On Mon, 12 Jun 2023, Vishal Moola (Oracle) wrote: > Currently, page table information is stored within struct page. As part > of simplifying struct page, create struct ptdesc for page table > information. > > Signed-off-by: Vishal Moola (Oracle) <vishal.moola@xxxxxxxxx> Vishal, as I think you have already guessed, your ptdesc series and my pte_free_defer() "mm: free retracted page table by RCU" series are on a collision course. Probably just trivial collisions in most architectures, which either of us can easily adjust to the other; powerpc likely to be more awkward, but fairly easily resolved; s390 quite a problem. I've so far been unable to post a v2 of my series (and powerpc and s390 were stupidly wrong in the v1), because a good s390 patch is not yet decided - Gerald Schaefer and I are currently working on that, on the s390 list (I took off most Ccs until we are settled and I can post v2). As you have no doubt found yourself, s390 has sophisticated handling of free half-pages already, and I need to add rcu_head usage in there too: it's tricky to squeeze it all in, and ptdesc does not appear to help us in any way (though mostly it's just changing some field names, okay). If ptdesc were actually allowing a flexible structure which architectures could add into, that would (in some future) be nice; but of course at present it's still fitting it all into one struct page, and mandating new restrictions which just make an architecture's job harder. Some notes on problematic fields below FYI. > --- > include/linux/pgtable.h | 51 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > 1 file changed, 51 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/include/linux/pgtable.h b/include/linux/pgtable.h > index c5a51481bbb9..330de96ebfd6 100644 > --- a/include/linux/pgtable.h > +++ b/include/linux/pgtable.h > @@ -975,6 +975,57 @@ static inline void ptep_modify_prot_commit(struct vm_area_struct *vma, > #endif /* __HAVE_ARCH_PTEP_MODIFY_PROT_TRANSACTION */ > #endif /* CONFIG_MMU */ > > + > +/** > + * struct ptdesc - Memory descriptor for page tables. > + * @__page_flags: Same as page flags. Unused for page tables. > + * @pt_list: List of used page tables. Used for s390 and x86. > + * @_pt_pad_1: Padding that aliases with page's compound head. > + * @pmd_huge_pte: Protected by ptdesc->ptl, used for THPs. > + * @_pt_s390_gaddr: Aliases with page's mapping. Used for s390 gmap only. > + * @pt_mm: Used for x86 pgds. > + * @pt_frag_refcount: For fragmented page table tracking. Powerpc and s390 only. > + * @ptl: Lock for the page table. > + * > + * This struct overlays struct page for now. Do not modify without a good > + * understanding of the issues. > + */ > +struct ptdesc { > + unsigned long __page_flags; > + > + union { > + struct list_head pt_list; I shall be needing struct rcu_head rcu_head (or pt_rcu_head or whatever, if you prefer) in this union too. Sharing the lru or pt_list with rcu_head is what's difficult to get right and efficient on s390 - and if ptdesc gave us an independent rcu_head for each page table, that would be a blessing! but sadly not, it still has to squeeze into a struct page. > + struct { > + unsigned long _pt_pad_1; > + pgtable_t pmd_huge_pte; > + }; > + }; > + unsigned long _pt_s390_gaddr; > + > + union { > + struct mm_struct *pt_mm; > + atomic_t pt_frag_refcount; Whether s390 will want pt_mm is not yet decided: I want to use it, Gerald prefers to go without it; but if we do end up using it, then pt_frag_refcount is a luxury we would have to give up. s390 does very well already with its _refcount tricks, and I'd expect powerpc's simpler but more wasteful implementation to work as well with _refcount too - I know that a few years back, powerpc did misuse _refcount (it did not allow for speculative accesses, thought it had sole ownership of that field); but s390 copes well with that, and I expect powerpc can do so too, without the luxury of pt_frag_refcount. But I've no desire to undo powerpc's use of pt_frag_refcount: just warning that we may want to undo any use of it in s390. I thought I had more issues to mention, probably Gerald will remind me of a whole new unexplored dimension! gmap perhaps. Hugh > + }; > + > +#if ALLOC_SPLIT_PTLOCKS > + spinlock_t *ptl; > +#else > + spinlock_t ptl; > +#endif > +}; > + > +#define TABLE_MATCH(pg, pt) \ > + static_assert(offsetof(struct page, pg) == offsetof(struct ptdesc, pt)) > +TABLE_MATCH(flags, __page_flags); > +TABLE_MATCH(compound_head, pt_list); > +TABLE_MATCH(compound_head, _pt_pad_1); > +TABLE_MATCH(pmd_huge_pte, pmd_huge_pte); > +TABLE_MATCH(mapping, _pt_s390_gaddr); > +TABLE_MATCH(pt_mm, pt_mm); > +TABLE_MATCH(ptl, ptl); > +#undef TABLE_MATCH > +static_assert(sizeof(struct ptdesc) <= sizeof(struct page)); > + > /* > * No-op macros that just return the current protection value. Defined here > * because these macros can be used even if CONFIG_MMU is not defined. > -- > 2.40.1