| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| ==================================================== |
| pin_user_pages() and related calls |
| ==================================================== |
| |
| .. contents:: :local: |
| |
| Overview |
| ======== |
| |
| This document describes the following functions:: |
| |
| pin_user_pages() |
| pin_user_pages_fast() |
| pin_user_pages_remote() |
| |
| Basic description of FOLL_PIN |
| ============================= |
| |
| FOLL_PIN and FOLL_LONGTERM are flags that can be passed to the get_user_pages*() |
| ("gup") family of functions. FOLL_PIN has significant interactions and |
| interdependencies with FOLL_LONGTERM, so both are covered here. |
| |
| FOLL_PIN is internal to gup, meaning that it should not appear at the gup call |
| sites. This allows the associated wrapper functions (pin_user_pages*() and |
| others) to set the correct combination of these flags, and to check for problems |
| as well. |
| |
| FOLL_LONGTERM, on the other hand, *is* allowed to be set at the gup call sites. |
| This is in order to avoid creating a large number of wrapper functions to cover |
| all combinations of get*(), pin*(), FOLL_LONGTERM, and more. Also, the |
| pin_user_pages*() APIs are clearly distinct from the get_user_pages*() APIs, so |
| that's a natural dividing line, and a good point to make separate wrapper calls. |
| In other words, use pin_user_pages*() for DMA-pinned pages, and |
| get_user_pages*() for other cases. There are five cases described later on in |
| this document, to further clarify that concept. |
| |
| FOLL_PIN and FOLL_GET are mutually exclusive for a given gup call. However, |
| multiple threads and call sites are free to pin the same struct pages, via both |
| FOLL_PIN and FOLL_GET. It's just the call site that needs to choose one or the |
| other, not the struct page(s). |
| |
| The FOLL_PIN implementation is nearly the same as FOLL_GET, except that FOLL_PIN |
| uses a different reference counting technique. |
| |
| FOLL_PIN is a prerequisite to FOLL_LONGTERM. Another way of saying that is, |
| FOLL_LONGTERM is a specific case, more restrictive case of FOLL_PIN. |
| |
| Which flags are set by each wrapper |
| =================================== |
| |
| For these pin_user_pages*() functions, FOLL_PIN is OR'd in with whatever gup |
| flags the caller provides. The caller is required to pass in a non-null struct |
| pages* array, and the function then pins pages by incrementing each by a special |
| value: GUP_PIN_COUNTING_BIAS. |
| |
| For large folios, the GUP_PIN_COUNTING_BIAS scheme is not used. Instead, |
| the extra space available in the struct folio is used to store the |
| pincount directly. |
| |
| This approach for large folios avoids the counting upper limit problems |
| that are discussed below. Those limitations would have been aggravated |
| severely by huge pages, because each tail page adds a refcount to the |
| head page. And in fact, testing revealed that, without a separate pincount |
| field, refcount overflows were seen in some huge page stress tests. |
| |
| This also means that huge pages and large folios do not suffer |
| from the false positives problem that is mentioned below.:: |
| |
| Function |
| -------- |
| pin_user_pages FOLL_PIN is always set internally by this function. |
| pin_user_pages_fast FOLL_PIN is always set internally by this function. |
| pin_user_pages_remote FOLL_PIN is always set internally by this function. |
| |
| For these get_user_pages*() functions, FOLL_GET might not even be specified. |
| Behavior is a little more complex than above. If FOLL_GET was *not* specified, |
| but the caller passed in a non-null struct pages* array, then the function |
| sets FOLL_GET for you, and proceeds to pin pages by incrementing the refcount |
| of each page by +1.:: |
| |
| Function |
| -------- |
| get_user_pages FOLL_GET is sometimes set internally by this function. |
| get_user_pages_fast FOLL_GET is sometimes set internally by this function. |
| get_user_pages_remote FOLL_GET is sometimes set internally by this function. |
| |
| Tracking dma-pinned pages |
| ========================= |
| |
| Some of the key design constraints, and solutions, for tracking dma-pinned |
| pages: |
| |
| * An actual reference count, per struct page, is required. This is because |
| multiple processes may pin and unpin a page. |
| |
| * False positives (reporting that a page is dma-pinned, when in fact it is not) |
| are acceptable, but false negatives are not. |
| |
| * struct page may not be increased in size for this, and all fields are already |
| used. |
| |
| * Given the above, we can overload the page->_refcount field by using, sort of, |
| the upper bits in that field for a dma-pinned count. "Sort of", means that, |
| rather than dividing page->_refcount into bit fields, we simple add a medium- |
| large value (GUP_PIN_COUNTING_BIAS, initially chosen to be 1024: 10 bits) to |
| page->_refcount. This provides fuzzy behavior: if a page has get_page() called |
| on it 1024 times, then it will appear to have a single dma-pinned count. |
| And again, that's acceptable. |
| |
| This also leads to limitations: there are only 31-10==21 bits available for a |
| counter that increments 10 bits at a time. |
| |
| * Because of that limitation, special handling is applied to the zero pages |
| when using FOLL_PIN. We only pretend to pin a zero page - we don't alter its |
| refcount or pincount at all (it is permanent, so there's no need). The |
| unpinning functions also don't do anything to a zero page. This is |
| transparent to the caller. |
| |
| * Callers must specifically request "dma-pinned tracking of pages". In other |
| words, just calling get_user_pages() will not suffice; a new set of functions, |
| pin_user_page() and related, must be used. |
| |
| FOLL_PIN, FOLL_GET, FOLL_LONGTERM: when to use which flags |
| ========================================================== |
| |
| Thanks to Jan Kara, Vlastimil Babka and several other -mm people, for describing |
| these categories: |
| |
| CASE 1: Direct IO (DIO) |
| ----------------------- |
| There are GUP references to pages that are serving |
| as DIO buffers. These buffers are needed for a relatively short time (so they |
| are not "long term"). No special synchronization with page_mkclean() or |
| munmap() is provided. Therefore, flags to set at the call site are: :: |
| |
| FOLL_PIN |
| |
| ...but rather than setting FOLL_PIN directly, call sites should use one of |
| the pin_user_pages*() routines that set FOLL_PIN. |
| |
| CASE 2: RDMA |
| ------------ |
| There are GUP references to pages that are serving as DMA |
| buffers. These buffers are needed for a long time ("long term"). No special |
| synchronization with page_mkclean() or munmap() is provided. Therefore, flags |
| to set at the call site are: :: |
| |
| FOLL_PIN | FOLL_LONGTERM |
| |
| NOTE: Some pages, such as DAX pages, cannot be pinned with longterm pins. That's |
| because DAX pages do not have a separate page cache, and so "pinning" implies |
| locking down file system blocks, which is not (yet) supported in that way. |
| |
| CASE 3: MMU notifier registration, with or without page faulting hardware |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Device drivers can pin pages via get_user_pages*(), and register for mmu |
| notifier callbacks for the memory range. Then, upon receiving a notifier |
| "invalidate range" callback , stop the device from using the range, and unpin |
| the pages. There may be other possible schemes, such as for example explicitly |
| synchronizing against pending IO, that accomplish approximately the same thing. |
| |
| Or, if the hardware supports replayable page faults, then the device driver can |
| avoid pinning entirely (this is ideal), as follows: register for mmu notifier |
| callbacks as above, but instead of stopping the device and unpinning in the |
| callback, simply remove the range from the device's page tables. |
| |
| Either way, as long as the driver unpins the pages upon mmu notifier callback, |
| then there is proper synchronization with both filesystem and mm |
| (page_mkclean(), munmap(), etc). Therefore, neither flag needs to be set. |
| |
| CASE 4: Pinning for struct page manipulation only |
| ------------------------------------------------- |
| If only struct page data (as opposed to the actual memory contents that a page |
| is tracking) is affected, then normal GUP calls are sufficient, and neither flag |
| needs to be set. |
| |
| CASE 5: Pinning in order to write to the data within the page |
| ------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Even though neither DMA nor Direct IO is involved, just a simple case of "pin, |
| write to a page's data, unpin" can cause a problem. Case 5 may be considered a |
| superset of Case 1, plus Case 2, plus anything that invokes that pattern. In |
| other words, if the code is neither Case 1 nor Case 2, it may still require |
| FOLL_PIN, for patterns like this: |
| |
| Correct (uses FOLL_PIN calls): |
| pin_user_pages() |
| write to the data within the pages |
| unpin_user_pages() |
| |
| INCORRECT (uses FOLL_GET calls): |
| get_user_pages() |
| write to the data within the pages |
| put_page() |
| |
| page_maybe_dma_pinned(): the whole point of pinning |
| =================================================== |
| |
| The whole point of marking pages as "DMA-pinned" or "gup-pinned" is to be able |
| to query, "is this page DMA-pinned?" That allows code such as page_mkclean() |
| (and file system writeback code in general) to make informed decisions about |
| what to do when a page cannot be unmapped due to such pins. |
| |
| What to do in those cases is the subject of a years-long series of discussions |
| and debates (see the References at the end of this document). It's a TODO item |
| here: fill in the details once that's worked out. Meanwhile, it's safe to say |
| that having this available: :: |
| |
| static inline bool page_maybe_dma_pinned(struct page *page) |
| |
| ...is a prerequisite to solving the long-running gup+DMA problem. |
| |
| Another way of thinking about FOLL_GET, FOLL_PIN, and FOLL_LONGTERM |
| =================================================================== |
| |
| Another way of thinking about these flags is as a progression of restrictions: |
| FOLL_GET is for struct page manipulation, without affecting the data that the |
| struct page refers to. FOLL_PIN is a *replacement* for FOLL_GET, and is for |
| short term pins on pages whose data *will* get accessed. As such, FOLL_PIN is |
| a "more severe" form of pinning. And finally, FOLL_LONGTERM is an even more |
| restrictive case that has FOLL_PIN as a prerequisite: this is for pages that |
| will be pinned longterm, and whose data will be accessed. |
| |
| Unit testing |
| ============ |
| This file:: |
| |
| tools/testing/selftests/mm/gup_test.c |
| |
| has the following new calls to exercise the new pin*() wrapper functions: |
| |
| * PIN_FAST_BENCHMARK (./gup_test -a) |
| * PIN_BASIC_TEST (./gup_test -b) |
| |
| You can monitor how many total dma-pinned pages have been acquired and released |
| since the system was booted, via two new /proc/vmstat entries: :: |
| |
| /proc/vmstat/nr_foll_pin_acquired |
| /proc/vmstat/nr_foll_pin_released |
| |
| Under normal conditions, these two values will be equal unless there are any |
| long-term [R]DMA pins in place, or during pin/unpin transitions. |
| |
| * nr_foll_pin_acquired: This is the number of logical pins that have been |
| acquired since the system was powered on. For huge pages, the head page is |
| pinned once for each page (head page and each tail page) within the huge page. |
| This follows the same sort of behavior that get_user_pages() uses for huge |
| pages: the head page is refcounted once for each tail or head page in the huge |
| page, when get_user_pages() is applied to a huge page. |
| |
| * nr_foll_pin_released: The number of logical pins that have been released since |
| the system was powered on. Note that pages are released (unpinned) on a |
| PAGE_SIZE granularity, even if the original pin was applied to a huge page. |
| Becaused of the pin count behavior described above in "nr_foll_pin_acquired", |
| the accounting balances out, so that after doing this:: |
| |
| pin_user_pages(huge_page); |
| for (each page in huge_page) |
| unpin_user_page(page); |
| |
| ...the following is expected:: |
| |
| nr_foll_pin_released == nr_foll_pin_acquired |
| |
| (...unless it was already out of balance due to a long-term RDMA pin being in |
| place.) |
| |
| Other diagnostics |
| ================= |
| |
| dump_page() has been enhanced slightly to handle these new counting |
| fields, and to better report on large folios in general. Specifically, |
| for large folios, the exact pincount is reported. |
| |
| References |
| ========== |
| |
| * `Some slow progress on get_user_pages() (Apr 2, 2019) <https://lwn.net/Articles/784574/>`_ |
| * `DMA and get_user_pages() (LPC: Dec 12, 2018) <https://lwn.net/Articles/774411/>`_ |
| * `The trouble with get_user_pages() (Apr 30, 2018) <https://lwn.net/Articles/753027/>`_ |
| * `LWN kernel index: get_user_pages() <https://lwn.net/Kernel/Index/#Memory_management-get_user_pages>`_ |
| |
| John Hubbard, October, 2019 |