On Thu, Jun 09, 2022 at 08:29:06PM +0000, Sean Christopherson wrote: > On Wed, Jun 08, 2022, Vishal Annapurve wrote: > > ... > > > With this patch series, it's actually even not possible for userspace VMM > > > to allocate private page by a direct write, it's basically unmapped from > > > there. If it really wants to, it should so something special, by intention, > > > that's basically the conversion, which we should allow. > > > > > > > A VM can pass GPA backed by private pages to userspace VMM and when > > Userspace VMM accesses the backing hva there will be pages allocated > > to back the shared fd causing 2 sets of pages backing the same guest > > memory range. > > > > > Thanks for bringing this up. But in my mind I still think userspace VMM > > > can do and it's its responsibility to guarantee that, if that is hard > > > required. > > That was my initial reaction too, but there are unfortunate side effects to punting > this to userspace. > > > By design, userspace VMM is the decision-maker for page > > > conversion and has all the necessary information to know which page is > > > shared/private. It also has the necessary knobs to allocate/free the > > > physical pages for guest memory. Definitely, we should make userspace > > > VMM more robust. > > > > Making Userspace VMM more robust to avoid double allocation can get > > complex, it will have to keep track of all in-use (by Userspace VMM) > > shared fd memory to disallow conversion from shared to private and > > will have to ensure that all guest supplied addresses belong to shared > > GPA ranges. > > IMO, the complexity argument isn't sufficient justfication for introducing new > kernel functionality. If multiple processes are accessing guest memory then there > already needs to be some amount of coordination, i.e. it can't be _that_ complex. > > My concern with forcing userspace to fully handle unmapping shared memory is that > it may lead to additional performance overhead and/or noisy neighbor issues, even > if all guests are well-behaved. > > Unnmapping arbitrary ranges will fragment the virtual address space and consume > more memory for all the result VMAs. The extra memory consumption isn't that big > of a deal, and it will be self-healing to some extent as VMAs will get merged when > the holes are filled back in (if the guest converts back to shared), but it's still > less than desirable. > > More concerning is having to take mmap_lock for write for every conversion, which > is very problematic for configurations where a single userspace process maps memory > belong to multiple VMs. Unmapping and remapping on every conversion will create a > bottleneck, especially if a VM has sub-optimal behavior and is converting pages at > a high rate. > > One argument is that userspace can simply rely on cgroups to detect misbehaving > guests, but (a) those types of OOMs will be a nightmare to debug and (b) an OOM > kill from the host is typically considered a _host_ issue and will be treated as > a missed SLO. > > An idea for handling this in the kernel without too much complexity would be to > add F_SEAL_FAULT_ALLOCATIONS (terrible name) that would prevent page faults from > allocating pages, i.e. holes can only be filled by an explicit fallocate(). Minor > faults, e.g. due to NUMA balancing stupidity, and major faults due to swap would > still work, but writes to previously unreserved/unallocated memory would get a > SIGSEGV on something it has mapped. That would allow the userspace VMM to prevent > unintentional allocations without having to coordinate unmapping/remapping across > multiple processes. Since this is mainly for shared memory and the motivation is catching misbehaved access, can we use mprotect(PROT_NONE) for this? We can mark those range backed by private fd as PROT_NONE during the conversion so subsequence misbehaved accesses will be blocked instead of causing double allocation silently. Chao