Christoph Hellwig
2020-Nov-09 09:14 UTC
[Nouveau] [PATCH v3 3/6] mm: support THP migration to device private memory
On Fri, Nov 06, 2020 at 01:26:50PM -0800, Ralph Campbell wrote:> > On 11/6/20 12:03 AM, Christoph Hellwig wrote: >> I hate the extra pin count magic here. IMHO we really need to finish >> off the series to get rid of the extra references on the ZONE_DEVICE >> pages first. > > First, thanks for the review comments. > > I don't like the extra refcount either, that is why I tried to fix that up > before resending this series. However, you didn't like me just fixing the > refcount only for device private pages and I don't know the dax/pmem code > and peer-to-peer PCIe uses of ZONE_DEVICE pages well enough to say how > long it will take me to fix all the use cases. > So I wanted to make progress on the THP migration code in the mean time.I think P2P is pretty trivial, given that ZONE_DEVICE pages are used like a normal memory allocator. DAX is the interesting case, any specific help that you need with that?
Ralph Campbell
2020-Nov-09 21:34 UTC
[Nouveau] [PATCH v3 3/6] mm: support THP migration to device private memory
On 11/9/20 1:14 AM, Christoph Hellwig wrote:> On Fri, Nov 06, 2020 at 01:26:50PM -0800, Ralph Campbell wrote: >> >> On 11/6/20 12:03 AM, Christoph Hellwig wrote: >>> I hate the extra pin count magic here. IMHO we really need to finish >>> off the series to get rid of the extra references on the ZONE_DEVICE >>> pages first. >> >> First, thanks for the review comments. >> >> I don't like the extra refcount either, that is why I tried to fix that up >> before resending this series. However, you didn't like me just fixing the >> refcount only for device private pages and I don't know the dax/pmem code >> and peer-to-peer PCIe uses of ZONE_DEVICE pages well enough to say how >> long it will take me to fix all the use cases. >> So I wanted to make progress on the THP migration code in the mean time. > > I think P2P is pretty trivial, given that ZONE_DEVICE pages are used like > a normal memory allocator. DAX is the interesting case, any specific > help that you need with that?Thanks for the offer. I'm putting a list together... :-)
Ralph Campbell
2020-Nov-11 23:38 UTC
[Nouveau] [PATCH v3 3/6] mm: support THP migration to device private memory
On 11/9/20 1:14 AM, Christoph Hellwig wrote:> On Fri, Nov 06, 2020 at 01:26:50PM -0800, Ralph Campbell wrote: >> >> On 11/6/20 12:03 AM, Christoph Hellwig wrote: >>> I hate the extra pin count magic here. IMHO we really need to finish >>> off the series to get rid of the extra references on the ZONE_DEVICE >>> pages first. >> >> First, thanks for the review comments. >> >> I don't like the extra refcount either, that is why I tried to fix that up >> before resending this series. However, you didn't like me just fixing the >> refcount only for device private pages and I don't know the dax/pmem code >> and peer-to-peer PCIe uses of ZONE_DEVICE pages well enough to say how >> long it will take me to fix all the use cases. >> So I wanted to make progress on the THP migration code in the mean time. > > I think P2P is pretty trivial, given that ZONE_DEVICE pages are used like > a normal memory allocator. DAX is the interesting case, any specific > help that you need with that?There are 4 types of ZONE_DEVICE struct pages: MEMORY_DEVICE_PRIVATE, MEMORY_DEVICE_FS_DAX, MEMORY_DEVICE_GENERIC, and MEMORY_DEVICE_PCI_P2PDMA. Currently, memremap_pages() allocates struct pages for a physical address range with a page_ref_count(page) of one and increments the pgmap->ref per CPU reference count by the number of pages created since each ZONE_DEVICE struct page has a pointer to the pgmap. The struct pages are not freed until memunmap_pages() is called which calls put_page() which calls put_dev_pagemap() which releases a reference to pgmap->ref. memunmap_pages() blocks waiting for pgmap->ref reference count to be zero. As far as I can tell, the put_page() in memunmap_pages() has to be the *last* put_page() (see MEMORY_DEVICE_PCI_P2PDMA). My RFC [1] breaks this put_page() -> put_dev_pagemap() connection so that the struct page reference count can go to zero and back to non-zero without changing the pgmap->ref reference count. Q1: Is that safe? Is there some code that depends on put_page() dropping the pgmap->ref reference count as part of memunmap_pages()? My testing of [1] seems OK but I'm sure there are lots of cases I didn't test. MEMORY_DEVICE_PCI_P2PDMA: Struct pages are created in pci_p2pdma_add_resource() and represent device memory accessible by PCIe bar address space. Memory is allocated with pci_alloc_p2pmem() based on a byte length but the gen_pool_alloc_owner() call will allocate memory in a minimum of PAGE_SIZE units. Reference counting is +1 per *allocation* on the pgmap->ref reference count. Note that this is not +1 per page which is what put_page() expects. So currently, a get_page()/put_page() works OK because the page reference count only goes 1->2 and 2->1. If it went to zero, the pgmap->ref reference count would be incorrect if the allocation size was greater than one page. I see pci_alloc_p2pmem() is called by nvme_alloc_sq_cmds() and pci_p2pmem_alloc_sgl() to create a command queue and a struct scatterlist *. Looks like sg_page(sg) returns the ZONE_DEVICE struct page of the scatterlist. There are a huge number of places sg_page() is called so it is hard to tell whether or not get_page()/put_page() is ever called on MEMORY_DEVICE_PCI_P2PDMA pages. pci_p2pmem_virt_to_bus() will return the physical address and I guess pfn_to_page(physaddr >> PAGE_SHIFT) could return the struct page. Since there is a clear allocation/free, pci_alloc_p2pmem() can probably be modified to increment/decrement the MEMORY_DEVICE_PCI_P2PDMA struct page reference count. Or maybe just leave it at one like it is now. MEMORY_DEVICE_GENERIC: Struct pages are created in dev_dax_probe() and represent non-volatile memory. The device can be mmap()'ed which calls dax_mmap() which sets vma->vm_flags | VM_HUGEPAGE. A CPU page fault will result in a PTE, PMD, or PUD sized page (but not compound) to be inserted by vmf_insert_mixed() which will call either insert_pfn() or insert_page(). Neither insert_pfn() nor insert_page() increments the page reference count. Invalidations don't callback into the device driver so I don't see how page reference counts can be tracked without adding a mmu_interval_notifier. I think just leaving the page reference count at one is better than trying to use the mmu_interval_notifier or changing vmf_insert_mixed() and invalidations of pfn_t_devmap(pfn) to adjust the page reference count. MEMORY_DEVICE_PRIVATE: This case has the most core mm code having to specially check for is_device_private_page() and adjusting the expected reference count when the page isn't mapped by any process. There is a clear allocation and free so it can be changed to use a reference count of zero while free (see [2]). MEMORY_DEVICE_FS_DAX: Struct pages are created in pmem_attach_disk() and virtio_fs_setup_dax() with an initial reference count of one. The problem I see is that there are 3 states that are important: a) memory is free and not allocated to any file (page_ref_count() == 0). b) memory is allocated to a file and in the page cache (page_ref_count() == 1). c) some gup() or I/O has a reference even after calling unmap_mapping_pages() (page_ref_count() > 1). ext4_break_layouts() basically waits until the page_ref_count() == 1 with put_page() calling wake_up_var(&page->_refcount) to wake up ext4_break_layouts(). The current code doesn't seem to distinguish (a) and (b). If we want to use the 0->1 reference count to signal (c), then the page cache would have hold entries with a page_ref_count() == 0 which doesn't match the general page cache assumptions. Q2: So how should I resolve that? [1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20201001181715.17416-1-rcampbell at nvidia.com [2] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20201012174540.17328-1-rcampbell at nvidia.com
Jason Gunthorpe
2020-Nov-20 20:01 UTC
[Nouveau] [PATCH v3 3/6] mm: support THP migration to device private memory
On Wed, Nov 11, 2020 at 03:38:42PM -0800, Ralph Campbell wrote:> MEMORY_DEVICE_GENERIC: > Struct pages are created in dev_dax_probe() and represent non-volatile memory. > The device can be mmap()'ed which calls dax_mmap() which sets > vma->vm_flags | VM_HUGEPAGE. > A CPU page fault will result in a PTE, PMD, or PUD sized page > (but not compound) to be inserted by vmf_insert_mixed() which will call either > insert_pfn() or insert_page(). > Neither insert_pfn() nor insert_page() increments the page reference > count.But why was this done? It seems very strange to put a pfn with a struct page into a VMA and then deliberately not take the refcount for the duration of that pfn being in the VMA? What prevents memunmap_pages() from progressing while VMAs still point at the memory?> I think just leaving the page reference count at one is better than trying > to use the mmu_interval_notifier or changing vmf_insert_mixed() and > invalidations of pfn_t_devmap(pfn) to adjust the page reference count.Why so? The entire point of getting struct page's for this stuff was to be able to follow the struct page flow. I never did learn a reason why there is devmap stuff all over the place in the page table code...> MEMORY_DEVICE_FS_DAX: > Struct pages are created in pmem_attach_disk() and virtio_fs_setup_dax() with > an initial reference count of one. > The problem I see is that there are 3 states that are important: > a) memory is free and not allocated to any file (page_ref_count() == 0). > b) memory is allocated to a file and in the page cache (page_ref_count() == 1). > c) some gup() or I/O has a reference even after calling unmap_mapping_pages() > (page_ref_count() > 1). ext4_break_layouts() basically waits until the > page_ref_count() == 1 with put_page() calling wake_up_var(&page->_refcount) > to wake up ext4_break_layouts(). > The current code doesn't seem to distinguish (a) and (b). If we want to use > the 0->1 reference count to signal (c), then the page cache would have hold > entries with a page_ref_count() == 0 which doesn't match the general page cache > assumptions.This explanation feels confusing. If *anything* has a reference on the page it cannot be recycled. I would have guess the logic is to remove it from the page cache then wait for a 0 reference?? Jason