On Mon, Aug 14, 2023 at 05:04:47PM -0700, Zach O'Keefe wrote: > > From a large folios perspective, filesystems do not implement a special > > handler. They call filemap_fault() (directly or indirectly) from their > > ->fault handler. If there is already a folio in the page cache which > > satisfies this fault, we insert it into the page tables (no matter what > > size it is). If there is no folio, we call readahead to populate that > > index in the page cache, and probably some other indices around it. > > That's do_sync_mmap_readahead(). > > > > If you look at that, you'll see that we check the VM_HUGEPAGE flag, and > > if set we align to a PMD boundary and read two PMD-size pages (so that we > > can do async readahead for the second page, if we're doing a linear scan). > > If the VM_HUGEPAGE flag isn't set, we'll use the readahead algorithm to > > decide how large the folio should be that we're reading into; if it's a > > random read workload, we'll stick to order-0 pages, but if we're getting > > good hit rate from the linear scan, we'll increase the size (although > > we won't go past PMD size) > > > > There's also the ->map_pages() optimisation which handles page faults > > locklessly, and will fail back to ->fault() if there's even a light > > breeze. I don't think that's of any particular use in answering your > > question, so I'm not going into details about it. > > > > I'm not sure I understand the code that's being modified well enough to > > be able to give you a straight answer to your question, but hopefully > > this is helpful to you. > > Thank you, this was great info. I had thought, incorrectly, that large > folio work would eventually tie into that ->huge_fault() handler > (should be dax_huge_fault() ?) > > If that's the case, then faulting file-backed, non-DAX memory as > (pmd-mapped-)THPs isn't supported at all, and no fault lies with the > aforementioned patches. Ah, wait, hang on. You absolutely can get a PMD mapping by calling into ->fault. Look at how finish_fault() works: if (pmd_none(*vmf->pmd)) { if (PageTransCompound(page)) { ret = do_set_pmd(vmf, page); if (ret != VM_FAULT_FALLBACK) return ret; } if (vmf->prealloc_pte) pmd_install(vma->vm_mm, vmf->pmd, &vmf->prealloc_pte); So if we find a large folio that is PMD mappable, and there's nothing at vmf->pmd, we install a PMD-sized mapping at that spot. If that fails, we install the preallocated PTE table at vmf->pmd and continue to trying set one or more PTEs to satisfy this page fault. So why, you may be asking, do we have ->huge_fault. Well, you should ask the clown who did commit b96375f74a6d ... in fairness to me, finish_fault() did not exist at the time, and the ability to return a PMD-sized page was added later.