On Wed, Jun 10, 2020 at 11:51 PM Alex Ghiti<alex@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi Atish,In that case, this patch mandates that the firmware region has to be
Le 6/10/20 Ã 2:32 PM, Atish Patra a Ãcrit :
On Wed, Jun 3, 2020 at 8:36 AM Alexandre Ghiti<alex@xxxxxxxx> wrote:Yes, a 1GB hugepage will cover those 2MB: I rely on the previous boot
This small patchset intends to use PUD/PGDIR entries for linear mappingI don't have in depth knowledge of how mm code works so this question
in order to better utilize TLB.
At the moment, only PMD entries can be used since on common platforms
(qemu/unleashed), the kernel is loaded at DRAM + 2MB which dealigns virtual
and physical addresses and then prevents the use of PUD/PGDIR entries.
So the kernel must be able to get those 2MB for PAGE_OFFSET to map the
beginning of the DRAM: this is achieved in patch 1.
may be a completely
stupid one :). Just for my understanding,
As per my understanding, kernel will map those 2MB of memory but never use it.
How does the kernel ensure that it doesn't allocate any memory from those 2MB
memory if it is not marked as reserved?
stage to mark this region
as reserved if there is something there (like opensbi). Otherwise, the
kernel will indeed try to
allocate memory from there :)
mark "reserved"
the device tree so that the Linux kernel doesn't try to allocate
memory from there.
OpenSBI is already doing it from v0.7. Thus, any user using latest
OpenSBI can leverage
this patch for a better TLB utilization.
However, legacy previous boot stages(BBL) do not reserve this area via
DT which may
result in an unexpected crash. I am not sure how many developers still
use BBL though.
Few general suggestions to tackle this problem:
1. This mandatory requirement should be added to the booting document
so that any other
SBI implementation is also aware of it.
2. You may have to move the patch1 to a separate config so that any
users of legacy boot stages
can disable this feature.
Alex
But furthermore, at the moment, the firmware (opensbi) explicitly asks the
kernel not to map the region it occupies, which is on those common
platforms at the very beginning of the DRAM and then it also dealigns
virtual and physical addresses. I proposed a patch here:
https://github.com/riscv/opensbi/pull/167
that removes this 'constraint' but *not* all the time as it offers some
kind of protection in case PMP is not available. So sometimes, we may
have a part of the memory below the kernel that is removed creating a
misalignment between virtual and physical addresses. So for performance
reasons, we must at least make sure that PMD entries can be used: that
is guaranteed by patch 1 too.
Finally the second patch simply improves best_map_size so that whenever
possible, PUD/PGDIR entries are used.
Below is the kernel page table without this patch on a 6G platform:
---[ Linear mapping ]---
0xffffc00000000000-0xffffc00176e00000 0x0000000080200000 5998M PMD D A . . . W R V
And with this patchset + opensbi patch:
---[ Linear mapping ]---
0xffffc00000000000-0xffffc00140000000 0x0000000080000000 5G PUD D A . . . W R V
0xffffc00140000000-0xffffc00177000000 0x00000001c0000000 880M PMD D A . . . W R V
Alexandre Ghiti (2):
riscv: Get memory below load_pa while ensuring linear mapping is PMD
aligned
riscv: Use PUD/PGDIR entries for linear mapping when possible
arch/riscv/include/asm/page.h | 8 ++++
arch/riscv/mm/init.c | 69 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------
2 files changed, 65 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)
--
2.20.1