Dear All, I''m trying to understand some of the details of the shadow page table implementation. In particular I''m interested in the inner workings of translated mode. Now as I understand it, the principle behind Shadow Page Tables (SPTs) is to provide a level of indirection between virtual and machine addresses. In Xen this is implemented by a P2M table for each domain (at least in translated mode this address space is reused). Each entry in this table is indexed by "physical" addresses and point to a given machine frame number (mfn). As far as I can tell from the code, this structure is walked much like a normal page table. In translated mode the guest VM however cannot make use of the two level lookup (first from virtual to physical and then from physical to machine addresses), so a hardware specific version (the SPT) of the two mappings is produced and given to the MMU instead of the ordinary page table. My first question is have the status bits of each entry in the P2M table changed semantics (compared to a normal l1 entry) or do they signify the same flags? If the read/write flag is not set (read only), will this be propagated to the SPT seen by the MMU? Normally producing a SPT each time a the cr3 register is updated (as required per context switch), is considered to be an overhead. One solution to this is to make use of a cache, where references to old SPTs are kept. This again involves the overhead in terms of memory usage and tracking if the cached SPT is valid. My second question is thus, does the implementation make use of a SPT cache or are SPTs produced on demand? If a cache is used, can anyone give me pointers to where I can find this structure? The implementation makes use of snapshots, how do these fit into big picture? Finally some of the terminology used for the implementation seems a bit un-intuitive to me. Throughout the source, there is the concept of a hl2 table. As far as I can tell, a l2 table is the PGD in Linux kernel terminology and a l1 table is the table pointed to by an entry in the l2 table (PT in Linux). My first guess was that the hl2 table was the table actually pointed to by the cr3 register, but I cannot seem to confirm this. What does the h in hl2 stand for and what is it used for? Thank you, Arne Mejlholm _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@lists.xensource.com http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel