Jason Gunthorpe
2020-Jul-20 19:59 UTC
[Nouveau] [PATCH v2 2/5] mm/migrate: add a direction parameter to migrate_vma
On Mon, Jul 20, 2020 at 12:54:53PM -0700, Ralph Campbell wrote:> > > diff --git a/include/linux/migrate.h b/include/linux/migrate.h > > > index 3e546cbf03dd..620f2235d7d4 100644 > > > +++ b/include/linux/migrate.h > > > @@ -180,6 +180,11 @@ static inline unsigned long migrate_pfn(unsigned long pfn) > > > return (pfn << MIGRATE_PFN_SHIFT) | MIGRATE_PFN_VALID; > > > } > > > +enum migrate_vma_direction { > > > + MIGRATE_VMA_FROM_SYSTEM, > > > + MIGRATE_VMA_FROM_DEVICE_PRIVATE, > > > +}; > > > > I would have guessed this is more natural as _FROM_DEVICE_ and > > TO_DEVICE_ ? > > The caller controls where the destination memory is allocated so it isn't > necessarily device private memory, it could be from system to system. > The use case for system to system memory migration is for hardware > like ARM SMMU or PCIe ATS where a single set of page tables is shared by > the device and a CPU process over a coherent system memory bus. > Also many integrated GPUs in SOCs fall into this category too.Maybe just TO/FROM_DEIVCE then? Even though the memory is not DEVICE_PRIVATE it is still device owned pages right?> So to me, it makes more sense to specify the direction based on the > source location.It feels strange because the driver doesn't always know or control the source? Jason
Ralph Campbell
2020-Jul-20 20:49 UTC
[Nouveau] [PATCH v2 2/5] mm/migrate: add a direction parameter to migrate_vma
On 7/20/20 12:59 PM, Jason Gunthorpe wrote:> On Mon, Jul 20, 2020 at 12:54:53PM -0700, Ralph Campbell wrote: >>>> diff --git a/include/linux/migrate.h b/include/linux/migrate.h >>>> index 3e546cbf03dd..620f2235d7d4 100644 >>>> +++ b/include/linux/migrate.h >>>> @@ -180,6 +180,11 @@ static inline unsigned long migrate_pfn(unsigned long pfn) >>>> return (pfn << MIGRATE_PFN_SHIFT) | MIGRATE_PFN_VALID; >>>> } >>>> +enum migrate_vma_direction { >>>> + MIGRATE_VMA_FROM_SYSTEM, >>>> + MIGRATE_VMA_FROM_DEVICE_PRIVATE, >>>> +}; >>> >>> I would have guessed this is more natural as _FROM_DEVICE_ and >>> TO_DEVICE_ ? >> >> The caller controls where the destination memory is allocated so it isn't >> necessarily device private memory, it could be from system to system. >> The use case for system to system memory migration is for hardware >> like ARM SMMU or PCIe ATS where a single set of page tables is shared by >> the device and a CPU process over a coherent system memory bus. >> Also many integrated GPUs in SOCs fall into this category too. > > Maybe just TO/FROM_DEIVCE then? Even though the memory is not > DEVICE_PRIVATE it is still device owned pages right? > >> So to me, it makes more sense to specify the direction based on the >> source location. > > It feels strange because the driver doesn't always know or control the > source? > > Jason >The driver can't really know where the source is currently located because the API is designed to not initially hold the page locks, migrate_vma_setup() only knows the source once it holds the page table locks and isolates/locks the pages being migrated. The direction and pgmap_owner are supposed to filter which pages the caller is interested in migrating. Perhaps the direction should instead be a flags field with separate bits for system memory and device private memory selecting source candidates for migration. I can imagine use cases for all 4 combinations of d->d, d->s, s->d, and s->s being valid. I didn't really think a direction was needed, this was something that Christoph Hellwig seemed to think made the API safer.
Jason Gunthorpe
2020-Jul-20 23:16 UTC
[Nouveau] [PATCH v2 2/5] mm/migrate: add a direction parameter to migrate_vma
On Mon, Jul 20, 2020 at 01:49:09PM -0700, Ralph Campbell wrote:> > On 7/20/20 12:59 PM, Jason Gunthorpe wrote: > > On Mon, Jul 20, 2020 at 12:54:53PM -0700, Ralph Campbell wrote: > > > > > diff --git a/include/linux/migrate.h b/include/linux/migrate.h > > > > > index 3e546cbf03dd..620f2235d7d4 100644 > > > > > +++ b/include/linux/migrate.h > > > > > @@ -180,6 +180,11 @@ static inline unsigned long migrate_pfn(unsigned long pfn) > > > > > return (pfn << MIGRATE_PFN_SHIFT) | MIGRATE_PFN_VALID; > > > > > } > > > > > +enum migrate_vma_direction { > > > > > + MIGRATE_VMA_FROM_SYSTEM, > > > > > + MIGRATE_VMA_FROM_DEVICE_PRIVATE, > > > > > +}; > > > > > > > > I would have guessed this is more natural as _FROM_DEVICE_ and > > > > TO_DEVICE_ ? > > > > > > The caller controls where the destination memory is allocated so it isn't > > > necessarily device private memory, it could be from system to system. > > > The use case for system to system memory migration is for hardware > > > like ARM SMMU or PCIe ATS where a single set of page tables is shared by > > > the device and a CPU process over a coherent system memory bus. > > > Also many integrated GPUs in SOCs fall into this category too. > > > > Maybe just TO/FROM_DEIVCE then? Even though the memory is not > > DEVICE_PRIVATE it is still device owned pages right? > > > > > So to me, it makes more sense to specify the direction based on the > > > source location. > > > > It feels strange because the driver doesn't always know or control the > > source? > > The driver can't really know where the source is currently located because the > API is designed to not initially hold the page locks, migrate_vma_setup() only knows > the source once it holds the page table locks and isolates/locks the pages being > migrated. The direction and pgmap_owner are supposed to filter which pages > the caller is interested in migrating. > Perhaps the direction should instead be a flags field with separate bits for > system memory and device private memory selecting source candidates for > migration. I can imagine use cases for all 4 combinations of > d->d, d->s, s->d, and s->s being valid. > > I didn't really think a direction was needed, this was something that > Christoph Hellwig seemed to think made the API safer.If it is a filter then just using those names would make sense MIGRATE_VMA_SELECT_SYSTEM MIGRATE_VMA_SELECT_DEVICE_PRIVATE SYSTEM feels like the wrong name too, doesn't linux have a formal name for RAM struct pages? In your future coherent design how would the migrate select 'device' pages that are fully coherent? Are they still zone something pages that are OK for CPU usage? Jason
Possibly Parallel Threads
- [PATCH v2 2/5] mm/migrate: add a direction parameter to migrate_vma
- [PATCH v2 2/5] mm/migrate: add a direction parameter to migrate_vma
- [PATCH v2 2/5] mm/migrate: add a direction parameter to migrate_vma
- [PATCH v2 2/5] mm/migrate: add a direction parameter to migrate_vma
- [PATCH v2 2/5] mm/migrate: add a direction parameter to migrate_vma