Re: [rfc 0/3] Cleaning up soft-dirty bit usage

From: Kirill A. Shutemov
Date: Mon Apr 07 2014 - 09:07:33 EST


On Thu, Apr 03, 2014 at 10:48:44PM +0400, Cyrill Gorcunov wrote:
> Hi! I've been trying to clean up soft-dirty bit usage. I can't cleanup
> "ridiculous macros in pgtable-2level.h" completely because I need to
> define _PAGE_FILE,_PAGE_PROTNONE,_PAGE_NUMA bits in sequence manner
> like
>
> #define _PAGE_BIT_FILE (_PAGE_BIT_PRESENT + 1) /* _PAGE_BIT_RW */
> #define _PAGE_BIT_NUMA (_PAGE_BIT_PRESENT + 2) /* _PAGE_BIT_USER */
> #define _PAGE_BIT_PROTNONE (_PAGE_BIT_PRESENT + 3) /* _PAGE_BIT_PWT */
>
> which can't be done right now because numa code needs to save original
> pte bits for example in __split_huge_page_map, if I'm not missing something
> obvious.

Sorry, I didn't get this. How __split_huge_page_map() does depend on pte
bits order?

>
> Also if we ever redefine the bits above we will need to update PAT code
> which uses _PAGE_GLOBAL + _PAGE_PRESENT to make pte_present return true
> or false.
>
> Another weird thing I found is the following sequence:
>
> mprotect_fixup
> change_protection (passes @prot_numa = 0 which finally ends up in)
> ...
> change_pte_range(..., prot_numa)
>
> if (!prot_numa) {
> ...
> } else {
> ... this seems to be dead code branch ...
> }
>
> is it intentional, and @prot_numa argument is supposed to be passed
> with prot_numa = 1 one day, or it's leftover from old times?

I see one more user of change_protection() -- change_prot_numa(), which
has .prot_numa == 1.

--
Kirill A. Shutemov
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/