On Thu, 14 Apr 2022, Fabio M. De Francesco wrote: > On gioved? 14 aprile 2022 09:03:40 CEST Julia Lawall wrote: > > > > On Wed, 13 Apr 2022, Ira Weiny wrote: > > > > > On Wed, Apr 13, 2022 at 05:44:54PM -0700, Alison Schofield wrote: > > > > On Thu, Apr 14, 2022 at 12:55:31AM +0200, Fabio M. De Francesco > wrote: > > > > > The use of kmap() is being deprecated in favor of kmap_local_page() > > > > > where it is feasible. The same is true for kmap_atomic(). > > > > > > > > > > In file pci/hmm/hmm.c, function hmm_store() test if we are in > atomic > > > > > context and, if so, it calls kmap_atomic(), if not, it calls > kmap(). > > > > > > > > > > First of all, in_atomic() shouldn't be used in drivers. This macro > > > > > cannot always detect atomic context; in particular, it cannot know > > > > > about held spinlocks in non-preemptible kernels. > > > > > > > > > > Notwithstanding what it is said above, this code doesn't need to > care > > > > > whether or not it is executing in atomic context. It can simply use > > > > > kmap_local_page() / kunmap_local() that can instead do the mapping > / > > > > > unmapping regardless of the context. > > > > > > > > > > With kmap_local_page(), the mapping is per thread, CPU local and > not > > > > > globally visible. Therefore, hmm_store()() is a function where the > use > > > > > of kmap_local_page() in place of both kmap() and kmap_atomic() is > > > > > correctly suited. > > > > > > > > > > Convert the calls of kmap() / kunmap() and kmap_atomic() / > > > > > kunmap_atomic() to kmap_local_page() / kunmap_local() and drop the > > > > > unnecessary tests which test if the code is in atomic context. > > > > > > > > > > > > > Not specifically about this patch, but more generally about all > > > > such conversions - is there a 'proof' that shows this just works > > > > > > Just code inspection. Most of them that I have done have been compile > tested > > > only. Part of the key is that des is a local variable and is not > aliased by > > > anything outside this function. > > > > Typically, the concern about being in atomic context has to do with > > whether GFP_KERNEL or GFP_ATOMIC should be used, ie whether allocation > > can sleep. > > I'd add that the concern about being in atomic context has mainly to do > with calling whatever function that may sleep. > > Some time ago I analyzed a calls chain which, under spinlocks and with > IRQ's disabled, led to console_lock() which is annotated with > might_sleep(). It took about 8000 ms to recover when executing in a 4 CPU / > 8 SMT System. Linus T. suggested to make this work asynchronous (commit > 1ee33b1ca2b8 ("tty: n_hdlc: make n_hdlc_tty_wakeup() asynchronous")). > > > It doesn't have to do with whether some data can be shared. > > Yes, FWIW I agree with you. > > > Is that the concern here? > > The concern here is about the locality of the pointer variable to which the > struct page has been mapped to. In atomic context we are not allowed to > kmap() (this is why in the code we had that in_atomic() test), instead we > can kmap_local_page() or kmap_atomic(). The latter is strongly discouraged > in favor of the former. I have the impression that you are first agreeing with me and then contradicting me :). Is your point that in general a concern about atomic context has to do with whether sleeping is allowed, but that the concern is something else here? I'm not familiar with these kmap functions. thanks, julia > > Furthermore, Alison was asking if we can prove that these kinds of > conversions can actually work when we have not the hardware for testing. As > Ira wrote, code inspection is sufficient to prove it. > > Thanks, > > Fabio M. De Francesco > > > >