The pagewalk in pagemap_read reads one PTE past the end of the requested range, and stops when the buffer runs out of space. While it produces the right result, the extra read is unnecessary and less performant. I timed the following command before and after this patch: dd count=100000 if=/proc/self/pagemap of=/dev/null The results are consistently within 0.001s across 5 runs. Before: 100000+0 records in 100000+0 records out 51200000 bytes (51 MB) copied, 0.0763159 s, 671 MB/s real 0m0.078s user 0m0.012s sys 0m0.065s After: 100000+0 records in 100000+0 records out 51200000 bytes (51 MB) copied, 0.0487928 s, 1.0 GB/s real 0m0.050s user 0m0.011s sys 0m0.039s Signed-off-by: Yuanchu Xie <yuanchu@xxxxxxxxxx> --- fs/proc/task_mmu.c | 12 ++++++------ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/fs/proc/task_mmu.c b/fs/proc/task_mmu.c index 420510f6a545..6259dd432eeb 100644 --- a/fs/proc/task_mmu.c +++ b/fs/proc/task_mmu.c @@ -1689,23 +1689,23 @@ static ssize_t pagemap_read(struct file *file, char __user *buf, /* watch out for wraparound */ start_vaddr = end_vaddr; if (svpfn <= (ULONG_MAX >> PAGE_SHIFT)) { + unsigned long end; + ret = mmap_read_lock_killable(mm); if (ret) goto out_free; start_vaddr = untagged_addr_remote(mm, svpfn << PAGE_SHIFT); mmap_read_unlock(mm); + + end = start_vaddr + ((count / PM_ENTRY_BYTES) << PAGE_SHIFT); + if (end >= start_vaddr && end < mm->task_size) + end_vaddr = end; } /* Ensure the address is inside the task */ if (start_vaddr > mm->task_size) start_vaddr = end_vaddr; - /* - * The odds are that this will stop walking way - * before end_vaddr, because the length of the - * user buffer is tracked in "pm", and the walk - * will stop when we hit the end of the buffer. - */ ret = 0; while (count && (start_vaddr < end_vaddr)) { int len; -- 2.40.1.606.ga4b1b128d6-goog