On Thu, 29 Feb 2024 04:10:03 PST (-0800), cyy@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
This patch has not been reviewed for more than a month. There is another patch that did the same fix but in another way and still has not been reviewed like this. I'm here to do a comparison of some choices briefly to let the maintainer understand the issues and the solutions. I think it's time to make a decision before the next Linux LTS v6.9. As a number of sv48 chips will be released this year. Issues: Since commit add2cc6b6515 ("RISC-V: mm: Restrict address space for sv39,sv48,sv57") from patch [1], userspace software cannot create virtual address memory mapping on the hint address if the address larger than (1<<38) on sv48, sv57 capable CPU using mmap without MAP_FIXED set. This is because since that commit, the hint address is treated as the upper bound to create the mapping when the hint address is larger than (1<<38). Existing regression for userspace software since that commit: - box64 [2]
Is this the same regression as before? IIUC the real issue there is that userspace wasn't passing MAP_FIXED and expecting a fixed address to be mapped. That's just a bug in userspace.
Is there any software that uses mmap() in a legal way that the flags patch caused a regression in? If that's the case then we'll need to figure out what it's doing so we can avoid the regression.
The only thing I can think of are realloc-type schemes, where rounding the hint address down would result in performance problems. I don't know of anything like that specifically, but I think Charlie's patch would fix it.
Some choices are: 1. Do not change it Con: This behavior is not the same as x86, arm64, and powerpc when treating memory address space larger than 48-bit. On x86, arm64, and powerpc, if the hint address is larger than 48-bit, mmap will not limit the upper bound to use. Also, these ISAs limit the mmap to 48-bit by default. However, RISC-V currently uses sv39 by default, which is not the same as the document and commit message.
IIUC arm64/amd64 started with 48-bit-capable hardware and kernels, and thus the only regression was when moving to the larger VA spaces. We started with sv39-based VA space,
2. Use my patch which limits the upper bound of mmap to 47-bit by default, if the hint address is larger than (1<<47), then no limit. Pros: Let the behavior of mmap align with x86, arm64, powerpc Cons: A new regression for software that assumes mmap will not return an address larger than the hint address if the hint address is larger than (1<<38) as it has been documented on RISC-V since v6.6. However, there is no change in the widespread sv39 systems we use now.
The OpenJDK and Go people have at least talked about using the interface as it is currently defined. I'm trying to chase down some of the folks around here who understand that stuff, but it might take a bit...
3. Use Charlie's patch [3] which adjusts the upper bound to hint address + size.
IMO we can call that compatible with the docs. There's sort of a grey area in "A hint address passed to mmap will cause the largest address space that fits entirely into the hint to be used" as to how that hint address is used, but I think interpreting it as the base address is sane and we can just update the docs.
This also should fix the realloc-type cases I can think of, though those are sort of theoretical right now.
Pros: Still has upper-bound limit using hint address but allows userspace to create mapping on the hint address without MAP_FIXED set. Cons: That patch will introduce a new regression even for the sv39 system when creating mmap with the same hint address more than one time if the hint address is less than round-gap.
I'm not quite sure what you're trying to say there. If users are passing a hint that's already allocated then they're not going to get that address allocated, so as long as we give them something else we're OK.
We might want to take more advantage of the clause in the docs that allows larger addresses to be allocated under memory pressure to avoid too many allocation failures, but that applies to any of these schemes.
4. Some new ideas currently are not on the mailing list Hope this issue can be fixed before the Linux v6.9 release. Thanks, Yangyu Chen [1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-riscv/20230809232218.849726-2-charlie@xxxxxxxxxxxx/ [2] https://github.com/ptitSeb/box64/commit/5b700cb6e6f397d2074c49659f7f9915f4a33c5f [3] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-riscv/20240130-use_mmap_hint_address-v3-0-8a655cfa8bcb@xxxxxxxxxxxx/