On 6/21/24 07:25, Peter Xu wrote: > These new helpers will be needed for pud entry updates soon. Namely: > > - pudp_invalidate() > - pud_modify() I think it's also definitely worth noting where you got this code from. Presumably you copied, pasted and modified the PMD code. That's fine, but it should be called out. ... > +static inline pud_t pud_modify(pud_t pud, pgprot_t newprot) > +{ > + pudval_t val = pud_val(pud), oldval = val; > + > + /* > + * NOTE: no need to consider shadow stack complexities because it > + * doesn't support 1G mappings. > + */ > + val &= _HPAGE_CHG_MASK; > + val |= check_pgprot(newprot) & ~_HPAGE_CHG_MASK; > + val = flip_protnone_guard(oldval, val, PHYSICAL_PUD_PAGE_MASK); > + > + return __pud(val); > +} First of all, the comment to explain what you didn't do here is as many lines as the code to _actually_ implement it. Second, I believe this might have missed the purpose of the "shadow stack complexities". The pmd/pte code is there not to support modifying shadow stack mappings, it's there to avoid inadvertent shadow stack mapping creation. That "NOTE:" is ambiguous as to whether the shadow stacks aren't supported on 1G mappings in Linux or the hardware (I just checked the hardware docs and don't see anything making 1G mappings special, btw). But, still, what if you take a Dirty=1,Write=1 pud and pud_modify() it to make it Dirty=1,Write=0? What prevents that from being misinterpreted by the hardware as being a valid 1G shadow stack mapping? > /* > * mprotect needs to preserve PAT and encryption bits when updating > * vm_page_prot > @@ -1377,10 +1398,25 @@ static inline pmd_t pmdp_establish(struct vm_area_struct *vma, > } > #endif > > +static inline pud_t pudp_establish(struct vm_area_struct *vma, > + unsigned long address, pud_t *pudp, pud_t pud) > +{ > + if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_SMP)) { > + return xchg(pudp, pud); > + } else { > + pud_t old = *pudp; > + WRITE_ONCE(*pudp, pud); > + return old; > + } > +} Why is there no: page_table_check_pud_set(vma->vm_mm, pudp, pud); ? Sure, it doesn't _do_ anything today. But the PMD code has it today. So leaving it out creates a divergence that honestly can only serve to bite us in the future and will create a head-scratching delta for anyone that is comparing PUD and PMD implementations in the future.