Re: [PATCH v2 00/19] mm: Support huge pfnmaps

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On Wed, Aug 28, 2024 at 7:41 AM Peter Xu <peterx@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Tue, Aug 27, 2024 at 05:42:21PM -0700, Jiaqi Yan wrote:
> > On Tue, Aug 27, 2024 at 3:57 PM Peter Xu <peterx@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > >
> > > On Tue, Aug 27, 2024 at 03:36:07PM -0700, Jiaqi Yan wrote:
> > > > Hi Peter,
> > >
> > > Hi, Jiaqi,
> > >
> > > > I am curious if there is any work needed for unmap_mapping_range? If a
> > > > driver hugely remap_pfn_range()ed at 1G granularity, can the driver
> > > > unmap at PAGE_SIZE granularity? For example, when handling a PFN is
> > >
> > > Yes it can, but it'll invoke the split_huge_pud() which default routes to
> > > removal of the whole pud right now (currently only covers either DAX
> > > mappings or huge pfnmaps; it won't for anonymous if it comes, for example).
> > >
> > > In that case it'll rely on the driver providing proper fault() /
> > > huge_fault() to refault things back with smaller sizes later when accessed
> > > again.
> >
> > I see, so the driver needs to drive the recovery process, and code
> > needs to be in the driver.
> >
> > But it seems to me the recovery process will be more or less the same
> > to different drivers? In that case does it make sense that
> > memory_failure do the common things for all drivers?
> >
> > Instead of removing the whole pud, can driver or memory_failure do
> > something similar to non-struct-page-version of split_huge_page? So
> > driver doesn't need to re-fault good pages back?
>
> I think we can, it's just that we don't yet have a valid use case.
>
> DAX is definitely fault-able.
>
> While for the new huge pfnmap, currently vfio is the only user, and vfio
> only requires to either zap all or map all.  In that case there's no real
> need to ask for what you described yet.  Meanwhile it's also faultable, so
> if / when needed it should hopefully still do the work properly.
>
> I believe it's not usual requirement too for most of the rest drivers, as
> most of them don't even support fault() afaiu. remap_pfn_range() can start
> to use huge mappings, however I'd expect they're mostly not ready for
> random tearing down of any MMIO mappings.
>
> It sounds doable to me though when there's a need of what you're
> describing, but I don't think I know well on the use case yet.
>
> >
> >
> > >
> > > > poisoned in the 1G mapping, it would be great if the mapping can be
> > > > splitted to 2M mappings + 4k mappings, so only the single poisoned PFN
> > > > is lost. (Pretty much like the past proposal* to use HGM** to improve
> > > > hugetlb's memory failure handling).
> > >
> > > Note that we're only talking about MMIO mappings here, in which case the
> > > PFN doesn't even have a struct page, so the whole poison idea shouldn't
> > > apply, afaiu.
> >
> > Yes, there won't be any struct page. Ankit proposed this patchset* for
> > handling poisoning. I wonder if someday the vfio-nvgrace-gpu-pci
> > driver adopts your change via new remap_pfn_range (install PMD/PUD
> > instead of PTE), and memory_failure_pfn still
> > unmap_mapping_range(pfn_space->mapping, pfn << PAGE_SHIFT, PAGE_SIZE,
> > 0), can it somehow just work and no re-fault needed?
> >
> > * https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20231123003513.24292-2-ankita@xxxxxxxxxx/#t
>
> I see now, interesting.. Thanks for the link.
>
> In that case of nvgpu usage, one way is to do as what you said; we can
> enhance the pmd/pud split for pfnmap, but maybe that's an overkill.

Yeah, just want a poke to see if splitting pmd/pud is some low-hanging fruit.

>
> I saw that the nvgpu will need a fault() anyway so as to detect poisoned
> PFNs, then it's also feasible that in the new nvgrace_gpu_vfio_pci_fault()
> when it supports huge pfnmaps it'll need to try to detect whether the whole
> faulting range contains any poisoned PFNs, then provide FALLBACK if so
> (rather than VM_FAULT_HWPOISON).
>
> E.g., when 4K of 2M is poisoned, we'll erase the 2M completely.  When
> access happens, as long as the accessed 4K is not on top of the poisoned
> 4k, huge_fault() should still detect that there's 4k range poisoned, then
> it'll not inject pmd but return FALLBACK, then in the fault() it'll see
> the accessed 4k range is not poisoned, then install a pte.

Thanks for illustrating the re-fault flow again. I think this should
work well for drivers (having large MMIO size) that care about memory
errors. We can put the pmd/pud split idea to backlog and see if it is
needed in future.

>
> Thanks,
>
> --
> Peter Xu
>





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