| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| =========== |
| Page Tables |
| =========== |
| |
| Paged virtual memory was invented along with virtual memory as a concept in |
| 1962 on the Ferranti Atlas Computer which was the first computer with paged |
| virtual memory. The feature migrated to newer computers and became a de facto |
| feature of all Unix-like systems as time went by. In 1985 the feature was |
| included in the Intel 80386, which was the CPU Linux 1.0 was developed on. |
| |
| Page tables map virtual addresses as seen by the CPU into physical addresses |
| as seen on the external memory bus. |
| |
| Linux defines page tables as a hierarchy which is currently five levels in |
| height. The architecture code for each supported architecture will then |
| map this to the restrictions of the hardware. |
| |
| The physical address corresponding to the virtual address is often referenced |
| by the underlying physical page frame. The **page frame number** or **pfn** |
| is the physical address of the page (as seen on the external memory bus) |
| divided by `PAGE_SIZE`. |
| |
| Physical memory address 0 will be *pfn 0* and the highest pfn will be |
| the last page of physical memory the external address bus of the CPU can |
| address. |
| |
| With a page granularity of 4KB and a address range of 32 bits, pfn 0 is at |
| address 0x00000000, pfn 1 is at address 0x00001000, pfn 2 is at 0x00002000 |
| and so on until we reach pfn 0xfffff at 0xfffff000. With 16KB pages pfs are |
| at 0x00004000, 0x00008000 ... 0xffffc000 and pfn goes from 0 to 0x3fffff. |
| |
| As you can see, with 4KB pages the page base address uses bits 12-31 of the |
| address, and this is why `PAGE_SHIFT` in this case is defined as 12 and |
| `PAGE_SIZE` is usually defined in terms of the page shift as `(1 << PAGE_SHIFT)` |
| |
| Over time a deeper hierarchy has been developed in response to increasing memory |
| sizes. When Linux was created, 4KB pages and a single page table called |
| `swapper_pg_dir` with 1024 entries was used, covering 4MB which coincided with |
| the fact that Torvald's first computer had 4MB of physical memory. Entries in |
| this single table were referred to as *PTE*:s - page table entries. |
| |
| The software page table hierarchy reflects the fact that page table hardware has |
| become hierarchical and that in turn is done to save page table memory and |
| speed up mapping. |
| |
| One could of course imagine a single, linear page table with enormous amounts |
| of entries, breaking down the whole memory into single pages. Such a page table |
| would be very sparse, because large portions of the virtual memory usually |
| remains unused. By using hierarchical page tables large holes in the virtual |
| address space does not waste valuable page table memory, because it will suffice |
| to mark large areas as unmapped at a higher level in the page table hierarchy. |
| |
| Additionally, on modern CPUs, a higher level page table entry can point directly |
| to a physical memory range, which allows mapping a contiguous range of several |
| megabytes or even gigabytes in a single high-level page table entry, taking |
| shortcuts in mapping virtual memory to physical memory: there is no need to |
| traverse deeper in the hierarchy when you find a large mapped range like this. |
| |
| The page table hierarchy has now developed into this:: |
| |
| +-----+ |
| | PGD | |
| +-----+ |
| | |
| | +-----+ |
| +-->| P4D | |
| +-----+ |
| | |
| | +-----+ |
| +-->| PUD | |
| +-----+ |
| | |
| | +-----+ |
| +-->| PMD | |
| +-----+ |
| | |
| | +-----+ |
| +-->| PTE | |
| +-----+ |
| |
| |
| Symbols on the different levels of the page table hierarchy have the following |
| meaning beginning from the bottom: |
| |
| - **pte**, `pte_t`, `pteval_t` = **Page Table Entry** - mentioned earlier. |
| The *pte* is an array of `PTRS_PER_PTE` elements of the `pteval_t` type, each |
| mapping a single page of virtual memory to a single page of physical memory. |
| The architecture defines the size and contents of `pteval_t`. |
| |
| A typical example is that the `pteval_t` is a 32- or 64-bit value with the |
| upper bits being a **pfn** (page frame number), and the lower bits being some |
| architecture-specific bits such as memory protection. |
| |
| The **entry** part of the name is a bit confusing because while in Linux 1.0 |
| this did refer to a single page table entry in the single top level page |
| table, it was retrofitted to be an array of mapping elements when two-level |
| page tables were first introduced, so the *pte* is the lowermost page |
| *table*, not a page table *entry*. |
| |
| - **pmd**, `pmd_t`, `pmdval_t` = **Page Middle Directory**, the hierarchy right |
| above the *pte*, with `PTRS_PER_PMD` references to the *pte*:s. |
| |
| - **pud**, `pud_t`, `pudval_t` = **Page Upper Directory** was introduced after |
| the other levels to handle 4-level page tables. It is potentially unused, |
| or *folded* as we will discuss later. |
| |
| - **p4d**, `p4d_t`, `p4dval_t` = **Page Level 4 Directory** was introduced to |
| handle 5-level page tables after the *pud* was introduced. Now it was clear |
| that we needed to replace *pgd*, *pmd*, *pud* etc with a figure indicating the |
| directory level and that we cannot go on with ad hoc names any more. This |
| is only used on systems which actually have 5 levels of page tables, otherwise |
| it is folded. |
| |
| - **pgd**, `pgd_t`, `pgdval_t` = **Page Global Directory** - the Linux kernel |
| main page table handling the PGD for the kernel memory is still found in |
| `swapper_pg_dir`, but each userspace process in the system also has its own |
| memory context and thus its own *pgd*, found in `struct mm_struct` which |
| in turn is referenced to in each `struct task_struct`. So tasks have memory |
| context in the form of a `struct mm_struct` and this in turn has a |
| `struct pgt_t *pgd` pointer to the corresponding page global directory. |
| |
| To repeat: each level in the page table hierarchy is a *array of pointers*, so |
| the **pgd** contains `PTRS_PER_PGD` pointers to the next level below, **p4d** |
| contains `PTRS_PER_P4D` pointers to **pud** items and so on. The number of |
| pointers on each level is architecture-defined.:: |
| |
| PMD |
| --> +-----+ PTE |
| | ptr |-------> +-----+ |
| | ptr |- | ptr |-------> PAGE |
| | ptr | \ | ptr | |
| | ptr | \ ... |
| | ... | \ |
| | ptr | \ PTE |
| +-----+ +----> +-----+ |
| | ptr |-------> PAGE |
| | ptr | |
| ... |
| |
| |
| Page Table Folding |
| ================== |
| |
| If the architecture does not use all the page table levels, they can be *folded* |
| which means skipped, and all operations performed on page tables will be |
| compile-time augmented to just skip a level when accessing the next lower |
| level. |
| |
| Page table handling code that wishes to be architecture-neutral, such as the |
| virtual memory manager, will need to be written so that it traverses all of the |
| currently five levels. This style should also be preferred for |
| architecture-specific code, so as to be robust to future changes. |
| |
| |
| MMU, TLB, and Page Faults |
| ========================= |
| |
| The `Memory Management Unit (MMU)` is a hardware component that handles virtual |
| to physical address translations. It may use relatively small caches in hardware |
| called `Translation Lookaside Buffers (TLBs)` and `Page Walk Caches` to speed up |
| these translations. |
| |
| When CPU accesses a memory location, it provides a virtual address to the MMU, |
| which checks if there is the existing translation in the TLB or in the Page |
| Walk Caches (on architectures that support them). If no translation is found, |
| MMU uses the page walks to determine the physical address and create the map. |
| |
| The dirty bit for a page is set (i.e., turned on) when the page is written to. |
| Each page of memory has associated permission and dirty bits. The latter |
| indicate that the page has been modified since it was loaded into memory. |
| |
| If nothing prevents it, eventually the physical memory can be accessed and the |
| requested operation on the physical frame is performed. |
| |
| There are several reasons why the MMU can't find certain translations. It could |
| happen because the CPU is trying to access memory that the current task is not |
| permitted to, or because the data is not present into physical memory. |
| |
| When these conditions happen, the MMU triggers page faults, which are types of |
| exceptions that signal the CPU to pause the current execution and run a special |
| function to handle the mentioned exceptions. |
| |
| There are common and expected causes of page faults. These are triggered by |
| process management optimization techniques called "Lazy Allocation" and |
| "Copy-on-Write". Page faults may also happen when frames have been swapped out |
| to persistent storage (swap partition or file) and evicted from their physical |
| locations. |
| |
| These techniques improve memory efficiency, reduce latency, and minimize space |
| occupation. This document won't go deeper into the details of "Lazy Allocation" |
| and "Copy-on-Write" because these subjects are out of scope as they belong to |
| Process Address Management. |
| |
| Swapping differentiates itself from the other mentioned techniques because it's |
| undesirable since it's performed as a means to reduce memory under heavy |
| pressure. |
| |
| Swapping can't work for memory mapped by kernel logical addresses. These are a |
| subset of the kernel virtual space that directly maps a contiguous range of |
| physical memory. Given any logical address, its physical address is determined |
| with simple arithmetic on an offset. Accesses to logical addresses are fast |
| because they avoid the need for complex page table lookups at the expenses of |
| frames not being evictable and pageable out. |
| |
| If the kernel fails to make room for the data that must be present in the |
| physical frames, the kernel invokes the out-of-memory (OOM) killer to make room |
| by terminating lower priority processes until pressure reduces under a safe |
| threshold. |
| |
| Additionally, page faults may be also caused by code bugs or by maliciously |
| crafted addresses that the CPU is instructed to access. A thread of a process |
| could use instructions to address (non-shared) memory which does not belong to |
| its own address space, or could try to execute an instruction that want to write |
| to a read-only location. |
| |
| If the above-mentioned conditions happen in user-space, the kernel sends a |
| `Segmentation Fault` (SIGSEGV) signal to the current thread. That signal usually |
| causes the termination of the thread and of the process it belongs to. |
| |
| This document is going to simplify and show an high altitude view of how the |
| Linux kernel handles these page faults, creates tables and tables' entries, |
| check if memory is present and, if not, requests to load data from persistent |
| storage or from other devices, and updates the MMU and its caches. |
| |
| The first steps are architecture dependent. Most architectures jump to |
| `do_page_fault()`, whereas the x86 interrupt handler is defined by the |
| `DEFINE_IDTENTRY_RAW_ERRORCODE()` macro which calls `handle_page_fault()`. |
| |
| Whatever the routes, all architectures end up to the invocation of |
| `handle_mm_fault()` which, in turn, (likely) ends up calling |
| `__handle_mm_fault()` to carry out the actual work of allocating the page |
| tables. |
| |
| The unfortunate case of not being able to call `__handle_mm_fault()` means |
| that the virtual address is pointing to areas of physical memory which are not |
| permitted to be accessed (at least from the current context). This |
| condition resolves to the kernel sending the above-mentioned SIGSEGV signal |
| to the process and leads to the consequences already explained. |
| |
| `__handle_mm_fault()` carries out its work by calling several functions to |
| find the entry's offsets of the upper layers of the page tables and allocate |
| the tables that it may need. |
| |
| The functions that look for the offset have names like `*_offset()`, where the |
| "*" is for pgd, p4d, pud, pmd, pte; instead the functions to allocate the |
| corresponding tables, layer by layer, are called `*_alloc`, using the |
| above-mentioned convention to name them after the corresponding types of tables |
| in the hierarchy. |
| |
| The page table walk may end at one of the middle or upper layers (PMD, PUD). |
| |
| Linux supports larger page sizes than the usual 4KB (i.e., the so called |
| `huge pages`). When using these kinds of larger pages, higher level pages can |
| directly map them, with no need to use lower level page entries (PTE). Huge |
| pages contain large contiguous physical regions that usually span from 2MB to |
| 1GB. They are respectively mapped by the PMD and PUD page entries. |
| |
| The huge pages bring with them several benefits like reduced TLB pressure, |
| reduced page table overhead, memory allocation efficiency, and performance |
| improvement for certain workloads. However, these benefits come with |
| trade-offs, like wasted memory and allocation challenges. |
| |
| At the very end of the walk with allocations, if it didn't return errors, |
| `__handle_mm_fault()` finally calls `handle_pte_fault()`, which via `do_fault()` |
| performs one of `do_read_fault()`, `do_cow_fault()`, `do_shared_fault()`. |
| "read", "cow", "shared" give hints about the reasons and the kind of fault it's |
| handling. |
| |
| The actual implementation of the workflow is very complex. Its design allows |
| Linux to handle page faults in a way that is tailored to the specific |
| characteristics of each architecture, while still sharing a common overall |
| structure. |
| |
| To conclude this high altitude view of how Linux handles page faults, let's |
| add that the page faults handler can be disabled and enabled respectively with |
| `pagefault_disable()` and `pagefault_enable()`. |
| |
| Several code path make use of the latter two functions because they need to |
| disable traps into the page faults handler, mostly to prevent deadlocks. |