On 12/17/19 12:51 PM, Jason Gunthorpe wrote:
On Mon, Dec 16, 2019 at 11:57:32AM -0800, Ralph Campbell wrote:
mmu_interval_notifier_insert() and mmu_interval_notifier_remove() can't
be called safely from inside the invalidate() callback. This is fine for
devices with explicit memory region register and unregister calls but it
is desirable from a programming model standpoint to not require explicit
memory region registration. Regions can be registered based on device
address faults but without a mechanism for updating or removing the mmu
interval notifiers in response to munmap(), the invalidation callbacks
will be for regions that are stale or apply to different mmaped regions.
What we do in RDMA is drive the removal from a work queue, as we need
a synchronize_srcu anyhow to serialize everything to do with
destroying a part of the address space mirror.
Is it really necessary to have all this stuff just to save doing
something like a work queue?
Well, the invalidates already have to use the driver lock to synchronize
so handling the range tracking updates semi-synchronously seems more
straightforward to me.
Do you feel strongly that adding a work queue is the right way to handle
this?
Also, I think we are not taking core kernel APIs like this with out an
in-kernel user??
Right. I was looking for feedback before updating nouveau to use it.
diff --git a/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h b/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h
index 9e6caa8ecd19..55fbefcdc564 100644
+++ b/include/linux/mmu_notifier.h
@@ -233,11 +233,18 @@ struct mmu_notifier {
* @invalidate: Upon return the caller must stop using any SPTEs within this
* range. This function can sleep. Return false only if sleeping
* was required but mmu_notifier_range_blockable(range) is false.
+ * @release: This function will be called when the mmu_interval_notifier
+ * is removed from the interval tree. Defining this function also
+ * allows mmu_interval_notifier_remove() and
+ * mmu_interval_notifier_update() to be called from the
+ * invalidate() callback function (i.e., they won't block waiting
+ * for invalidations to finish.
Having a function called remove that doesn't block seems like very
poor choice of language, we've tended to use put to describe that
operation.
The difference is meaningful as people often create use after free
bugs in drivers when presented with interfaces named 'remove' or
'destroy' that don't actually guarentee there is not going to be
continued accesses to the memory.
OK. I can rename it put().
*/
struct mmu_interval_notifier_ops {
bool (*invalidate)(struct mmu_interval_notifier *mni,
const struct mmu_notifier_range *range,
unsigned long cur_seq);
+ void (*release)(struct mmu_interval_notifier *mni);
};
struct mmu_interval_notifier {
@@ -246,6 +253,8 @@ struct mmu_interval_notifier {
struct mm_struct *mm;
struct hlist_node deferred_item;
unsigned long invalidate_seq;
+ unsigned long deferred_start;
+ unsigned long deferred_last;
I couldn't quite understand how something like this can work, what is
preventing parallel updates?
It is serialized by the struct mmu_notifier_mm lock.
If there are no tasks walking the interval tree, the update
happens synchronously under the lock. If there are walkers,
the start/last values are stored under the lock and the last caller's
values are used to update the interval tree when the last walker
finishes (under the lock again).
+/**
+ * mmu_interval_notifier_update - Update interval notifier end
+ * @mni: Interval notifier to update
+ * @start: New starting virtual address to monitor
+ * @length: New length of the range to monitor
+ *
+ * This function updates the range being monitored.
+ * If there is no release() function defined, the call will wait for the
+ * update to finish before returning.
+ */
+int mmu_interval_notifier_update(struct mmu_interval_notifier *mni,
+ unsigned long start, unsigned long length)
+{
Update should probably be its own patch
Jason
OK.
Thanks for the review.