On Fri, Mar 24, 2023 at 09:37:31AM +0100, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Wed 08-03-23 11:41:02, Mike Rapoport wrote: > > From: "Mike Rapoport (IBM)" <rppt@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > > When set_memory or set_direct_map APIs used to change attribute or > > permissions for chunks of several pages, the large PMD that maps these > > pages in the direct map must be split. Fragmenting the direct map in such > > manner causes TLB pressure and, eventually, performance degradation. > > > > To avoid excessive direct map fragmentation, add ability to allocate > > "unmapped" pages with __GFP_UNMAPPED flag that will cause removal of the > > allocated pages from the direct map and use a cache of the unmapped pages. > > > > This cache is replenished with higher order pages with preference for > > PMD_SIZE pages when possible so that there will be fewer splits of large > > pages in the direct map. > > > > The cache is implemented as a buddy allocator, so it can serve high order > > allocations of unmapped pages. > > Why do we need a dedicated gfp flag for all this when a dedicated > allocator is used anyway. What prevents users to call unmapped_pages_{alloc,free}? Using unmapped_pages_{alloc,free} adds complexity to the users which IMO outweighs the cost of a dedicated gfp flag. For modules we'd have to make x86::module_{alloc,free}() take care of mapping and unmapping the allocated pages in the modules virtual address range. This also might become relevant for another architectures in future and than we'll have several complex module_alloc()s. And for secretmem while using unmapped_pages_alloc() is easy, the free path becomes really complex because actual page freeing for fd-based memory is deeply buried in the page cache code. My gut feeling is that for PKS using a gfp flag would save a lot of hassle as well. I also think that some of the core buddy allocator code might be reused and unmapped_pages_{alloc,free} could be statics in mm/page_alloc.c and won't be exposed at all. For now I've just copied free list helpers to a separate file out of laziness. > -- > Michal Hocko > SUSE Labs -- Sincerely yours, Mike.