On Thu, Feb 28, 2019 at 10:55:48PM -0500, Andrea Arcangeli wrote: > Hello, > > This was a well known issue for more than a decade, but until a few > months ago we relied on the compiler to stick to atomic accesses and > updates while walking and updating pagetables. > > However now the 64bit native_set_pte finally uses WRITE_ONCE and > gup_pmd_range uses READ_ONCE as well. > > This convert more racy VM places to avoid depending on the expected > compiler behavior to achieve kernel runtime correctness. > > It mostly guarantees gcc to do atomic updates at 64bit granularity > (practically not needed) and it also prevents gcc to emit code that > risks getting confused if the memory unexpectedly changes under it > (unlikely to ever be needed). > > The list of vm_start/end/pgoff to update isn't complete, I covered the > most obvious places, but before wasting too much time at doing a full > audit I thought it was safer to post it and get some comment. More > updates can be posted incrementally anyway. The intention is described well to my eyes. Do I understand correctly, that it's attempt to get away with modifying vma's fields under down_read(mmap_sem)? I'm not fan of this. It can help with producing stable value for the one field, but it doesn't help if more than one thing changed under you. Like if both vm_start and vm_end modifed under you, it can lead to inconsistency. Like vm_end < vm_start. -- Kirill A. Shutemov