On 28/02/2019 02:15, Paul Burton wrote: > Hi Steven, > > On Wed, Feb 27, 2019 at 05:05:45PM +0000, Steven Price wrote: >> For mips, we don't support large pages on 32 bit so add stubs returning 0. > > So far so good :) > >> For 64 bit look for _PAGE_HUGE flag being set. This means exposing the >> flag when !CONFIG_MIPS_HUGE_TLB_SUPPORT. > > Here I have to ask why? We could just return 0 like the mips32 case when > CONFIG_MIPS_HUGE_TLB_SUPPORT=n, let the compiler optimize the whole > thing out and avoid redundant work at runtime. > > This could be unified too in asm/pgtable.h - checking for > CONFIG_MIPS_HUGE_TLB_SUPPORT should be sufficient to cover the mips32 > case along with the subset of mips64 configurations without huge pages. The intention here is to define a new set of macros/functions which will always tell us whether we're at the leaf of a page table walk, whether or not huge pages are compiled into the kernel. Basically this allows the page walking code to be used on page tables other than user space, for instance the kernel page tables (which e.g. might use a large mapping for linear memory even if huge pages are not compiled in) or page tables from firmware (e.g. EFI on arm64). I'm not familiar enough with mips to know how it handles things like the linear map so I don't know how relevant that is, but I'm trying to introduce a new set of functions which differ from the existing p?d_huge() macros by not depending on whether these mappings could exist for a user space VMA (i.e. not depending on HUGETLB support and existing for all levels that architecturally they can occur at). Steve