[PATCH v2 03/11] mm/gup: migrate PIN_LONGTERM dev coherent pages to system
Felix Kuehling
felix.kuehling at amd.com
Wed Dec 8 16:58:27 UTC 2021
Am 2021-12-08 um 6:31 a.m. schrieb Alistair Popple:
> On Tuesday, 7 December 2021 5:52:43 AM AEDT Alex Sierra wrote:
>> Avoid long term pinning for Coherent device type pages. This could
>> interfere with their own device memory manager.
>> If caller tries to get user device coherent pages with PIN_LONGTERM flag
>> set, those pages will be migrated back to system memory.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Alex Sierra <alex.sierra at amd.com>
>> ---
>> mm/gup.c | 32 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
>> 1 file changed, 30 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
>>
>> diff --git a/mm/gup.c b/mm/gup.c
>> index 886d6148d3d0..1572eacf07f4 100644
>> --- a/mm/gup.c
>> +++ b/mm/gup.c
>> @@ -1689,17 +1689,37 @@ struct page *get_dump_page(unsigned long addr)
>> #endif /* CONFIG_ELF_CORE */
>>
>> #ifdef CONFIG_MIGRATION
>> +static int migrate_device_page(unsigned long address,
>> + struct page *page)
>> +{
>> + struct vm_area_struct *vma = find_vma(current->mm, address);
>> + struct vm_fault vmf = {
>> + .vma = vma,
>> + .address = address & PAGE_MASK,
>> + .flags = FAULT_FLAG_USER,
>> + .pgoff = linear_page_index(vma, address),
>> + .gfp_mask = GFP_KERNEL,
>> + .page = page,
>> + };
>> + if (page->pgmap && page->pgmap->ops->migrate_to_ram)
>> + return page->pgmap->ops->migrate_to_ram(&vmf);
> How does this synchronise against pgmap being released? As I understand things
> at this point we're not holding a reference on either the page or pgmap, so
> the page and therefore the pgmap may have been freed.
>
> I think a similar problem exists for device private fault handling as well and
> it has been on my list of things to fix for a while. I think the solution is to
> call try_get_page(), except it doesn't work with device pages due to the whole
> refcount thing. That issue is blocking a fair bit of work now so I've started
> looking into it.
At least the page should have been pinned by the __get_user_pages_locked
call in __gup_longterm_locked. That refcount is dropped in
check_and_migrate_movable_pages when it returns 0 or an error.
>
>> +
>> + return -EBUSY;
>> +}
>> +
>> /*
>> * Check whether all pages are pinnable, if so return number of pages. If some
>> * pages are not pinnable, migrate them, and unpin all pages. Return zero if
>> * pages were migrated, or if some pages were not successfully isolated.
>> * Return negative error if migration fails.
>> */
>> -static long check_and_migrate_movable_pages(unsigned long nr_pages,
>> +static long check_and_migrate_movable_pages(unsigned long start,
>> + unsigned long nr_pages,
>> struct page **pages,
>> unsigned int gup_flags)
>> {
>> unsigned long i;
>> + unsigned long page_index;
>> unsigned long isolation_error_count = 0;
>> bool drain_allow = true;
>> LIST_HEAD(movable_page_list);
>> @@ -1720,6 +1740,10 @@ static long check_and_migrate_movable_pages(unsigned long nr_pages,
>> * If we get a movable page, since we are going to be pinning
>> * these entries, try to move them out if possible.
>> */
>> + if (is_device_page(head)) {
>> + page_index = i;
>> + goto unpin_pages;
>> + }
>> if (!is_pinnable_page(head)) {
>> if (PageHuge(head)) {
>> if (!isolate_huge_page(head, &movable_page_list))
>> @@ -1750,12 +1774,16 @@ static long check_and_migrate_movable_pages(unsigned long nr_pages,
>> if (list_empty(&movable_page_list) && !isolation_error_count)
>> return nr_pages;
>>
>> +unpin_pages:
>> if (gup_flags & FOLL_PIN) {
>> unpin_user_pages(pages, nr_pages);
>> } else {
>> for (i = 0; i < nr_pages; i++)
>> put_page(pages[i]);
>> }
>> + if (is_device_page(head))
>> + return migrate_device_page(start + page_index * PAGE_SIZE, head);
> This isn't very optimal - if a range contains more than one device page (which
> seems likely) we will have to go around the whole gup/check_and_migrate loop
> once for each device page which seems unnecessary. You should be able to either
> build a list or migrate them as you go through the loop. I'm also currently
> looking into how to extend migrate_pages() to support device pages which might
> be useful here too.
We have to do it this way because page->pgmap->ops->migrate_to_ram can
migrate multiple pages per "CPU page fault" to amortize the cost of
migration. The AMD driver typically migrates 2MB at a time. Calling
page->pgmap->ops->migrate_to_ram for each page would probably be even
less optimal.
Regards,
Felix
>
>> +
>> if (!list_empty(&movable_page_list)) {
>> ret = migrate_pages(&movable_page_list, alloc_migration_target,
>> NULL, (unsigned long)&mtc, MIGRATE_SYNC,
>> @@ -1798,7 +1826,7 @@ static long __gup_longterm_locked(struct mm_struct *mm,
>> NULL, gup_flags);
>> if (rc <= 0)
>> break;
>> - rc = check_and_migrate_movable_pages(rc, pages, gup_flags);
>> + rc = check_and_migrate_movable_pages(start, rc, pages, gup_flags);
>> } while (!rc);
>> memalloc_pin_restore(flags);
>>
>>
>
>
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