David Hildenbrand <david@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > On 02.07.24 12:19, Alistair Popple wrote: >> David Hildenbrand <david@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >>> On 27.06.24 02:54, Alistair Popple wrote: >>>> Currently DAX folio/page reference counts are managed differently to >>>> normal pages. To allow these to be managed the same as normal pages >>>> introduce dax_insert_pfn_pud. This will map the entire PUD-sized folio >>>> and take references as it would for a normally mapped page. >>>> This is distinct from the current mechanism, vmf_insert_pfn_pud, >>>> which >>>> simply inserts a special devmap PUD entry into the page table without >>>> holding a reference to the page for the mapping. >>> >>> Do we really have to involve mapcounts/rmap for daxfs pages at this >>> point? Or is this only "to make it look more like other pages" ? >> The aim of the series is make FS DAX and other ZONE_DEVICE pages >> look >> like other pages, at least with regards to the way they are refcounted. >> At the moment they are not refcounted - instead their refcounts are >> basically statically initialised to one and there are all these special >> cases and functions requiring magic PTE bits (pXX_devmap) to do the >> special DAX reference counting. This then adds some cruft to manage >> pgmap references and to catch the 2->1 page refcount transition. All >> this just goes away if we manage the page references the same as other >> pages (and indeed we already manage DEVICE_PRIVATE and COHERENT pages >> the same as normal pages). >> So I think to make this work we at least need the mapcounts. >> > > We only really need the mapcounts if we intend to do something like > folio_mapcount() == folio_ref_count() to detect unexpected folio > references, and if we have to have things like folio_mapped() > working. For now that was not required, that's why I am asking. Oh I see, thanks for pointing that out. In that case I agree, we don't need the mapcounts. As you say we don't currently need to detect unexpect references for FS DAX and this series doesn't seek to introduce any new behviour/features. > Background also being that in a distant future folios will be > decoupled more from other compound pages, and only folios (or "struct > anon_folio" / "struct file_folio") would even have mapcounts. > > For example, most stuff we map (and refcount!) via vm_insert_page() > really must stop involving mapcounts. These won't be "ordinary" > mapcount-tracked folios in the future, they are simply some refcounted > pages some ordinary driver allocated. Ok, so for FS DAX we should take a reference on the folio for the mapping but not a mapcount? > For FS-DAX, if we'll be using the same "struct file_folio" approach as > for ordinary pageache memory, then this is the right thing to do here. > > >>> I'm asking this because: >>> >>> (A) We don't support mixing PUD+PMD mappings yet. I have plans to change >>> that in the future, but for now you can only map using a single PUD >>> or by PTEs. I suspect that's good enoug for now for dax fs? >> Yep, that's all we support. >> >>> (B) As long as we have subpage mapcounts, this prevents vmemmap >>> optimizations [1]. Is that only used for device-dax for now and are >>> there no plans to make use of that for fs-dax? >> I don't have any plans to. This is purely focussed on refcounting >> pages >> "like normal" so we can get rid of all the DAX special casing. >> >>> (C) We managed without so far :) >> Indeed, although Christoph has asked repeatedly ([1], [2] and likely >> others) that this gets fixed and I finally got sick of it coming up >> everytime I need to touch something with ZONE_DEVICE pages :) >> Also it removes the need for people to understand the special DAX >> page >> recounting scheme and ends up removing a bunch of cruft as a bonus: >> 59 files changed, 485 insertions(+), 869 deletions(-) > > I'm not challenging the refcounting scheme. I'm purely asking about > mapcount handling, which is something related but different. Got it, thanks. I hadn't quite picked up on the mapcount vs. refcount distinction you were asking about. >> And that's before I clean up all the pgmap reference handling. It >> also >> removes the pXX_trans_huge and pXX_leaf distinction. So we managed, but >> things could be better IMHO. >> > > Again, all nice things. > >>> Having that said, with folio->_large_mapcount things like >>> folio_mapcount() are no longer terribly slow once we weould PTE-map a >>> PUD-sized folio. >>> >>> Also, all ZONE_DEVICE pages should currently be marked PG_reserved, >>> translating to "don't touch the memmap". I think we might want to >>> tackle that first. > > Missed to add a pointer to [2]. > >> Ok. I'm keen to get this series finished and I don't quite get the >> connection here, what needs to change there? > > include/linux/page-flags.h > > "PG_reserved is set for special pages. The "struct page" of such a > page should in general not be touched (e.g. set dirty) except by its > owner. Pages marked as PG_reserved include: > > ... > > - Device memory (e.g. PMEM, DAX, HMM) > " > > I think we already entered that domain with other ZONE_DEVICE pages > being returned from vm_normal_folio(), unfortunately. But that really > must be cleaned up for these pages to not look special anymore. > > Agreed that it likely is something that is not blocking this series. Great. I'd like to see that cleaned up a little too or at least made more understandable. The first time I looked at this it took a suprising amount of time to figure out what constituted a "normal" page so I'd be happy to help. This series does, in a small way, clean that up by removing the pte_devmap special case.