Re: [PATCH RFC 0/4] mm: Enable PM_SWAP for shmem with PTE_MARKER

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On Tue, Aug 17, 2021 at 08:46:45PM +0200, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> > Please have a look at current pagemap impl in pte_to_pagemap_entry().  It's not
> > accurate from the 1st day, imho.  E.g., when a page is being migrated from numa
> > node 1 to node 2, we'll mark it PM_SWAP but I think it's not the case.  We can
> > make it more accurate, but I think it's fine, because it's a hint.
> 
> That inconsistency doesn't really matter as you can determine if something
> is present and worth dumping if it's either swapped or present. As long as
> it's one of both but not simply nothing.
> 
> I will shamelessly reference
> tools/testing/selftests/vm/madv_populate.c:pagemap_is_populated() that
> checks exactly for that (the test case uses only private anonymous memory).

Then I think the MADV_POPULATE_READ|WRITE test cases shouldn't depend on
PM_SWAP for that when it goes beyond anonymous private memories - when shmem
swapped out the pte can be none, then the test case can fail even if it
shouldn't, imho.

The mincore() syscall seems to be ideally the thing you may want to make it
accurate, but again it's not a problem for current anonymous private memories.

> 
> > 
> > > Take CRIU as an example, it has to be correct even if a process would remap a
> > > memory region, fork() and unmap in the parent as far as I understand, ...
> > 
> > Are you talking about dirty bit or swap bit?  I'm a bit confused on why swap
> > bit needs to be accurate.  Maybe you mean the dirty bit?
> 
> https://criu.org/Shared_memory
> 
> "Dumping present pages"
> 
> "... CRIU does not dump all of the data. Instead, it determines which pages
> contain it, and only dumps those pages. This is done similarly to how
> regular memory dumping and restoring works, i.e. by looking for PRESENT or
> SWAPPED bits in owners' pagemap entries."
> 
> -> Neither PRESENT nor SWAPPED results in memory not getting dumped, which
> makes perfect sense.
> 
> 1) Process A sets up shared memory and writes data to it.
> 2) System swaps out memory, hints are setup.
> 3) Process A forks Process B, hints are not copied.
> 4) Process A unmaps shared memory, hints are dropped.
> 5) CRIU migrates process A and B and migrates only PRESENT or SWAPPED in
> pagemap.
> 6) Process B uses memory in shared memory region. Pages were not migrated.
> 
> Just one example; feel free to correct me.

I think pte marker won't crash criu, what will happen is that it'll see more
ptes that used to be none that become the pte markers.  This reminded me that
maybe I should teach up mincore() syscall to also be aware of the pte marker at
least, and all non_swap_entry() callers.

> 
> 
> There is notion of the mincore() systemcall:
> 
> "There is one particular feature of shared memory dumps worth mentioning.
> Sometimes, a shared memory page can exist in the kernel, but it is not
> mapped to any process. CRIU detects such pages by calling mincore() on the
> shmem segment, which reports back the page in-memory status. The mincore
> bitmap is when ANDed with the per-process ones. "
> 
> Not sure if they actually mean ORed, because otherwise they'd be losing
> pages that have been swapped out. "mincore() returns a vector that indicates
> whether pages of the calling process's virtual memory are resident in core
> (RAM)"

I am wildly guessing they ORed the two just because PM_SWAP is not working
properly for shmem, so the OR happens only for shmem.  Criu may not only rely
on mincore() because they also want the dirty bits.

Btw, I noticed in 2016 criu switched from mincore() to lseek():

https://github.com/checkpoint-restore/criu/commit/1821acedd04b602b37b587eac5a481094b6274ae

Criu should want to know "whether this page has valid data" not "whether this
page has swapped out", so lseek() seems to be more suitable, which I'm not
aware of before.

I'm now wondering whether for Tiberiu's case mincore() can also be used.  It
should just still be a bit slow because it'll look up the cache too, but it
should work similarly like the original proposal.

Thanks,

-- 
Peter Xu





[Index of Archives]     [Linux ARM Kernel]     [Linux ARM]     [Linux Omap]     [Fedora ARM]     [IETF Annouce]     [Bugtraq]     [Linux OMAP]     [Linux MIPS]     [eCos]     [Asterisk Internet PBX]     [Linux API]

  Powered by Linux