Re: [PATCH v21 1/4] mm: add VM_DROPPABLE for designating always lazily freeable mappings

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On 08.07.24 02:08, Linus Torvalds wrote:
On Sun, 7 Jul 2024 at 14:01, David Hildenbrand <david@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

At least MAP_DROPPABLE doesn't quite make sense with hugetlb, but at least
the other ones do have semantics with hugetlb?

Hmm.

How about we just say that VM_DROPPABLE really is something separate
from MAP_PRIVATE or MAP_SHARED..

So it would essentially currently imply MAP_ANON|MAP_PRIVATE, without COW (not shared with a child process).

Then, we should ignore any fd+offset that is passed (or bail out); I assume that's what your proposal below does automatically without diving into the code.


And then we make the rule be that VM_DROPPABLE is never dumped and
always dropped on fork, just to make things simpler.

The semantics are much more intuitive. No need for separate mmap flags.


It not only avoids a flag, but it actually makes sense: the pages
aren't stable for dumping anyway, and not copying them on fork() not
only avoids some overhead, but makes it much more reliable and
testable.

IOW, how about taking this approach:

    --- a/include/uapi/linux/mman.h
    +++ b/include/uapi/linux/mman.h
    @@ -17,5 +17,6 @@
     #define MAP_SHARED  0x01            /* Share changes */
     #define MAP_PRIVATE 0x02            /* Changes are private */
     #define MAP_SHARED_VALIDATE 0x03    /* share + validate extension flags */
    +#define MAP_DROPPABLE       0x08    /* 4 is not in MAP_TYPE on parisc? */

     /*

with do_mmap() doing:

    --- a/mm/mmap.c
    +++ b/mm/mmap.c
    @@ -1369,6 +1369,23 @@ unsigned long do_mmap(struct file *file,
                         pgoff = 0;
                         vm_flags |= VM_SHARED | VM_MAYSHARE;
                         break;
    +            case MAP_DROPPABLE:
    +                    /*
    +                     * A locked or stack area makes no sense to
    +                     * be droppable.
    +                     *
    +                     * Also, since droppable pages can just go
    +                     * away at any time, it makes no sense to
    +                     * copy them on fork or dump them.
    +                     */
    +                    if (flags & MAP_LOCKED)
    +                            return -EINVAL;

Likely we'll have to adjust mlock() as well. Also, I think we should just bail out with hugetlb as well.

    +                    if (vm_flags & (VM_GROWSDOWN|VM_GROWSUP))
    +                            return -EINVAL;
    +
    +                    vm_flags |= VM_DROPPABLE;
    +                    vm_flags |= VM_WIPEONFORK | VM_DONTDUMP;

Further, maybe we want to disallow madvise() clearing these flags here, just to be consistent.

    +                    fallthrough;
                 case MAP_PRIVATE:
                         /*
                          * Set pgoff according to addr for anon_vma.

which looks rather simple.

The only oddity is that parisc thing - every other archiecture has the
MAP_TYPE bits being 0xf, but parisc uses 0x2b (also four bits, but
instead of the low four bits it's 00101011 - strange).

I assume, changing that would have the risk of breaking stupid user space, right? (that sets a bit without any semantics)


So using 8 as a MAP_TYPE bit for MAP_DROPPABLE works everywhere, and
if we eventually want to do a "signaling" MAP_DROPPABLE we could use
9.

Sounds good enough.


This has the added advantage that if somebody does this on an old
kernel,. they *will* get an error. Because unlike the 'flag' bits in
general, the MAP_TYPE bit space has always been tested.

Hmm?

As a side note, I'll raise that I am not a particular fan of the "droppable" terminology, at least with the "read 0s" approach.

From a user perspective, the memory might suddenly lose its state and read as 0s just like volatile memory when it loses power. "dropping pages" sounds more like an implementation detail.

Something like MAP_VOLATILE might be more intuitive (similar to the proposed MADV_VOLATILE).

But naming is hard, just mentioning to share my thought :)

--
Cheers,

David / dhildenb





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