On Mon, Jan 28, 2019 at 04:22:16PM -0800, John Hubbard wrote: > On 1/23/19 11:04 AM, Jerome Glisse wrote: > > On Wed, Jan 23, 2019 at 07:02:30PM +0100, Jan Kara wrote: > >> On Tue 22-01-19 11:46:13, Jerome Glisse wrote: > >>> On Tue, Jan 22, 2019 at 04:24:59PM +0100, Jan Kara wrote: > >>>> On Thu 17-01-19 10:17:59, Jerome Glisse wrote: > >>>>> On Thu, Jan 17, 2019 at 10:30:47AM +0100, Jan Kara wrote: > >>>>>> On Wed 16-01-19 08:08:14, Jerome Glisse wrote: > >>>>>>> On Wed, Jan 16, 2019 at 12:38:19PM +0100, Jan Kara wrote: > >>>>>>>> On Tue 15-01-19 09:07:59, Jan Kara wrote: > >>>>>>>>> Agreed. So with page lock it would actually look like: > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> get_page_pin() > >>>>>>>>> lock_page(page); > >>>>>>>>> wait_for_stable_page(); > >>>>>>>>> atomic_add(&page->_refcount, PAGE_PIN_BIAS); > >>>>>>>>> unlock_page(page); > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> And if we perform page_pinned() check under page lock, then if > >>>>>>>>> page_pinned() returned false, we are sure page is not and will not be > >>>>>>>>> pinned until we drop the page lock (and also until page writeback is > >>>>>>>>> completed if needed). > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> After some more though, why do we even need wait_for_stable_page() and > >>>>>>>> lock_page() in get_page_pin()? > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> During writepage page_mkclean() will write protect all page tables. So > >>>>>>>> there can be no new writeable GUP pins until we unlock the page as all such > >>>>>>>> GUPs will have to first go through fault and ->page_mkwrite() handler. And > >>>>>>>> that will wait on page lock and do wait_for_stable_page() for us anyway. > >>>>>>>> Am I just confused? > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> Yeah with page lock it should synchronize on the pte but you still > >>>>>>> need to check for writeback iirc the page is unlocked after file > >>>>>>> system has queue up the write and thus the page can be unlock with > >>>>>>> write back pending (and PageWriteback() == trye) and i am not sure > >>>>>>> that in that states we can safely let anyone write to that page. I > >>>>>>> am assuming that in some case the block device also expect stable > >>>>>>> page content (RAID stuff). > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> So the PageWriteback() test is not only for racing page_mkclean()/ > >>>>>>> test_set_page_writeback() and GUP but also for pending write back. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> But this is prevented by wait_for_stable_page() that is already present in > >>>>>> ->page_mkwrite() handlers. Look: > >>>>>> > >>>>>> ->writepage() > >>>>>> /* Page is locked here */ > >>>>>> clear_page_dirty_for_io(page) > >>>>>> page_mkclean(page) > >>>>>> -> page tables get writeprotected > >>>>>> /* The following line will be added by our patches */ > >>>>>> if (page_pinned(page)) -> bounce > >>>>>> TestClearPageDirty(page) > >>>>>> set_page_writeback(page); > >>>>>> unlock_page(page); > >>>>>> ...submit_io... > >>>>>> > >>>>>> IRQ > >>>>>> - IO completion > >>>>>> end_page_writeback() > >>>>>> > >>>>>> So if GUP happens before page_mkclean() writeprotects corresponding PTE > >>>>>> (and these two actions are synchronized on the PTE lock), page_pinned() > >>>>>> will see the increment and report the page as pinned. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> If GUP happens after page_mkclean() writeprotects corresponding PTE, it > >>>>>> will fault: > >>>>>> handle_mm_fault() > >>>>>> do_wp_page() > >>>>>> wp_page_shared() > >>>>>> do_page_mkwrite() > >>>>>> ->page_mkwrite() - that is block_page_mkwrite() or > >>>>>> iomap_page_mkwrite() or whatever filesystem provides > >>>>>> lock_page(page) > >>>>>> ... prepare page ... > >>>>>> wait_for_stable_page(page) -> this blocks until IO completes > >>>>>> if someone cares about pages not being modified while under IO. > >>>>> > >>>>> The case i am worried is GUP see pte with write flag set but has not > >>>>> lock the page yet (GUP is get pte first, then pte to page then lock > >>>>> page), then it locks the page but the lock page can make it wait for a > >>>>> racing page_mkclean()...write back that have not yet write protected > >>>>> the pte the GUP just read. So by the time GUP has the page locked the > >>>>> pte it read might no longer have the write flag set. Hence why you need > >>>>> to also check for write back after taking the page lock. Alternatively > >>>>> you could recheck the pte after a successful try_lock on the page. > >>>> > >>>> This isn't really possible. GUP does: > >>>> > >>>> get_user_pages() > >>>> ... > >>>> follow_page_mask() > >>>> ... > >>>> follow_page_pte() > >>>> ptep = pte_offset_map_lock() > >>>> check permissions and page sanity > >>>> if (flags & FOLL_GET) > >>>> get_page(page); -> this would become > >>>> atomic_add(&page->_refcount, PAGE_PIN_BIAS); > >>>> pte_unmap_unlock(ptep, ptl); > >>>> > >>>> page_mkclean() on the other hand grabs the same pte lock to change the pte > >>>> to write-protected. So after page_mkclean() has modified the PTE we are > >>>> racing on for access, we are sure to either see increased _refcount or get > >>>> page fault from GUP. > >>>> > >>>> If we see increased _refcount, we bounce the page and are fine. If GUP > >>>> faults, we will wait for page lock (so wait until page is prepared for IO > >>>> and has PageWriteback set) while handling the fault, then enter > >>>> ->page_mkwrite, which will do wait_for_stable_page() -> wait for > >>>> outstanding writeback to complete. > >>>> > >>>> So I still conclude - no need for page lock in the GUP path at all AFAICT. > >>>> In fact we rely on the very same page fault vs page writeback synchronization > >>>> for normal user faults as well. And normal user mmap access is even nastier > >>>> than GUP access because the CPU reads page tables without taking PTE lock. > >>> > >>> For the "slow" GUP path you are right you do not need a lock as the > >>> page table lock give you the ordering. For the GUP fast path you > >>> would either need the lock or the memory barrier with the test for > >>> page write back. > >>> > >>> Maybe an easier thing is to convert GUP fast to try to take the page > >>> table lock if it fails taking the page table lock then we fall back > >>> to slow GUP path. Otherwise then we have the same garantee as the slow > >>> path. > >> > >> You're right I was looking at the wrong place for GUP_fast() path. But I > >> still don't think anything special (i.e. page lock or new barrier) is > >> necessary. GUP_fast() takes care already now that it cannot race with page > >> unmapping or write-protection (as there are other places in MM that rely on > >> this). Look, gup_pte_range() has: > >> > >> if (!page_cache_get_speculative(head)) > >> goto pte_unmap; > >> > >> if (unlikely(pte_val(pte) != pte_val(*ptep))) { > >> put_page(head); > >> goto pte_unmap; > >> } > >> > >> So that page_cache_get_speculative() will become > >> page_cache_pin_speculative() to increment refcount by PAGE_PIN_BIAS instead > >> of 1. That is atomic ordered operation so it cannot be reordered with the > >> following check that PTE stayed same. So once page_mkclean() write-protects > >> PTE, there can be no new pins from GUP_fast() and we are sure all > >> succeeding pins are visible in page->_refcount after page_mkclean() > >> completes. Again this is nothing new, other mm code already relies on > >> either seeing page->_refcount incremented or GUP fast bailing out (e.g. DAX > >> relies on this). Although strictly speaking I'm not 100% sure what prevents > >> page->_refcount load to be speculatively reordered before PTE update even > >> in current places using this but there's so much stuff inbetween that > >> there's probably something ;). But we could add smp_rmb() after > >> page_mkclean() before changing page_pinned() for the peace of mind I guess. > > > > Yeah i think you are right, i missed the check on same pte value > > and the atomic inc in page_cache_get_speculative() is a barrier. > > I do not think the barrier would be necessary as page_mkclean is > > taking and dropping locks so those should have enough barriering. > > > > Hi Jan, Jerome, > > OK, this seems to be up and running locally, but while putting together > documentation and polishing up things, I noticed that there is one last piece > that I don't quite understand, after all. The page_cache_get_speculative() > existing documentation explains how refcount synchronizes these things, but I > don't see how that helps with synchronization page_mkclean and gup, in this > situation: > > gup_fast gets the refcount and rechecks the pte hasn't changed > > meanwhile, page_mkclean...wait, how does refcount come into play here? > page_mkclean can remove the mapping and insert a write-protected pte, > regardless of page refcount, correct? Help? :) Correct, page_mkclean() does not check the refcount and do not need to check it. We need to check for the page pin after the page_mkclean when code is done prepping the page for io (clear_page_dirty_for_io). The race Jan and I were discussing was about wether we needed to lock the page or not and we do not. For slow path page_mkclean and GUP_slow will synchronize on the page table lock. For GUP_fast the fast code will back off if the pte is not the same and thus either we see the pin after page_mkclean() or GUP_fast back off. You will never have code that miss the pin after page_mkclean() and GUP_fast that did not back off. Now the page_cache_get_speculative() is for another race when a page is freed concurrently. page_cache_get_speculative() only inc the refcount if the page is not already freed ie refcount != 0. So GUP_fast has 2 exclusions mechanisms, one for racing modification to the page table like page_mkclean (pte the same after incrementing the refcount) and one for racing put_page (only increment refcount if it is not 0). Here for what we want we just modify this second mechanisms to add the bias value not just 1 to the refcount. This keep both mechanisms intacts and give us the page pin test through refcount bias value. Note that page_mkclean can not race with a put_page() as whoever calls page_mkclean already hold a reference on the page and thus no put_page can free the page. Does that help ? Cheers, Jérôme