> >>> I argue that this page pinning (or page migration prevention) is not >> >>> tied to where the page comes from, instead related to how the page will >> >>> be used. Whether the page is restrictedmem backed or GUP() backed, once >> >>> it's used by current version of TDX then the page pinning is needed. So >> >>> such page migration prevention is really TDX thing, even not KVM generic >> >>> thing (that's why I think we don't need change the existing logic of >> >>> kvm_release_pfn_clean()). >> >>> >> > This essentially boils down to who "owns" page migration handling, and sadly, >> > page migration is kinda "owned" by the core-kernel, i.e. KVM cannot handle page >> > migration by itself -- it's just a passive receiver. >> > >> > For normal pages, page migration is totally done by the core-kernel (i.e. it >> > unmaps page from VMA, allocates a new page, and uses migrate_pape() or a_ops- >> >> migrate_page() to actually migrate the page). >> > In the sense of TDX, conceptually it should be done in the same way. The more >> > important thing is: yes KVM can use get_page() to prevent page migration, but >> > when KVM wants to support it, KVM cannot just remove get_page(), as the core- >> > kernel will still just do migrate_page() which won't work for TDX (given >> > restricted_memfd doesn't have a_ops->migrate_page() implemented). >> > >> > So I think the restricted_memfd filesystem should own page migration handling, >> > (i.e. by implementing a_ops->migrate_page() to either just reject page migration >> > or somehow support it). >> >> While this thread seems to be settled on refcounts already, just wanted >> to point out that it wouldn't be ideal to prevent migrations by >> a_ops->migrate_page() rejecting them. It would mean cputime wasted (i.e. >> by memory compaction) by isolating the pages for migration and then >> releasing them after the callback rejects it (at least we wouldn't waste >> time creating and undoing migration entries in the userspace page tables >> as there's no mmap). Elevated refcount on the other hand is detected >> very early in compaction so no isolation is attempted, so from that >> aspect it's optimal. > > Hm. Do we need a new hook in a_ops to check if the page is migratable > before going with longer path to migrate_page(). > > Or maybe add AS_UNMOVABLE? AS_UNMOVABLE should indeed allow a test in e.g. compaction to descide that the page is not worth isolating in the first place.