Hi David, On Tue, 6 Aug 2024 at 14:51, David Hildenbrand <david@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > - if (gmem_flags & GUEST_MEMFD_FLAG_NO_DIRECT_MAP) { > > + if (!ops->accessible && (gmem_flags & GUEST_MEMFD_FLAG_NO_DIRECT_MAP)) { > > r = guest_memfd_folio_private(folio); > > if (r) > > goto out_err; > > @@ -107,6 +109,82 @@ struct folio *guest_memfd_grab_folio(struct file *file, pgoff_t index, u32 flags > > } > > EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(guest_memfd_grab_folio); > > > > +int guest_memfd_make_inaccessible(struct file *file, struct folio *folio) > > +{ > > + unsigned long gmem_flags = (unsigned long)file->private_data; > > + unsigned long i; > > + int r; > > + > > + unmap_mapping_folio(folio); > > + > > + /** > > + * We can't use the refcount. It might be elevated due to > > + * guest/vcpu trying to access same folio as another vcpu > > + * or because userspace is trying to access folio for same reason > > As discussed, that's insufficient. We really have to drive the refcount > to 1 -- the single reference we expect. > > What is the exact problem you are running into here? Who can just grab a > reference and maybe do nasty things with it? I was wondering, why do we need to check the refcount? Isn't it enough to check for page_mapped() || page_maybe_dma_pinned(), while holding the folio lock? Thanks! /fuad > -- > Cheers, > > David / dhildenb >