On Tue, Oct 11, 2022 at 6:52 AM Andrei Vagin <avagin@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Mon, Oct 03, 2022 at 04:21:22PM +0500, Muhammad Usama Anjum wrote: > > On 9/28/22 10:24 PM, Andrei Vagin wrote: > > > On Wed, Sep 21, 2022 at 11:26 AM Muhammad Usama Anjum > > > <usama.anjum@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > >> > > >> Hi, > > >> > > >> Thank you for reviewing. > > >> > > >> On 9/19/22 7:58 PM, Andrei Vagin wrote: > > >>>> This ioctl can be used by the CRIU project and other applications which > > >>>> require soft-dirty PTE bit information. The following operations are > > >>>> supported in this ioctl: > > >>>> - Get the pages that are soft-dirty. > > >>> > > >>> I think this interface doesn't have to be limited by the soft-dirty > > >>> bits only. For example, CRIU needs to know whether file, present and swap bits > > >>> are set or not. > > >> These operations can be performed by pagemap procfs file. Definitely > > >> performing them through IOCTL will be faster. But I'm trying to add a > > >> simple IOCTL by which some specific PTE bit can be read and cleared > > >> atomically. This IOCTL can be extended to include other bits like file, > > >> present and swap bits by keeping the interface simple. The following > > >> mask advice is nice. But if we add that kind of masking, it'll start to > > >> look like a filter on top of pagemap. My intention is to not duplicate > > >> the functionality already provided by the pagemap. One may ask, then why > > >> am I adding "get the soft-dirty pages" functionality? I'm adding it to > > >> complement the get and clear operation. The "get" and "get and clear" > > >> operations with special flag (PAGEMAP_SD_NO_REUSED_REGIONS) can give > > >> results quicker by not splitting the VMAs. > > > > > > This simple interface is good only for a limited number of use-cases. > > > The interface > > > that I suggest doesn't duplicate more code than this one, but it is much more > > > universal. It will be a big mess if you add a separate API for each > > > specific use-case. > > > > > > > > >>> I mean we should be able to specify for what pages we need to get info > > >>> for. An ioctl argument can have these four fields: > > >>> * required bits (rmask & mask == mask) - all bits from this mask have to be set. > > >>> * any of these bits (amask & mask != 0) - any of these bits is set. > > >>> * exclude masks (emask & mask == 0) = none of these bits are set. > > >>> * return mask - bits that have to be reported to user. > > The required mask (rmask) makes sense to me. At the moment, I only know > > about the practical use case for the required mask. Can you share how > > can any and exclude masks help for the CRIU? > > > > I looked at should_dump_page in the CRIU code: > https://github.com/checkpoint-restore/criu/blob/45641ab26d7bb78706a6215fdef8f9133abf8d10/criu/mem.c#L102 > > When CRIU dumps file private mappings, it needs to get pages that have > PME_PRESENT or PME_SWAP but don't have PME_FILE. I would really like to see the mask discussed will be adopted. With it CRIU will be able to migrate huge sparse VMAs assuming that a single hole is processed in O(1) time. Use cases for migrating sparse VMAs are binaries sanitized with ASAN, MSAN or TSAN [1]. All of these sanitizers produce sparse mappings of shadow memory [2]. Being able to migrate such binaries allows to highly reduce the amount of work needed to identify and fix post-migration crashes, which happen constantly. > > > >>>> - Clear the pages which are soft-dirty. > > >>>> - The optional flag to ignore the VM_SOFTDIRTY and only track per page > > >>>> soft-dirty PTE bit > > >>>> > > >>>> There are two decisions which have been taken about how to get the output > > >>>> from the syscall. > > >>>> - Return offsets of the pages from the start in the vec > > >>> > > >>> We can conside to return regions that contains pages with the same set > > >>> of bits. > > >>> > > >>> struct page_region { > > >>> void *start; > > >>> long size; > > >>> u64 bitmap; > > >>> } > > >>> > > >>> And ioctl returns arrays of page_region-s. I believe it will be more > > >>> compact form for many cases. > > >> Thank you for mentioning this. I'd considered this while development. > > >> But I gave up and used the simple array to return the offsets of the > > >> pages as in the problem I'm trying to solve, the dirty pages may be > > >> present amid non-dirty pages. The range may not be useful in that case. > > > > > > This is a good example. If we expect more than two consequent pages > > > on average, the "region" interface looks more prefered. I don't know your > > > use-case, but in the case of CRIU, this assumption looks reasonable. Plus one for page_region data structure. It will make ASAN shadow memory representation much more compact as well as any other classical use-case. [1] https://github.com/google/sanitizers [2] https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizerAlgorithm#64-bit Best, Danylo