On Mon, Mar 16, 2020 at 9:30 AM Marc Zyngier <maz@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 2020-03-16 08:22, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > On Sat, Mar 14, 2020 at 4:36 PM Michael Kelley <mikelley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > wrote: > >> /* > >> + * Functions for allocating and freeing memory with size and > >> + * alignment HV_HYP_PAGE_SIZE. These functions are needed because > >> + * the guest page size may not be the same as the Hyper-V page > >> + * size. We depend upon kmalloc() aligning power-of-two size > >> + * allocations to the allocation size boundary, so that the > >> + * allocated memory appears to Hyper-V as a page of the size > >> + * it expects. > >> + * > >> + * These functions are used by arm64 specific code as well as > >> + * arch independent Hyper-V drivers. > >> + */ > >> + > >> +void *hv_alloc_hyperv_page(void) > >> +{ > >> + BUILD_BUG_ON(PAGE_SIZE < HV_HYP_PAGE_SIZE); > >> + return kmalloc(HV_HYP_PAGE_SIZE, GFP_KERNEL); > >> +} > >> +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hv_alloc_hyperv_page); > > > > I don't think there is any guarantee that kmalloc() returns > > page-aligned > > allocations in general. > > I believe that guarantee came with 59bb47985c1db ("mm, sl[aou]b: > guarantee > natural alignment for kmalloc(power-of-two)"). > > > How about using get_free_pages() to implement this? > > This would certainly work, at the expense of a lot of wasted memory when > PAGE_SIZE isn't 4k. I'm sure this is the least of your problems when the guest runs with a large base page size, you've already wasted most of your memory otherwise then. Arnd