On Tue, Dec 06, 2022 at 01:03:45PM -0800, John Hubbard wrote: > On 12/6/22 08:45, Peter Xu wrote: > > I've got a fixup attached. John, since this got your attention please also > > have a look too in case there's further issues. > > > > Well, one question: Normally, the pattern of "release_lock(A); call f(); > acquire_lock(A);" is tricky, because one must revalidate that the state > protected by A has not changed while the lock was released. However, in > this case, it's letting page fault handling proceed, which already > assumes that pages might be gone, so generally that seems OK. Yes it's tricky, but not as tricky in this case. I hope my documentation supplemented that (in the fixup patch): + * @hugetlb_entry: if set, called for each hugetlb entry. Note that + * currently the hook function is protected by hugetlb + * vma lock to make sure pte_t* and the spinlock is valid + * to access. If the hook function needs to yield the + * thread or retake the vma lock for some reason, it + * needs to properly release the vma lock manually, + * and retake it before the function returns. The vma lock here makes sure the pte_t and the pgtable spinlock being stable. Without the lock, they're prone to be freed in parallel. > > However, I'm lagging behind on understanding what the vma lock actually > protects. It seems to be a hugetlb-specific protection for concurrent > freeing of the page tables? Not exactly freeing, but unsharing. Mike probably has more to say. The series is here: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20220914221810.95771-1-mike.kravetz@xxxxxxxxxx/#t > If so, then running a page fault handler seems safe. If there's something > else it protects, then we might need to revalidate that after > re-acquiring the vma lock. Nothing to validate here. The only reason to take the vma lock is to match with the caller who assumes the lock taken, so either it'll be released very soon or it prepares for the next hugetlb pgtable walk (huge_pte_offset). > > Also, scattering hugetlb-specific locks throughout mm seems like an > unfortuate thing, I wonder if there is a longer term plan to Not Do > That? So far HMM is really the only one - normally hugetlb_entry() hook is pretty light, so not really throughout the whole mm yet. It's even not urgently needed for the other two places calling cond_sched(), I added it mostly just for completeness, and with the slight hope that maybe we can yield earlier for some pmd unsharers. But yes it's unfortunate, I just didn't come up with a good solution. Suggestion is always welcomed. Thanks, -- Peter Xu