On Fri, May 31, 2019 at 12:46:56PM +1000, Nicholas Piggin wrote: > Peter Zijlstra's on May 28, 2019 12:25 am: > > On Mon, May 27, 2019 at 06:59:08PM +0530, Aneesh Kumar K.V wrote: > >> On 5/27/19 4:31 PM, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > >> > On Tue, May 21, 2019 at 04:18:33PM -0700, akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > >> > > --- a/mm/mmu_gather.c~mm-mmu_gather-remove-__tlb_reset_range-for-force-flush > >> > > +++ a/mm/mmu_gather.c > >> > > @@ -245,14 +245,28 @@ void tlb_finish_mmu(struct mmu_gather *t > >> > > { > >> > > /* > >> > > * If there are parallel threads are doing PTE changes on same range > >> > > - * under non-exclusive lock(e.g., mmap_sem read-side) but defer TLB > >> > > - * flush by batching, a thread has stable TLB entry can fail to flush > >> > > - * the TLB by observing pte_none|!pte_dirty, for example so flush TLB > >> > > - * forcefully if we detect parallel PTE batching threads. > >> > > + * under non-exclusive lock (e.g., mmap_sem read-side) but defer TLB > >> > > + * flush by batching, one thread may end up seeing inconsistent PTEs > >> > > + * and result in having stale TLB entries. So flush TLB forcefully > >> > > + * if we detect parallel PTE batching threads. > >> > > + * > >> > > + * However, some syscalls, e.g. munmap(), may free page tables, this > >> > > + * needs force flush everything in the given range. Otherwise this > >> > > + * may result in having stale TLB entries for some architectures, > >> > > + * e.g. aarch64, that could specify flush what level TLB. > >> > > */ > >> > > if (mm_tlb_flush_nested(tlb->mm)) { > >> > > + /* > >> > > + * The aarch64 yields better performance with fullmm by > >> > > + * avoiding multiple CPUs spamming TLBI messages at the > >> > > + * same time. > >> > > + * > >> > > + * On x86 non-fullmm doesn't yield significant difference > >> > > + * against fullmm. > >> > > + */ > >> > > + tlb->fullmm = 1; > >> > > __tlb_reset_range(tlb); > >> > > - __tlb_adjust_range(tlb, start, end - start); > >> > > + tlb->freed_tables = 1; > >> > > } > >> > > tlb_flush_mmu(tlb); > > Maybe, but given the patch that went into -mm, PPC will never hit that > > branch I killed anymore -- and that really shouldn't be in architecture > > code anyway. > > Yeah well if mm/ does this then sure it's dead and can go. > > I don't think it's very nice to set fullmm and freed_tables for this > case though. Is this concurrent zapping an important fast path? It > must have been, in order to justify all this complexity to the mm, so > we don't want to tie this boat anchor to it AFAIKS? I'm not convinced its an important fast path, afaict it is an unfortunate correctness issue caused by allowing concurrenct frees. > Is the problem just that the freed page tables flags get cleared by > __tlb_reset_range()? Why not just remove that then, so the bits are > set properly for the munmap? That's insufficient; as argued in my initial suggestion: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20190509103813.GP2589@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Since we don't know what was flushed by the concorrent flushes, we must flush all state (page sizes, tables etc..). But it looks like benchmarks (for the one test-case we have) seem to favour flushing the world over flushing a smaller range.