On 9/8/2014 3:55 AM, Steve Capper wrote: > On Thu, Sep 04, 2014 at 10:41:52AM +0100, Catalin Marinas wrote: >> Hi Zhichang, >> >> (cc'ing Steve Capper for the huge page stuff) >> >> On Fri, Aug 22, 2014 at 01:38:26PM +0100, zhichang.yuan wrote: >>> I am working to implement the DEBUG_PAGEALLOC on ARMv8. >> >> I assume that's the arm64 kernel. >> >>> After i investigated the DEBUG_PAGEALLOC implementation on x86 arch, >>> some questions are standing in the way to start coding. >>> >>> 1. How to handle the large page when DEBUG_PAGEALLOC is enabled In >>> ARMv8, the kernel direct memory page table entries will set the block >>> flag for better performance. When DEBUG_PAGEALLOC is configured, if >>> the size of freed page is not multiply of page block size, there is no >>> corresponding page table entry. In the old x86 kernel version, the >>> large page to be freed will be split into normal page size and build >>> the corresponding PTEs. And afterwards, someone done a patch to remove >>> the splitting process. It will make the code simpler and easily >>> stable. >> >> Initially, you could either map everything as pages or implement >> splitting of huge pages (if for example the huge page is at the pmd >> level, you allocate and populate a pte). >> >>> I prefer the current design in x86, what are your thoughts here? >> >> I haven't looked at it yet. >> >>> 2. Does ARMv8 support HIBERNATION? >> >> Not yet. >> >>> The HIBERNATION has some dependency on DEBUG_PAGEALLOC. >> >> Like in DEBUG_PAGEALLOC "depends on !HIBERNATION"? >> >>> 3. Is the hypothesis of DEBUG_PAGEALLOC always true? >> >> Which hypothesis? >> >>> From the x86 code, DEBUG_PAGEALLOC use the invalid page table entries >>> to catch the accesses to free pages. This mechanism is based on the >>> hypothesis that all the corresponding page table entries that are >>> corresponding to the free pages are cleared correctly. Supposed this >>> condition is always true, what we need to do is just to clear the >>> kernel linear mapping page entries, since those page tables are >>> fixable after initialization. DEBUG_PAGEALLOC on x86 seems to do like >>> that. >> >> I guess that's the ARCH_SUPPORTS_DEBUG_PAGEALLOC rather than just the >> simple DEBUG_PAGEALLOC which can be enabled on arm64 as well, you just >> get page poisoning rather than invalid mappings. >> >> It could be done on arm64 as well but you need to sort out huge page >> splitting or just map everything as pages when the option is enabled. >> > > (cc'ing Laura Abbott for info...) > > Hi, > There is support for splitting pmd's and pud's in the direct kernel > mapping in the following series from Laura Abbott: > > "[PATCHv3 7/7] arm64: add better page protections to arm64" > http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-arm-kernel/2014-August/280782.html > > Perhaps some of the splitting logic there could be used by the > kernel_map_pages arm64 implementation for ARCH_SUPPORTS_DEBUG_PAGEALLOC? > > Cheers, >
The page splitting was originally written for a out of tree implementation of something similar to ARCH_SUPPORTS_DEBUG_PAGEALLOC for both arm and arm64 so yes it could be used. The approach taken was - map all memory with sections initially - walk all memblock and remap as 4K pages There is a performance hit involved but for some issues the benefits certainly outweigh the costs (One person described it as 'the best feature since CONFIG_SLUB_DEBUG'). If there is interest, I can clean up the patches and submit them as a proof of concept. The approach probably won't cover 64K/THP but it might be a starting point. Thanks, Laura -- Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum, hosted by The Linux Foundation -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/