Peter Xu <peterx@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Wed, Aug 24, 2022 at 04:25:44PM -0400, Peter Xu wrote: >> On Wed, Aug 24, 2022 at 11:56:25AM +1000, Alistair Popple wrote: >> > >> Still I don't know whether there'll be any side effect of having stall tlbs >> > >> in !present ptes because I'm not familiar enough with the private dev swap >> > >> migration code. But I think having them will be safe, even if redundant. >> > >> > What side-effect were you thinking of? I don't see any issue with not >> > TLB flushing stale device-private TLBs prior to the migration because >> > they're not accessible anyway and shouldn't be in any TLB. >> >> Sorry to be misleading, I never meant we must add them. As I said it's >> just that I don't know the code well so I don't know whether it's safe to >> not have it. >> >> IIUC it's about whether having stall system-ram stall tlb in other >> processor would matter or not here. E.g. some none pte that this code >> collected (boosted both "cpages" and "npages" for a none pte) could have >> stall tlb in other cores that makes the page writable there. > > For this one, let me give a more detailed example. Thanks, I would have been completely lost about what you were talking about without this :-) > It's about whether below could happen: > > thread 1 thread 2 thread 3 > -------- -------- -------- > write to page P (data=P1) > (cached TLB writable) > zap_pte_range() > pgtable lock > clear pte for page P > pgtable unlock > ... > migrate_vma_collect > pte none, npages++, cpages++ > allocate device page > copy data (with P1) > map pte as device swap > write to page P again > (data updated from P1->P2) > flush tlb > > Then at last from processor side P should have data P2 but actually from > device memory it's P1. Data corrupt. In the above scenario migrate_vma_collect_pmd() will observe pte_none. This will mark the src_pfn[] array as needing a new zero page which will be installed by migrate_vma_pages()->migrate_vma_insert_page(). So there is no data to be copied hence there can't be any data corruption. Remember these are private anonymous pages, so any zap_pte_range() indicates the data is no longer needed (eg. MADV_DONTNEED). >> >> When I said I'm not familiar with the code, it's majorly about one thing I >> never figured out myself, in that migrate_vma_collect_pmd() has this >> optimization to trylock on the page, collect if it succeeded: >> >> /* >> * Optimize for the common case where page is only mapped once >> * in one process. If we can lock the page, then we can safely >> * set up a special migration page table entry now. >> */ >> if (trylock_page(page)) { >> ... >> } else { >> put_page(page); >> mpfn = 0; >> } >> >> But it's kind of against a pure "optimization" in that if trylock failed, >> we'll clear the mpfn so the src[i] will be zero at last. Then will we >> directly give up on this page, or will we try to lock_page() again >> somewhere? That comment is out dated. We used to try locking the page again but that was removed by ab09243aa95a ("mm/migrate.c: remove MIGRATE_PFN_LOCKED"). See https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20211025041608.289017-1-apopple@xxxxxxxxxx Will post a clean-up for it. >> The future unmap op is also based on this "cpages", not "npages": >> >> if (args->cpages) >> migrate_vma_unmap(args); >> >> So I never figured out how this code really works. It'll be great if you >> could shed some light to it. >> >> Thanks, >> >> -- >> Peter Xu