[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: [PATCH v2 1/1] mm: fix folio_pte_batch() on XEN PV
- To: Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- From: David Hildenbrand <david@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 4 May 2025 10:58:44 +0200
- Autocrypt: addr=david@xxxxxxxxxx; keydata= xsFNBFXLn5EBEAC+zYvAFJxCBY9Tr1xZgcESmxVNI/0ffzE/ZQOiHJl6mGkmA1R7/uUpiCjJ dBrn+lhhOYjjNefFQou6478faXE6o2AhmebqT4KiQoUQFV4R7y1KMEKoSyy8hQaK1umALTdL QZLQMzNE74ap+GDK0wnacPQFpcG1AE9RMq3aeErY5tujekBS32jfC/7AnH7I0v1v1TbbK3Gp XNeiN4QroO+5qaSr0ID2sz5jtBLRb15RMre27E1ImpaIv2Jw8NJgW0k/D1RyKCwaTsgRdwuK Kx/Y91XuSBdz0uOyU/S8kM1+ag0wvsGlpBVxRR/xw/E8M7TEwuCZQArqqTCmkG6HGcXFT0V9 PXFNNgV5jXMQRwU0O/ztJIQqsE5LsUomE//bLwzj9IVsaQpKDqW6TAPjcdBDPLHvriq7kGjt WhVhdl0qEYB8lkBEU7V2Yb+SYhmhpDrti9Fq1EsmhiHSkxJcGREoMK/63r9WLZYI3+4W2rAc UucZa4OT27U5ZISjNg3Ev0rxU5UH2/pT4wJCfxwocmqaRr6UYmrtZmND89X0KigoFD/XSeVv jwBRNjPAubK9/k5NoRrYqztM9W6sJqrH8+UWZ1Idd/DdmogJh0gNC0+N42Za9yBRURfIdKSb B3JfpUqcWwE7vUaYrHG1nw54pLUoPG6sAA7Mehl3nd4pZUALHwARAQABzSREYXZpZCBIaWxk ZW5icmFuZCA8ZGF2aWRAcmVkaGF0LmNvbT7CwZgEEwEIAEICGwMGCwkIBwMCBhUIAgkKCwQW AgMBAh4BAheAAhkBFiEEG9nKrXNcTDpGDfzKTd4Q9wD/g1oFAl8Ox4kFCRKpKXgACgkQTd4Q 9wD/g1oHcA//a6Tj7SBNjFNM1iNhWUo1lxAja0lpSodSnB2g4FCZ4R61SBR4l/psBL73xktp rDHrx4aSpwkRP6Epu6mLvhlfjmkRG4OynJ5HG1gfv7RJJfnUdUM1z5kdS8JBrOhMJS2c/gPf wv1TGRq2XdMPnfY2o0CxRqpcLkx4vBODvJGl2mQyJF/gPepdDfcT8/PY9BJ7FL6Hrq1gnAo4 3Iv9qV0JiT2wmZciNyYQhmA1V6dyTRiQ4YAc31zOo2IM+xisPzeSHgw3ONY/XhYvfZ9r7W1l pNQdc2G+o4Di9NPFHQQhDw3YTRR1opJaTlRDzxYxzU6ZnUUBghxt9cwUWTpfCktkMZiPSDGd KgQBjnweV2jw9UOTxjb4LXqDjmSNkjDdQUOU69jGMUXgihvo4zhYcMX8F5gWdRtMR7DzW/YE BgVcyxNkMIXoY1aYj6npHYiNQesQlqjU6azjbH70/SXKM5tNRplgW8TNprMDuntdvV9wNkFs 9TyM02V5aWxFfI42+aivc4KEw69SE9KXwC7FSf5wXzuTot97N9Phj/Z3+jx443jo2NR34XgF 89cct7wJMjOF7bBefo0fPPZQuIma0Zym71cP61OP/i11ahNye6HGKfxGCOcs5wW9kRQEk8P9 M/k2wt3mt/fCQnuP/mWutNPt95w9wSsUyATLmtNrwccz63XOwU0EVcufkQEQAOfX3n0g0fZz Bgm/S2zF/kxQKCEKP8ID+Vz8sy2GpDvveBq4H2Y34XWsT1zLJdvqPI4af4ZSMxuerWjXbVWb T6d4odQIG0fKx4F8NccDqbgHeZRNajXeeJ3R7gAzvWvQNLz4piHrO/B4tf8svmRBL0ZB5P5A 2uhdwLU3NZuK22zpNn4is87BPWF8HhY0L5fafgDMOqnf4guJVJPYNPhUFzXUbPqOKOkL8ojk CXxkOFHAbjstSK5Ca3fKquY3rdX3DNo+EL7FvAiw1mUtS+5GeYE+RMnDCsVFm/C7kY8c2d0G NWkB9pJM5+mnIoFNxy7YBcldYATVeOHoY4LyaUWNnAvFYWp08dHWfZo9WCiJMuTfgtH9tc75 7QanMVdPt6fDK8UUXIBLQ2TWr/sQKE9xtFuEmoQGlE1l6bGaDnnMLcYu+Asp3kDT0w4zYGsx 5r6XQVRH4+5N6eHZiaeYtFOujp5n+pjBaQK7wUUjDilPQ5QMzIuCL4YjVoylWiBNknvQWBXS lQCWmavOT9sttGQXdPCC5ynI+1ymZC1ORZKANLnRAb0NH/UCzcsstw2TAkFnMEbo9Zu9w7Kv AxBQXWeXhJI9XQssfrf4Gusdqx8nPEpfOqCtbbwJMATbHyqLt7/oz/5deGuwxgb65pWIzufa N7eop7uh+6bezi+rugUI+w6DABEBAAHCwXwEGAEIACYCGwwWIQQb2cqtc1xMOkYN/MpN3hD3 AP+DWgUCXw7HsgUJEqkpoQAKCRBN3hD3AP+DWrrpD/4qS3dyVRxDcDHIlmguXjC1Q5tZTwNB boaBTPHSy/Nksu0eY7x6HfQJ3xajVH32Ms6t1trDQmPx2iP5+7iDsb7OKAb5eOS8h+BEBDeq 3ecsQDv0fFJOA9ag5O3LLNk+3x3q7e0uo06XMaY7UHS341ozXUUI7wC7iKfoUTv03iO9El5f XpNMx/YrIMduZ2+nd9Di7o5+KIwlb2mAB9sTNHdMrXesX8eBL6T9b+MZJk+mZuPxKNVfEQMQ a5SxUEADIPQTPNvBewdeI80yeOCrN+Zzwy/Mrx9EPeu59Y5vSJOx/z6OUImD/GhX7Xvkt3kq Er5KTrJz3++B6SH9pum9PuoE/k+nntJkNMmQpR4MCBaV/J9gIOPGodDKnjdng+mXliF3Ptu6 3oxc2RCyGzTlxyMwuc2U5Q7KtUNTdDe8T0uE+9b8BLMVQDDfJjqY0VVqSUwImzTDLX9S4g/8 kC4HRcclk8hpyhY2jKGluZO0awwTIMgVEzmTyBphDg/Gx7dZU1Xf8HFuE+UZ5UDHDTnwgv7E th6RC9+WrhDNspZ9fJjKWRbveQgUFCpe1sa77LAw+XFrKmBHXp9ZVIe90RMe2tRL06BGiRZr jPrnvUsUUsjRoRNJjKKA/REq+sAnhkNPPZ/NNMjaZ5b8Tovi8C0tmxiCHaQYqj7G2rgnT0kt WNyWQQ==
- Cc: Petr Vaněk <arkamar@xxxxxxxx>, linux-mm@xxxxxxxxx, linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, Ryan Roberts <ryan.roberts@xxxxxxx>, xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, x86@xxxxxxxxxx, stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Delivery-date: Sun, 04 May 2025 08:59:14 +0000
- List-id: Xen developer discussion <xen-devel.lists.xenproject.org>
On 04.05.25 09:15, Andrew Morton wrote:
On Sun, 4 May 2025 08:47:45 +0200 David Hildenbrand <david@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Methinks max_nr really wants to be unsigned long.
We only batch within a single PTE table, so an integer was sufficient.
The unsigned value is the result of a discussion with Ryan regarding
similar/related
(rmap) functions:
"
Personally I'd go with signed int (since
that's what all the counters in struct folio that we are manipulating are,
underneath the atomic_t) then check that nr_pages > 0 in
__folio_rmap_sanity_checks().
"
https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20231204142146.91437-14-david@xxxxxxxxxx/T/#ma0bfff0102f0f2391dfa94aa22a8b7219b92c957
As soon as we let "max_nr" be an "unsigned long", also the return value
should be an "unsigned long", and everybody calling that function.
In this case here, we should likely just use whatever type "max_nr" is.
Not sure myself if we should change that here to unsigned long or long. Some
callers also operate with the negative values IIRC (e.g., adjust the RSS by
doing -= nr).
"rss -= nr" doesn't require, expect or anticipate that `nr' can be negative!
The one thing I ran into with "unsigned int" around folio_nr_pages()
was that if you pass
-folio-nr_pages()
into a function that expects an "long" (add vs. remove a value to a counter),
then
the result might not be what one would expect when briefly glimpsing at the
code:
#include <stdio.h>
static __attribute__((noinline)) void print(long diff)
{
printf("%ld\n", diff);
}
static int value_int()
{
return 12345;
}
static unsigned int value_unsigned_int()
{
return 12345;
}
static int value_long()
{
return 12345;
}
static unsigned long value_unsigned_long()
{
return 12345;
}
int main(void)
{
print(-value_int());
print(-value_unsigned_int());
print(-value_long());
print(-value_unsigned_long());
return 0;
}
$ ./tmp
-12345
4294954951
-12345
-12345
So, I am fine with using "unsigned long" (as stated in that commit description
below).
That will permit the
cleanup of quite a bit of truncation, extension, signedness conversion
and general type chaos in folio_pte_batch()'s various callers.
And...
Why does folio_nr_pages() return a signed quantity? It's a count.
A partial answer is in 1ea5212aed068 ("mm: factor out large folio handling
from folio_nr_pages() into folio_large_nr_pages()"), where I stumbled over the
reason for a signed value myself and at least made the other
functions be consistent with folio_nr_pages():
"
While at it, let's consistently return a "long" value from all these
similar functions. Note that we cannot use "unsigned int" (even though
_folio_nr_pages is of that type), because it would break some callers that
do stuff like "-folio_nr_pages()". Both "int" or "unsigned long" would
work as well.
"
Note that folio_nr_pages() returned a "long" since the very beginning. Probably
using
a signed value for consistency because also mapcounts / refcounts are all
signed.
Geeze.
Can we step back and look at what we're doing? Anything which counts
something (eg, has "nr" in the identifier) cannot be negative.
Yes. Unless we want to catch underflows (e.g., mapcount / refcount). For
"nr_pages" I agree.
It's that damn "int" thing. I think it was always a mistake that the C
language's go-to type is a signed one.
Yeah. But see above that "unsigned int" in combination with long can also cause
pain.
It's a system programming
language and system software rarely deals with negative scalars.
Signed scalars are the rare case.
I do expect that the code in and around here would be cleaner and more
reliable if we were to do a careful expunging of inappropriately signed
variables.
Maybe, but it would mostly be a "int -> unsigned long" conversion, probably not
much more. I'm not against cleaning that up at all.
And why the heck is folio_pte_batch() inlined? It's larger then my
first hard disk and it has five callsites!
:)
In case of fork/zap we really want it inlined because
(1) We want to optimize out all of the unnecessary checks we added for other
users
(2) Zap/fork code is very sensitive to function call overhead
Probably, as that function sees more widespread use, we might want a
non-inlined variant that can be used in places where performance doesn't
matter all that much (although I am not sure there will be that many).
a quick test.
before:
text data bss dec hex filename
12380 470 0 12850 3232 mm/madvise.o
52975 2689 24 55688 d988 mm/memory.o
25305 1448 2096 28849 70b1 mm/mempolicy.o
8573 924 4 9501 251d mm/mlock.o
20950 5864 16 26830 68ce mm/rmap.o
(120183)
after:
text data bss dec hex filename
11916 470 0 12386 3062 mm/madvise.o
52990 2697 24 55711 d99f mm/memory.o
25161 1448 2096 28705 7021 mm/mempolicy.o
8381 924 4 9309 245d mm/mlock.o
20806 5864 16 26686 683e mm/rmap.o
(119254)
so uninlining saves a kilobyte of text - less than I expected but
almost 1%.
As I said, for fork+zap/unmap we really want to inline -- the first two users
of that function when that function was still simpler and resided in
mm/memory.o. For
the other users, probably okay to have a non-inlined one in mm/util.c .
--
Cheers,
David / dhildenb
|