[AMD Official Use Only - General] Hello Boris, >> >You need to elaborate more here: a RMP fault can happen and then the >> >page can get unmapped? What is the exact scenario here? >> >> Yes, if the page gets unmapped while the RMP fault was being handled, >> will add more explanation here. >So what's the logic here to return 1, i.e., retry? >Why should a fault for a page that gets unmapped be retried? The fault in that case should be ignored, IMO. It'll have the same effect to return from do_user_addr_fault() there, without splitting but you need to have a separate return value >definition so that it is clear what needs to happen. And that return value should be != 0 so that the current check still works. if (!pte || !pte_present(*pte)) return 1; This is more like a sanity check and returning 1 will cause the fault handler to return and ignore the fault for current #PF case. If the page got unmapped, the fault will not happen again and there will be no retry, so the fault in this case is being ignored. The other case where 1 is returned is RMP table lookup failure, in that case the faulting process is being terminated, that resolves the fault. >> Actually, the above computes an index into the RMP table. >What index in the RMP table? >> It is basically an index into the 4K page within the hugepage mapped >> in the RMP table or in other words an index into the RMP table entry >> for 4K page(s) corresponding to a hugepage. >So pte_index(address) and for 1G pages, pmd_index(address). >So no reinventing the wheel if we already have helpers for that. Yes that makes sense and pte_index(address) is exactly what is required for 2M hugepages. Will use pte_index() for 2M pages and pmd_index() for 1G pages. >> It is mainly a wrapper around__split_huge_pmd() for SNP use case where >> the host hugepage is split to be in sync with the RMP table. >I see what it is. And I'm saying this looks wrong. You're enforcing page splitting to be a valid thing to do only for SEV machines. Why? >Why is > if (!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_AMD_MEM_ENCRYPT)) > return VM_FAULT_SIGBUS; >there at all? >This is generic code you're touching - not arch/x86/. Ok, so you are suggesting that we remove this check and simply keep this function wrapping around __split_huge_pmd(). This becomes a generic utility function. Thanks, Ashish