On 4/7/23 03:45, Ard Biesheuvel wrote: ...
That is what I am talking about - the struct pages are allocated in a region that is reserved for something else.
Maybe an example helps here:
It does! After also poking around quite a lot, and comparing to x86, it is starting to become clearer now.
When running the 39-bit VA kernel build on a AMD Seatte board, we will have (assuming sizeof(struct page) == 64)
memstart_addr := 0x80_0000_0000
PAGE_OFFSET := 0xffff_ff80_0000_0000
VMEMMAP_SHIFT := 6 VMEMMAP_START := 0xffff_fffe_0000_0000 VMEMMAP_SIZE := 0x1_0000_0000
pfn_to_page() conversions are based on ordinary array indexing involving vemmap[], where vmemmap is defined as
#define vmemmap \ ((struct page *)VMEMMAP_START - (memstart_addr >> PAGE_SHIFT))
So the PFN associated with the first usable DRAM address is 0x800_0000, and pfn_to_page(0x800_0000) will return VMEMMAP_START.
OK, I see how that's set up, yes.
pfn_to_page(x) for any x < 0x800_0000 will produce a kernel VA that points into the vmalloc area, and may conflict with the kernel mapping, modules mappings, per-CPU mappings, IO mappings, etc etc.
pfn_to_page(x) for values 0xc00_0000 < x < 0x1000_0000 will produce a kernel VA that points outside the region set aside for the vmemmap. This region is currently unused, but that will likely change soon.
I tentatively think I'm in this case right now. Because there is no wrap around happening in my particular config, which is CONFIG_ARM64_VA_BITS == 48, and PAGE_SIZE == 4KB and sizeof(struct page) == 64 (details below).
It occurs to me that ZONE_DEVICE and (within that category) device private page support need only support rather large setups. On x86, it requires 64-bit. And on arm64, from what I'm learning after a day or so of looking around and comparing, I think we must require at least 48 bit VA support. Otherwise there's just no room for things.
And for smaller systems, everyone disables this fancy automatic handling (hmm_range_fault()-based page migration) anyway, partly because of the VA and PA small ranges, but also because of size and performance constraints.
pfn_to_page(x) for any x >= 0x1000_0000 will wrap around and produce a bogus address in the user range.
The bottom line is that the VMEMMAP region is dimensioned to cover system memory only, i.e., what can be covered by the kernel direct map. If you want to allocate struct pages for thing that are not system memory, you will need to enlarge the VMEMMAP region, and ensure that request_mem_region() produces a region that is covered by it.
This is going to be tricky with LPA2, because there, the 4k pages configuration already uses up half of the vmalloc region to cover the linear map, so we have to consider this carefully.
Things are interlocked a little differently on arm64, than on x86, and the layout is also different. One other interesting thing jumps out at me: On arm64, the (VMALLOC_END - VMALLOC_START) size is *huge*: 123 TB on my config. And it seems to cover the kernel mapping. On x86, those are separate. This still confuses me a bit and I wonder if I'm reading it wrong?
Also, below are the values on my 48 bit VA setup. I'm listing these in order to help jumpstart thinking about how exactly to extend VMEMMAP_SIZE. GPUs have on the order of GB's of memory these days, so that's the order of magnitude that's needed.
PAGE_OFFSET: 0xffff000000000000 PAGE_END: 0xffff800000000000 high_memory: 0xffff087f80000000 (8 TB)
VMALLOC_START: 0xffff800008000000 VMALLOC_END: 0xfffffbfff0000000 (123 TB)
vmemmap: 0xfffffbfffe000000 VMEMMAP_START: 0xfffffc0000000000 VMEMMAP_END: 0xfffffe0000000000
Typical device private struct page that is causing warnings: 0xffffffffaee00000
VMEMMAP_SIZE: 0x0000020000000000 (2 TB) VMEMMAP_SHIFT: 6
PHYS_OFFSET: 0x0000000080000000 memstart_addr (signed 64-bit): 0x0000000080000000
MODULES_VADDR: 0xffff800000000000 MODULES_END: 0xffff800008000000 (128 MB)
PAGE_SHIFT: 12 PAGE_SIZE: 0x0000000000001000 (4 KB) PAGE_MASK: 0xfffffffffffff000
PMD_SIZE: 0x0000000000200000 (2 MB) PMD_MASK: 0xffffffffffe00000
PUD_SIZE: 0x0000000040000000 (1 GB) PUD_MASK: 0xffffffffc0000000
PGDIR_SIZE: 0x0000008000000000 (512 GB)
PTE_ADDR_MASK: 0x0000fffffffff000 sizeof(struct page): 64
thanks,