On Fri, Oct 13, 2023 at 9:08 AM Peter Xu <peterx@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Oct 13, 2023 at 11:56:31AM +0200, David Hildenbrand wrote: > > Hi Peter, > > Hi, David, > > > > > > I used to have the same thought with David on whether we can simplify the > > > design to e.g. limit it to single mm. Then I found that the trickiest is > > > actually patch 1 together with the anon_vma manipulations, and the problem > > > is that's not avoidable even if we restrict the api to apply on single mm. > > > > > > What else we can benefit from single mm? One less mmap read lock, but > > > probably that's all we can get; IIUC we need to keep most of the rest of > > > the code, e.g. pgtable walks, double pgtable lockings, etc. > > > > No existing mechanisms move anon pages between unrelated processes, that > > naturally makes me nervous if we're doing it "just because we can". > > IMHO that's also the potential, when guarded with userfaultfd descriptor > being shared between two processes. > > See below with more comment on the raised concerns. > > > > > > > > > Actually, even though I have no solid clue, but I had a feeling that there > > > can be some interesting way to leverage this across-mm movement, while > > > keeping things all safe (by e.g. elaborately requiring other proc to create > > > uffd and deliver to this proc). > > > > Okay, but no real use cases yet. > > I can provide a "not solid" example. I didn't mention it because it's > really something that just popped into my mind when thinking cross-mm, so I > never discussed with anyone yet nor shared it anywhere. > > Consider VM live upgrade in a generic form (e.g., no VFIO), we can do that > very efficiently with shmem or hugetlbfs, but not yet anonymous. We can do > extremely efficient postcopy live upgrade now with anonymous if with REMAP. > > Basically I see it a potential way of moving memory efficiently especially > with thp. > > > > > > > > > Considering Andrea's original version already contains those bits and all > > > above, I'd vote that we go ahead with supporting two MMs. > > > > You can do nasty things with that, as it stands, on the upstream codebase. > > > > If you pin the page in src_mm and move it to dst_mm, you successfully broke > > an invariant that "exclusive" means "no other references from other > > processes". That page is marked exclusive but it is, in fact, not exclusive. > > It is still exclusive to the dst mm? I see your point, but I think you're > taking exclusiveness altogether with pinning, and IMHO that may not be > always necessary? > > > > > Once you achieved that, you can easily have src_mm not have MMF_HAS_PINNED, > > (I suppose you meant dst_mm here) > > > so you can just COW-share that page. Now you successfully broke the > > invariant that COW-shared pages must not be pinned. And you can even trigger > > VM_BUG_ONs, like in sanity_check_pinned_pages(). > > Yeah, that's really unfortunate. But frankly, I don't think it's the fault > of this new feature, but the rest. > > Let's imagine if the MMF_HAS_PINNED wasn't proposed as a per-mm flag, but > per-vma, which I don't see why we can't because it's simply a hint so far. > Then if we apply the same rule here, UFFDIO_REMAP won't even work for > single-mm as long as cross-vma. Then UFFDIO_REMAP as a whole feature will > be NACKed simply because of this.. > > And I don't think anyone can guarantee a per-vma MMF_HAS_PINNED can never > happen, or any further change to pinning solution that may affect this. So > far it just looks unsafe to remap a pin page to me. > > I don't have a good suggestion here if this is a risk.. I'd think it risky > then to do REMAP over pinned pages no matter cross-mm or single-mm. It > means probably we just rule them out: folio_maybe_dma_pinned() may not even > be enough to be safe with fast-gup. We may need page_needs_cow_for_dma() > with proper write_protect_seq no matter cross-mm or single-mm? > > > > > Can it all be fixed? Sure, with more complexity. For something without clear > > motivation, I'll have to pass. > > I think what you raised is a valid concern, but IMHO it's better fixed no > matter cross-mm or single-mm. What do you think? > > In general, pinning lose its whole point here to me for an userspace either > if it DONTNEEDs it or REMAP it. What would be great to do here is we unpin > it upon DONTNEED/REMAP/whatever drops the page, because it loses its > coherency anyway, IMHO. > > > > > Once there is real demand, we can revisit it and explore what else we would > > have to take care of (I don't know how memcg behaves when moving between > > completely unrelated processes, maybe that works as expected, I don't know > > and I have no time to spare on reviewing features with no real use cases) > > and announce it as a new feature. > > Good point. memcg is probably needed.. > > So you reminded me to do a more thorough review against zap/fault paths, I > think what's missing are (besides page pinning): > > - mem_cgroup_charge()/mem_cgroup_uncharge(): > > (side note: I think folio_throttle_swaprate() is only for when > allocating new pages, so not needed here) > > - check_stable_address_space() (under pgtable lock) > > - tlb flush > > Hmm???????????????? I can't see anywhere we did tlb flush, batched or > not, either single-mm or cross-mm should need it. Is this missing? > IIUC, ptep_clear_flush() flushes tlb entry. So I think we are doing unbatched flushing. Possibly a nice performance improvement later on would be to try doing it batched. Suren can throw more light on it. One thing I was wondering is don't we need cache flush for the src pages? mremap's move_page_tables() does it. IMHO, it's required here as well. > > > > > > Note: that (with only reading the documentation) it also kept me wondering > > how the MMs are even implied from > > > > struct uffdio_move { > > __u64 dst; /* Destination of move */ > > __u64 src; /* Source of move */ > > __u64 len; /* Number of bytes to move */ > > __u64 mode; /* Flags controlling behavior of move */ > > __s64 move; /* Number of bytes moved, or negated error */ > > }; > > > > That probably has to be documented as well, in which address space dst and > > src reside. > > Agreed, some better documentation will never hurt. Dst should be in the mm > address space that was bound to the userfault descriptor. Src should be in > the current mm address space. > > Thanks, > > -- > Peter Xu >