Q How can a page be mapped into multiple processes and have a mapcount of 1? A It is a hugetlb page referenced by a shared PMD. I was looking to expose some basic information about PMD sharing via /proc/smaps. After adding the code, I started a couple processes sharing a large hugetlb mapping that would result in the use of shared PMDs. When I looked at the output of /proc/smaps, I saw my new metric counting the number of shared PMDs. However, what stood out was that the entire mapping was listed as Private_Hugetlb. WTH??? It certainly was shared! The routine smaps_hugetlb_range decides between Private_Hugetlb and Shared_Hugetlb with this code: if (page) { int mapcount = page_mapcount(page); if (mapcount >= 2) mss->shared_hugetlb += huge_page_size(hstate_vma(vma)); else mss->private_hugetlb += huge_page_size(hstate_vma(vma)); } After spending some time looking for issues in the page_mapcount code, I came to the realization that the mapcount of hugetlb pages only referenced by a shared PMD would be 1 no matter how many processes had mapped the page. When a page is first faulted, the mapcount is set to 1. When faulted in other processes, the shared PMD is added to the page table of the other processes. No increase of mapcount will occur. At first thought this seems bad. However, I believe this has been the behavior since hugetlb PMD sharing was introduced in 2006 and I am unaware of any reported issues. I did a audit of code looking at mapcount. In addition to the above issue with smaps, there appears to be an issue with 'migrate_pages' where shared pages could be migrated without appropriate privilege. /* With MPOL_MF_MOVE, we migrate only unshared hugepage. */ if (flags & (MPOL_MF_MOVE_ALL) || (flags & MPOL_MF_MOVE && page_mapcount(page) == 1)) { if (isolate_hugetlb(page, qp->pagelist) && (flags & MPOL_MF_STRICT)) /* * Failed to isolate page but allow migrating pages * which have been queued. */ ret = 1; } I will prepare fixes for both of these. However, I wanted to ask if anyone has ideas about other potential issues with this? Since COW is mostly relevant to private mappings, shared PMDs generally do not apply. Nothing stood out in a quick audit of code. -- Mike Kravetz