On Tue, 28 Jul 2015, Michal Hocko wrote: > [I am sorry but I didn't get to this sooner.] > > On Mon 27-07-15 10:54:09, Eric B Munson wrote: > > Now that VM_LOCKONFAULT is a modifier to VM_LOCKED and > > cannot be specified independentally, it might make more sense to mirror > > that relationship to userspace. Which would lead to soemthing like the > > following: > > A modifier makes more sense. > > > To lock and populate a region: > > mlock2(start, len, 0); > > > > To lock on fault a region: > > mlock2(start, len, MLOCK_ONFAULT); > > > > If LOCKONFAULT is seen as a modifier to mlock, then having the flags > > argument as 0 mean do mlock classic makes more sense to me. > > > > To mlock current on fault only: > > mlockall(MCL_CURRENT | MCL_ONFAULT); > > > > To mlock future on fault only: > > mlockall(MCL_FUTURE | MCL_ONFAULT); > > > > To lock everything on fault: > > mlockall(MCL_CURRENT | MCL_FUTURE | MCL_ONFAULT); > > Makes sense to me. The only remaining and still tricky part would be > the munlock{all}(flags) behavior. What should munlock(MLOCK_ONFAULT) > do? Keep locked and poppulate the range or simply ignore the flag an > just unlock? > > I can see some sense to allow munlockall(MCL_FUTURE[|MLOCK_ONFAULT]), > munlockall(MCL_CURRENT) resp. munlockall(MCL_CURRENT|MCL_FUTURE) but > other combinations sound weird to me. > > Anyway munlock with flags opens new doors of trickiness. In the current revision there are no new munlock[all] system calls introduced. munlockall() unconditionally cleared both MCL_CURRENT and MCL_FUTURE before the set and now unconditionally clears all three. munlock() does the same for VM_LOCK and VM_LOCKONFAULT. If the user wants to adjust mlockall flags today, they need to call mlockall a second time with the new flags, this remains true for mlockall after this set and the same behavior is mirrored in mlock2. The only remaining question I have is should we have 2 new mlockall flags so that the caller can explicitly set VM_LOCKONFAULT in the mm->def_flags vs locking all current VMAs on fault. I ask because if the user wants to lock all current VMAs the old way, but all future VMAs on fault they have to call mlockall() twice: mlockall(MCL_CURRENT); mlockall(MCL_CURRENT | MCL_FUTURE | MCL_ONFAULT); This has the side effect of converting all the current VMAs to VM_LOCKONFAULT, but because they were all made present and locked in the first call, this should not matter in most cases. The catch is that, like mmap(MAP_LOCKED), mlockall() does not communicate if mm_populate() fails. This has been true of mlockall() from the beginning so I don't know if it needs more than an entry in the man page to clarify (which I will add when I add documentation for MCL_ONFAULT). In a much less likely corner case, it is not possible in the current setup to request all current VMAs be VM_LOCKONFAULT and all future be VM_LOCKED.
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