Re: [PATCH v10 3/6] fs/proc/task_mmu: Implement IOCTL to get and/or the clear info about PTEs

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On Wed, 22 Feb 2023 at 11:11, Muhammad Usama Anjum
<usama.anjum@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On 2/21/23 5:42 PM, Michał Mirosław wrote:
> > On Tue, 21 Feb 2023 at 11:28, Muhammad Usama Anjum
> > <usama.anjum@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi Michał,
> >>
> >> Thank you so much for comment!
> >>
> >> On 2/17/23 8:18 PM, Michał Mirosław wrote:
> > [...]
> >>> For the page-selection mechanism, currently required_mask and
> >>> excluded_mask have conflicting
> >> They are opposite of each other:
> >> All the set bits in required_mask must be set for the page to be selected.
> >> All the set bits in excluded_mask must _not_ be set for the page to be
> >> selected.
> >>
> >>> responsibilities. I suggest to rework that to:
> >>> 1. negated_flags: page flags which are to be negated before applying
> >>> the page selection using following masks;
> >> Sorry I'm unable to understand the negation (which is XOR?). Lets look at
> >> the truth table:
> >> Page Flag       negated_flags
> >> 0               0                       0
> >> 0               1                       1
> >> 1               0                       1
> >> 1               1                       0
> >>
> >> If a page flag is 0 and negated_flag is 1, the result would be 1 which has
> >> changed the page flag. It isn't making sense to me. Why the page flag bit
> >> is being fliped?
> >>
> >> When Anrdei had proposed these masks, they seemed like a fancy way of
> >> filtering inside kernel and it was straight forward to understand. These
> >> masks would help his use cases for CRIU. So I'd included it. Please can you
> >> elaborate what is the purpose of negation?
> >
> > The XOR is a way to invert the tested value of a flag (from positive
> > to negative and the other way) without having the API with invalid
> > values (with required_flags and excluded_flags you need to define a
> > rule about what happens if a flag is present in both of the masks -
> > either prioritise one mask over the other or reject the call).
> At minimum, one mask (required, any or excluded) must be specified. For a
> page to get selected, the page flags must fulfill the criterion of all the
> specified masks.

[Please see the comment below.]

[...]
> Lets translate words into table:
[Yes, those tables captured the intent correctly.]

> > BTW, I think I assumed that both conditions (all flags in
> > required_flags and at least one in anyof_flags is present) need to be
> > true for the page to be selected - is this your intention?
> All the masks are optional. If all or any of the 3 masks are specified, the
> page flags must pass these masks to get selected.

This explanation contradicts in part the introductory paragraph, but
this version seems more useful as you can pass all masks zero to have
all pages selected.

> > The example
> > code has a bug though, in that if anyof_flags is zero it will never
> > match. Let me fix the selection part:
> >
> > // calc. a mask of flags that have expected ("active") values
> > tested_flags = page_flags ^ negated_flags;
> > // are all required flags in "active" state? [== all zero when negated]
> > if (~tested_flags & required_mask)
> >   skip page;
> > // is any extra flag "active"?
> > if (anyof_flags && !(tested_flags & anyof_flags))
> >   skip page;
> >
> After taking a while to understand this and compare with already present
> flag system, `negated flags` is comparatively difficult to understand while
> already present flags seem easier.

Maybe replacing negated_flags in the API with matched_values =
~negated_flags would make this better?

We compare having to understand XOR vs having to understand ordering
of required_flags and excluded_flags.
IOW my proposal is to replace branches in the masks interpretation (if
in one set then matches but if in another set then doesn't; if flags
match ... ) with plain calculation (flag is matching when equals
~negated_flags; if flags match the masks ...).

Best Regards
Michał Mirosław




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