On Tue, Jul 12, 2022 at 05:49:32AM +0000, Song Liu wrote: > > On Jul 11, 2022, at 9:18 PM, Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > I believe you are mentioning requiring text_poke() because the way > > eBPF code uses the module_alloc() is different. Correct me if I'm > > wrong, but from what I gather is you use the text_poke_copy() as the data > > is already RO+X, contrary module_alloc() use cases. You do this since your > > bpf_prog_pack_alloc() calls set_memory_ro() and set_memory_x() after > > module_alloc() and before you can use this memory. This is a different type > > of allocator. And, again please correct me if I'm wrong but now you want to > > share *one* 2 MiB huge-page for multiple BPF programs to help with the > > impact of TLB misses. > > Yes, sharing 1x 2MiB huge page is the main reason to require text_poke. > OTOH, 2MiB huge pages without sharing is not really useful. Both kprobe > and ftrace only uses a fraction of a 4kB page. Most BPF programs and > modules cannot use 2MiB either. Therefore, vmalloc_rw_exec() doesn't add > much value on top of current module_alloc(). Thanks for the clarification. > > A vmalloc_ro_exec() by definition would imply a text_poke(). > > > > Can kprobes, ftrace and modules use it too? It would be nice > > so to not have to deal with the loose semantics on the user to > > have to use set_vm_flush_reset_perms() on ro+x later, but > > I think this can be addressed separately on a case by case basis. > > I am pretty confident that kprobe and ftrace can share huge pages with > BPF programs. Then wonderful, we know where to go in terms of a new API then as it can be shared in the future for sure and there are gains. > I haven't looked into all the details with modules, but > given CONFIG_ARCH_WANTS_MODULES_DATA_IN_VMALLOC, I think it is also > possible. Sure. > Once this is done, a regular system (without huge BPF program or huge > modules) will just use 1x 2MB page for text from module, ftrace, kprobe, > and bpf programs. That would be nice, if possible, however modules will require likely its own thing, on my system I see about 57 MiB used on coresize alone. lsmod | grep -v Module | cut -f1 -d ' ' | \ xargs sudo modinfo | grep filename | \ grep -o '/.*' | xargs stat -c "%s - %n" | \ awk 'BEGIN {sum=0} {sum+=$1} END {print sum}' 60001272 And so perhaps we need such a pool size to be configurable. > > But a vmalloc_ro_exec() with a respective free can remove the > > requirement to do set_vm_flush_reset_perms(). > > Removing the requirement to set_vm_flush_reset_perms() is the other > reason to go directly to vmalloc_ro_exec(). Yes fantastic. > My current version looks like this: > > void *vmalloc_exec(unsigned long size); > void vfree_exec(void *ptr, unsigned int size); > > ro is eliminated as there is no rw version of the API. Alright. I am not sure if 2 MiB will suffice given what I mentioned above, and what to do to ensure this grows at a reasonable pace. Then, at least for usage for all architectures since not all will support text_poke() we will want to consider a way to make it easy to users to use non huge page fallbacks, but that would be up to those users, so we can wait for that. > The ugly part is @size for vfree_exec(). We need it to share huge > pages. I suppose this will become evident during patch review. > Under the hood, it looks similar to current bpf_prog_pack_alloc > and bpf_prog_pack_free. Groovy. Luis