----- Ursprüngliche Mail ----- > Von: "David Hildenbrand" <david@xxxxxxxxxx> >> I'm currently investigating why a real-time application faces unexpected >> page faults. Page faults are usually fatal for real-time work loads because >> the latency constraints are no longer met. > > Are you concerned about any type of page fault, or are things like a > simple remapping of the same page from "read-only to writable" > acceptable? ("very minor fault") Any page fault has to be avoided. To give you more background, the real time application runs on Xenomai, a real time extension for Linux. Xenomai applies already many tweaks to the kernel to trigger pre-faulting of memory areas. But sometimes the application does not use the Xenomai API correctly or there is an bug in Xenomai it self. Currently I'm suspecting the latter. >> >> So, I wrote a small tool to inspect the memory mappings of a process to find >> areas which are not correctly pre-faulted. While doing so I noticed that >> there is currently no way to detect CoW mappings. >> Exposing the writable property of a PTE seemed like a good start to me. > > Is it just about "detection" for debugging purposes or about "fixup" in > running applications? It's only about debugging. If an application fails a test I want to have a tool which tells me what memory mappings are wonky or could cause a fault at runtime. I fully understand that my use case is a corner case and anything but mainline. While developing my debug tool I thought that improving the pagemap interface might help others too. Thanks, //richard