On Thu, Aug 29, 2024 at 09:42:22AM GMT, Lorenzo Stoakes wrote:
On Thu, Aug 29, 2024 at 12:15:57AM GMT, 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).
I'm still confused as to why, if an mmap flag is desired, and thus programs are having to be heavily modified and controlled to be able to do this, why you can't just do an mmap() with PROT_NONE early, around a hinted address that, sits below the required limit, and then mprotect() or mmap() over it?
Your feature is a major adjustment to mmap(), it needs to be pretty significantly justified, especially if taking up a new flag.
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.
You mean x86 _has_ to limit to physically available bits in a canonical format :) this will not be the case for 5-page table levels though...
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.
I raised this last time and you didn't seem to address it so to be more blunt:
I don't understand why this needs to be an mmap() flag. From this it seems the whole process needs allocations to be below a certain limit.
That _could_ be achieved through a 'personality' or similar (though a personality is on/off, rather than allowing configuration so maybe something else would be needed).
From what you're saying 57-bit is all you really need right? So maybe ADDR_LIMIT_57BIT?
I don't see how you're going to actually enforce this in a process either via an mmap flag, as a library might decide not to use it, so you'd need to control the allocator, the thread library implementation, and everything that might allocate.
Liam also raised various points about VMA particulars that I'm not sure are addressed either.
I just find it hard to believe that everything will fit together.
I'd _really_ need to be convinced that this MAP_ flag is justified, and I"m just not.
This flag will also allow seemless compatibility between all architectures, so applications like Go and OpenJDK that use bits in a virtual address can request the exact number of bits they need in a generic way. The flag can be checked inside of vm_unmapped_area() so that this flag does not have to be handled individually by each architecture.
I'm still very unconvinced and feel the bar needs to be high for making changes like this that carry maintainership burden.
So for me, it's a no really as an overall concept.
Happy to be convinced otherwise, however... (I may be missing details or context that provide more justification).
Some more thoughts:
* If you absolutely must keep allocations below a certain limit, you'd probably need to actually associate this information with the VMA so the memory can't be mremap()'d somewhere invalid (you might not control all code so you can't guarantee this won't happen). * Keeping a map limit associated with a VMA would be horrid and keeping VMAs as small as possible is a key aim, so that'd be a no go. VMA flags are in limited supply also. * If we did implement a per-process thing, but it were arbitrary, we'd then have to handle all kinds of corner cases forever (this is UAPI, can't break it etc.) with crazy-low values, or determine a minimum that might vary by arch... * If we did this we'd absolutely have to implement a check in the brk() implementation, which is a very very sensitive bit of code. And of course, in mmap() and mremap()... and any arch-specific code that might interface with this stuff (these functions are hooked). * A fixed address limit would make more sense, but it seems difficult to know what would work for everybody, and again we'd have to deal with edge cases and having a permanent maintenance burden. * If you did have a map flag what about merging between VMAs above the limit and below it? To avoid that you'd need to implement some kind of a 'VMA flag that has an arbitrary characteristic' or a 'limit' field, adjust all the 'can VMA merge' functions and write extensive testing and none of that is frankly acceptable. * We have some 'weird' arches that might have problem with certain virtual address ranges or require arbitrary mappings at a certain address range that a limit might not be able to account for.
I'm absolutely opposed to a new MAP_ flag for this, but even if you implemented that, it implies a lot of complexity.
It implies even more complexity if you implement something per-process except if it were a fixed limit.
And if you implement a fixed limit, it's hard to see that it'll be acceptable to everybody, and I suspect we'd still run into some possible weirdness.
So again, I'm struggling to see how this concept can be justified in any form.