Re: [PATCH -v6 2/2] Updating ctime and mtime for memory-mappedfiles

From: Linus Torvalds
Date: Fri Jan 18 2008 - 17:23:00 EST




On Sat, 19 Jan 2008, Anton Salikhmetov wrote:
>
> The page_check_address() function is called from the
> page_mkclean_one() routine as follows:

.. and the page_mkclean_one() function is totally different.

Lookie here, this is the correct and complex sequence:

> entry = ptep_clear_flush(vma, address, pte);
> entry = pte_wrprotect(entry);
> entry = pte_mkclean(entry);
> set_pte_at(mm, address, pte, entry);

That's a rather expensive sequence, but it's done exactly because it has
to be done that way. What it does is to

- *atomically* load the pte entry _and_ clear the old one in memory.

That's the

entry = ptep_clear_flush(vma, address, pte);

thing, and it basically means that it's doing some
architecture-specific magic to make sure that another CPU that accesses
the PTE at the same time will never actually modify the pte (because
it's clear and not valid)

- it then - while the page table is actually clear and invalid - takes
the old value and turns it into the new one:

entry = pte_wrprotect(entry);
entry = pte_mkclean(entry);

- and finally, it replaces the entry with the new one:

set_pte_at(mm, address, pte, entry);

which takes care to write the new entry in some specific way that is
atomic wrt other CPU's (ie on 32-bit x86 with a 64-bit page table
entry it writes the high word first, see the write barriers in
"native_set_pte()" in include/asm-x86/pgtable-3level.h

Now, compare that subtle and correct thing with what is *not* correct:

if (pte_dirty(*pte) && pte_write(*pte))
*pte = pte_wrprotect(*pte);

which makes no effort at all to make sure that it's safe in case another
CPU updates the accessed bit.

Now, arguably it's unlikely to cause horrible problems at least on x86,
because:

- we only do this if the pte is already marked dirty, so while we can
lose the accessed bit, we can *not* lose the dirty bit. And the
accessed bit isn't such a big deal.

- it's not doing any of the "be careful about" ordering things, but since
the really important bits aren't changing, ordering probably won't
practically matter.

But the problem is that we have something like 24 different architectures,
it's hard to make sure that none of them have issues.

In other words: it may well work in practice. But when these things go
subtly wrong, they are *really* nasty to find, and the unsafe sequence is
really not how it's supposed to be done. For example, you don't even flush
the TLB, so even if there are no cross-CPU issues, there's probably going
to be writable entries in the TLB that now don't match the page tables.

Will it matter? Again, probably impossible to see in practice. But ...

Linus
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