On Thu, Dec 17, 2020 at 2:54 PM Muchun Song <songmuchun@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, Dec 17, 2020 at 6:52 AM Mike Kravetz <mike.kravetz@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On 12/16/20 2:25 PM, Oscar Salvador wrote: > > > On Wed, Dec 16, 2020 at 02:08:30PM -0800, Mike Kravetz wrote: > > >>> + * vmemmap_rmap_walk - walk vmemmap page table > > >>> + > > >>> +static void vmemmap_pte_range(pmd_t *pmd, unsigned long addr, > > >>> + unsigned long end, struct vmemmap_rmap_walk *walk) > > >>> +{ > > >>> + pte_t *pte; > > >>> + > > >>> + pte = pte_offset_kernel(pmd, addr); > > >>> + do { > > >>> + BUG_ON(pte_none(*pte)); > > >>> + > > >>> + if (!walk->reuse) > > >>> + walk->reuse = pte_page(pte[VMEMMAP_TAIL_PAGE_REUSE]); > > >> > > >> It may be just me, but I don't like the pte[-1] here. It certainly does work > > >> as designed because we want to remap all pages in the range to the page before > > >> the range (at offset -1). But, we do not really validate this 'reuse' page. > > >> There is the BUG_ON(pte_none(*pte)) as a sanity check, but we do nothing similar > > >> for pte[-1]. Based on the usage for HugeTLB pages, we can be confident that > > >> pte[-1] is actually a pte. In discussions with Oscar, you mentioned another > > >> possible use for these routines. > > > > > > Without giving it much of a thought, I guess we could duplicate the > > > BUG_ON for the pte outside the loop, and add a new one for pte[-1]. > > > Also, since walk->reuse seems to not change once it is set, we can take > > > it outside the loop? e.g: > > > > > > pte *pte; > > > > > > pte = pte_offset_kernel(pmd, addr); > > > BUG_ON(pte_none(*pte)); > > > BUG_ON(pte_none(pte[VMEMMAP_TAIL_PAGE_REUSE])); > > > walk->reuse = pte_page(pte[VMEMMAP_TAIL_PAGE_REUSE]); > > > do { > > > .... > > > } while... > > > > > > Or I am not sure whether we want to keep it inside the loop in case > > > future cases change walk->reuse during the operation. > > > But to be honest, I do not think it is realistic of all future possible > > > uses of this, so I would rather keep it simple for now. > > > > I was thinking about possibly passing the 'reuse' address as another parameter > > to vmemmap_remap_reuse(). We could add this addr to the vmemmap_rmap_walk > > struct and set walk->reuse when we get to the pte for that address. Of > > course this would imply that the addr would need to be part of the range. > > Maybe adding another one parameter is unnecessary. How about doing > this in the vmemmap_remap_reuse? > > The 'reuse' address just is start + PAGE_SIZE. > > void vmemmap_remap_free(unsigned long start, unsigned long size) > { > unsigned long end = start + size; > unsigned long reuse_addr = start + PAGE_SIZE; ^^^ Here is "-" Sorry. > LIST_HEAD(vmemmap_pages); > > struct vmemmap_remap_walk walk = { > .remap_pte = vmemmap_remap_pte, > .vmemmap_pages = &vmemmap_pages, > .reuse_addr = reuse_addr. > }; > > } > > > > > Ideally, we would walk the page table to get to the reuse page. My concern > > was not explicitly about adding the BUG_ON. In more general use, *pte could > > be the first entry on a pte page. And, then pte[-1] may not even be a pte. > > > > Again, I don't think this matters for the current HugeTLB use case. Just a > > little concerned if code is put to use for other purposes. > > -- > > Mike Kravetz > > > > -- > Yours, > Muchun -- Yours, Muchun