On Thu, 11 Jun 2015 15:21:30 -0400 Eric B Munson <emunson@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Ditto mlockall(MCL_ONFAULT) followed by munlock(). I'm not sure
that even makes sense but the behaviour should be understood and
tested.
I have extended the kselftest for lock-on-fault to try both of these
scenarios and they work as expected. The VMA is split and the VM
flags are set appropriately for the resulting VMAs.
munlock() should do vma merging as well. I *think* we implemented
that. More tests for you to add ;)
How are you testing the vma merging and splitting, btw? Parsing
the profcs files?
What's missing here is a syscall to set VM_LOCKONFAULT on an
arbitrary range of memory - mlock() for lock-on-fault. It's a
shame that mlock() didn't take a `mode' argument. Perhaps we
should add such a syscall - that would make the mmap flag unneeded
but I suppose it should be kept for symmetry.
Do you want such a system call as part of this set? I would need some
time to make sure I had thought through all the possible corners one
could get into with such a call, so it would delay a V3 quite a bit.
Otherwise I can send a V3 out immediately.
I think the way to look at this is to pretend that mm/mlock.c doesn't
exist and ask "how should we design these features".
And that would be:
- mmap() takes a `flags' argument: MAP_LOCKED|MAP_LOCKONFAULT.
- mlock() takes a `flags' argument. Presently that's
MLOCK_LOCKED|MLOCK_LOCKONFAULT.
- munlock() takes a `flags' arument. MLOCK_LOCKED|MLOCK_LOCKONFAULT
to specify which flags are being cleared.
- mlockall() and munlockall() ditto.
IOW, LOCKED and LOCKEDONFAULT are treated identically and independently.
Now, that's how we would have designed all this on day one. And I
think we can do this now, by adding new mlock2() and munlock2()
syscalls. And we may as well deprecate the old mlock() and munlock(),
not that this matters much.
*should* we do this? I'm thinking "yes" - it's all pretty simple
boilerplate and wrappers and such, and it gets the interface correct,
and extensible.
What do others think?
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