Peter Xu <peterx@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
On Fri, Oct 11, 2024 at 11:32:11PM +0000, Ackerley Tng wrote:
Peter Xu <peterx@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 11:43:57PM +0000, Ackerley Tng wrote:
The faultability xarray is stored on the inode since faultability is a
property of the guest_memfd's memory contents.
In this RFC, presence of an entry in the xarray indicates faultable,
but this could be flipped so that presence indicates unfaultable. For
flexibility, a special value "FAULT" is used instead of a simple
boolean.
However, at some stages of a VM's lifecycle there could be more
private pages, and at other stages there could be more shared pages.
This is likely to be replaced by a better data structure in a future
revision to better support ranges.
Also store struct kvm_gmem_hugetlb in struct kvm_gmem_hugetlb as a
pointer. inode->i_mapping->i_private_data.
Could you help explain the difference between faultability v.s. the
existing KVM_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTE_PRIVATE? Not sure if I'm the only one who's
confused, otherwise might be good to enrich the commit message.
Thank you for this question, I'll add this to the commit message to the
next revision if Fuad's patch set [1] doesn't make it first.
Reason (a): To elaborate on the explanation in [1],
KVM_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTE_PRIVATE is whether userspace wants this page to be
private or shared, and faultability is whether the page is allowed to be
faulted in by userspace.
These two are similar but may not be the same thing. In pKVM, pKVM
cannot trust userspace's configuration of private/shared, and other
information will go into determining the private/shared setting in
faultability.
It makes sense to me that the kernel has the right to decide which page is
shared / private. No matter if it's for pKVM or CoCo, I believe the normal
case is most / all pages are private, until some requests to share them for
special purposes (like DMA). But that'll need to be initiated as a request
from the guest not the userspace hypervisor.
For TDX, the plan is that the guest will request the page to be remapped
as shared or private, and the handler for that request will exit to
the userspace VMM.
The userspace VMM will then do any necessary coordination (e.g. for a
shared to private conversion it may need to unpin pages from DMA), and
then use the KVM_SET_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTES ioctl to indicate agreement with
the guest's requested conversion. This is where
KVM_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTE_PRIVATE will be provided.
Patch 38 [1] updates
tools/testing/selftests/kvm/x86_64/private_mem_conversions_test.c to
demonstrate the usage flow for x86.
Fuad will be in a better position to explain the flow for pKVM.
I must confess I totally have no idea how KVM_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTE_PRIVATE is
planned to be used in the future. Currently it's always set at least in
QEMU if gmemfd is enabled, so it doesn't yet tell me anything..
If it's driven by the userspace side of the hypervisor, I wonder when
should the user app request some different value it already was, if the
kernel already has an answer in this case. It made me even more confused,
as we have this in the API doc:
Note, there is no "get" API. Userspace is responsible for
explicitly tracking the state of a gfn/page as needed.
And I do wonder whether we will still need some API just to query whether
the kernel allows the page to be mapped or not (aka, the "real" shared /
private status of a guest page). I guess that's not directly relevant to
the faultability to be introduced here, but if you or anyone know please
kindly share, I'd love to learn about it.
The userspace VMM will track the initial shared/private state, in the
sense that when the VM is created, the mem_attr_array is initialized
such that the guest pages are all shared.
Then when the userspace VMM calls the KVM_SET_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTES ioctl,
it should record all changes so it knows what the state is in the
kernel.
Even if userspace VMM doesn't record the state properly, if the
KVM_SET_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTES ioctl is used to request no change
(e.g. setting an already private page to private), it will just be a
no-op in the kernel.
Perhaps Fuad can elaborate more here.
Reason (b): In this patch series (mostly focus on x86 first), we're
using faultability to prevent any future faults before checking that
there are no mappings.
Having a different xarray from mem_attr_array allows us to disable
faulting before committing to changing mem_attr_array. Please see
`kvm_gmem_should_set_attributes_private()` in this patch [2].
We're not completely sure about the effectiveness of using faultability
to block off future faults here, in future revisions we may be using a
different approach. The folio_lock() is probably important if we need to
check mapcount. Please let me know if you have any ideas!
The starting point of having a different xarray was pKVM's requirement
of having separate xarrays, and we later realized that the xarray could
be used for reason (b). For x86 we could perhaps eventually remove the
second xarray? Not sure as of now.
Just had a quick look at patch 27:
https://lore.kernel.org/all/5a05eb947cf7aa21f00b94171ca818cc3d5bdfee.1726009989.git.ackerleytng@xxxxxxxxxx/
I'm not yet sure what's protecting from faultability being modified against
a concurrent fault().
I wonder whether one can use the folio lock to serialize that, so that one
needs to take the folio lock to modify/lookup the folio's faultability,
then it may naturally match with the fault() handler design, where
kvm_gmem_get_folio() needs to lock the page first.
But then kvm_gmem_is_faultable() will need to also be called only after the
folio is locked to avoid races.
My bad. In our rush to get this series out before LPC, the patch series
was not organized very well. Patch 39 [2] adds the
lock. filemap_invalidate_lock_shared() should make sure that faulting
doesn't race with faultability updates.
The latter is per-slot, so one level higher, however I don't think it's a
common use case for mapping the same gmemfd in multiple slots anyway for
KVM (besides corner cases like live upgrade). So perhaps this is not about
layering but something else? For example, any use case where PRIVATE and
FAULTABLE can be reported with different values.
Another higher level question is, is there any plan to support non-CoCo
context for 1G?
I believe guest_memfd users are generally in favor of eventually using
guest_memfd for non-CoCo use cases, which means we do want 1G (shared,
in the case of CoCo) page support.
However, core-mm's fault path does not support mapping at anything
higher than the PMD level (other than hugetlb_fault(), which the
community wants to move away from), so core-mm wouldn't be able to map
1G pages taken from HugeTLB.
Have you looked at vm_operations_struct.huge_fault()? Or maybe you're
referring to some other challenges?
IIUC vm_operations_struct.huge_fault() is used when creating a PMD, but
PUD mappings will be needed for 1G pages, so 1G pages can't be mapped by
core-mm using vm_operations_struct.huge_fault().