On Fri, Aug 11, 2023 at 01:49:52PM +0800, ThinerLogoer wrote: > At 2023-08-11 05:24:43, "Peter Xu" <pet...@redhat.com> wrote: > >On Fri, Aug 11, 2023 at 01:06:12AM +0800, ThinerLogoer wrote: > >> >I think we have the following options (there might be more) > >> > > >> >1) This patch. > >> > > >> >2) New flag for memory-backend-file. We already have "readonly" and > >> >"share=". I'm having a hard time coming up with a good name that really > >> >describes the subtle difference. > >> > > >> >3) Glue behavior to the QEMU machine > >> > > >> > >> 4) '-deny-private-discard' argv, or environment variable, or both > > > >I'd personally vote for (2). How about "fdperm"? To describe when we want > >to use different rw permissions on the file (besides the access permission > >of the memory we already provided with "readonly"=XXX). IIUC the only sane > >value will be ro/rw/default, where "default" should just use the same rw > >permission as the memory ("readonly"=XXX). > > > >Would that be relatively clean and also work in this use case? > > > >(the other thing I'd wish we don't have that fallback is, as long as we > > have any of that "fallback" we'll need to be compatible with it since > > then, and for ever...) > > If it must be (2), I would vote (2) + (4), with (4) adjust the default > behavior of said `fdperm`. > Mainly because (private+discard) is itself not a good practice and (4) serves > as a good tool to help catch existing (private+discard) problems. > > Actually (readonly+private) is more reasonable than (private+discard), so I > want at least one room for a default (readonly+private) behavior.
Just for purely discussion purpose: I think maybe someday private+discard could work. IIUC what we're missing is an syscall interface to install a zero page for a MAP_PRIVATE, atomically freeing what's underneath: it seems either punching a hole or DONTNEED won't suffice here. It'll just be another problem when having zero page involved in file mappings at least. > > Also in my case I kind of have to use "-mem-path" despite it being considered > to be close to deprecated. Only with this I can avoid knowledge of memory > backend before migration. Actually there seems to be no equivalent working > after-migration > setup of "-object memory-backend-file,... -machine q35,mem=..." that can match > before-migration setup of "-machine q35" (specifying nothing). Therefore > I must make a plan and choose a migration method BEFORE I boot the > machine and prepare to migrate, reducing the operation freedom. > Considering that, I have to use "-mem-path" which keeps the freedom but > has no configurable argument and I have to rely on default config. > > Are there any "-object memory-backend-file..." setup equivalent to "-machine > q35" > that can migrate from and to each other? If there is, I want to try it out. > By the way "-object memory-backend-file,id=pc.ram" has just been killed by an > earlier > commit. I'm actually not familiar enough on the interfaces here, but I just checked up the man page; would this work for you, together with option (2)? memory-backend='id' An alternative to legacy -mem-path and mem-prealloc options. Allows to use a memory backend as main RAM. For example: -object memory-backend-file,id=pc.ram,size=512M,mem-path=/hugetlbfs,prealloc=on,share=on -machine memory-backend=pc.ram -m 512M -- Peter Xu