On Thu 29-08-24 00:15:57, Charlie Jenkins wrote:
Some applications rely on placing data in free bits addresses allocated by mmap. Various architectures (eg. x86, arm64, powerpc) restrict the address returned by mmap to be less than the 48-bit address space, unless the hint address uses more than 47 bits (the 48th bit is reserved for the kernel address space).
The riscv architecture needs a way to similarly restrict the virtual address space. On the riscv port of OpenJDK an error is thrown if attempted to run on the 57-bit address space, called sv57 [1]. golang has a comment that sv57 support is not complete, but there are some workarounds to get it to mostly work [2].
These applications work on x86 because x86 does an implicit 47-bit restriction of mmap() address that contain a hint address that is less than 48 bits.
Instead of implicitly restricting the address space on riscv (or any current/future architecture), a flag would allow users to opt-in to this behavior rather than opt-out as is done on other architectures. This is desirable because it is a small class of applications that do pointer masking.
IIRC this has been discussed at length when 5-level page tables support has been proposed for x86. Sorry I do not have a link handy but lore should help you. Linus was not really convinced and in the end vetoed it and prefer that those few applications that benefit from greater address space would do that explicitly than other way around.