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authorAndré Fabian Silva Delgado <emulatorman@parabola.nu>2015-12-15 14:52:16 -0300
committerAndré Fabian Silva Delgado <emulatorman@parabola.nu>2015-12-15 14:52:16 -0300
commit8d91c1e411f55d7ea91b1183a2e9f8088fb4d5be (patch)
treee9891aa6c295060d065adffd610c4f49ecf884f3 /Documentation/vm
parenta71852147516bc1cb5b0b3cbd13639bfd4022dc8 (diff)
Linux-libre 4.3.2-gnu
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/vm')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/vm/00-INDEX2
-rw-r--r--Documentation/vm/hugetlbpage.txt15
-rw-r--r--Documentation/vm/idle_page_tracking.txt98
-rw-r--r--Documentation/vm/pagemap.txt28
-rw-r--r--Documentation/vm/userfaultfd.txt144
-rw-r--r--Documentation/vm/zswap.txt36
6 files changed, 308 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/vm/00-INDEX b/Documentation/vm/00-INDEX
index 75bde3da7..09eaa9a12 100644
--- a/Documentation/vm/00-INDEX
+++ b/Documentation/vm/00-INDEX
@@ -14,6 +14,8 @@ hugetlbpage.txt
- a brief summary of hugetlbpage support in the Linux kernel.
hwpoison.txt
- explains what hwpoison is
+idle_page_tracking.txt
+ - description of the idle page tracking feature.
ksm.txt
- how to use the Kernel Samepage Merging feature.
uksm.txt
diff --git a/Documentation/vm/hugetlbpage.txt b/Documentation/vm/hugetlbpage.txt
index 030977fb8..54dd9b9c6 100644
--- a/Documentation/vm/hugetlbpage.txt
+++ b/Documentation/vm/hugetlbpage.txt
@@ -329,7 +329,14 @@ Examples
3) hugepage-mmap: see tools/testing/selftests/vm/hugepage-mmap.c
-4) The libhugetlbfs (http://libhugetlbfs.sourceforge.net) library provides a
- wide range of userspace tools to help with huge page usability, environment
- setup, and control. Furthermore it provides useful test cases that should be
- used when modifying code to ensure no regressions are introduced.
+4) The libhugetlbfs (https://github.com/libhugetlbfs/libhugetlbfs) library
+ provides a wide range of userspace tools to help with huge page usability,
+ environment setup, and control.
+
+Kernel development regression testing
+=====================================
+
+The most complete set of hugetlb tests are in the libhugetlbfs repository.
+If you modify any hugetlb related code, use the libhugetlbfs test suite
+to check for regressions. In addition, if you add any new hugetlb
+functionality, please add appropriate tests to libhugetlbfs.
diff --git a/Documentation/vm/idle_page_tracking.txt b/Documentation/vm/idle_page_tracking.txt
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..85dcc3bb8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/vm/idle_page_tracking.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,98 @@
+MOTIVATION
+
+The idle page tracking feature allows to track which memory pages are being
+accessed by a workload and which are idle. This information can be useful for
+estimating the workload's working set size, which, in turn, can be taken into
+account when configuring the workload parameters, setting memory cgroup limits,
+or deciding where to place the workload within a compute cluster.
+
+It is enabled by CONFIG_IDLE_PAGE_TRACKING=y.
+
+USER API
+
+The idle page tracking API is located at /sys/kernel/mm/page_idle. Currently,
+it consists of the only read-write file, /sys/kernel/mm/page_idle/bitmap.
+
+The file implements a bitmap where each bit corresponds to a memory page. The
+bitmap is represented by an array of 8-byte integers, and the page at PFN #i is
+mapped to bit #i%64 of array element #i/64, byte order is native. When a bit is
+set, the corresponding page is idle.
+
+A page is considered idle if it has not been accessed since it was marked idle
+(for more details on what "accessed" actually means see the IMPLEMENTATION
+DETAILS section). To mark a page idle one has to set the bit corresponding to
+the page by writing to the file. A value written to the file is OR-ed with the
+current bitmap value.
+
+Only accesses to user memory pages are tracked. These are pages mapped to a
+process address space, page cache and buffer pages, swap cache pages. For other
+page types (e.g. SLAB pages) an attempt to mark a page idle is silently ignored,
+and hence such pages are never reported idle.
+
+For huge pages the idle flag is set only on the head page, so one has to read
+/proc/kpageflags in order to correctly count idle huge pages.
+
+Reading from or writing to /sys/kernel/mm/page_idle/bitmap will return
+-EINVAL if you are not starting the read/write on an 8-byte boundary, or
+if the size of the read/write is not a multiple of 8 bytes. Writing to
+this file beyond max PFN will return -ENXIO.
+
+That said, in order to estimate the amount of pages that are not used by a
+workload one should:
+
+ 1. Mark all the workload's pages as idle by setting corresponding bits in
+ /sys/kernel/mm/page_idle/bitmap. The pages can be found by reading
+ /proc/pid/pagemap if the workload is represented by a process, or by
+ filtering out alien pages using /proc/kpagecgroup in case the workload is
+ placed in a memory cgroup.
+
+ 2. Wait until the workload accesses its working set.
+
+ 3. Read /sys/kernel/mm/page_idle/bitmap and count the number of bits set. If
+ one wants to ignore certain types of pages, e.g. mlocked pages since they
+ are not reclaimable, he or she can filter them out using /proc/kpageflags.
+
+See Documentation/vm/pagemap.txt for more information about /proc/pid/pagemap,
+/proc/kpageflags, and /proc/kpagecgroup.
+
+IMPLEMENTATION DETAILS
+
+The kernel internally keeps track of accesses to user memory pages in order to
+reclaim unreferenced pages first on memory shortage conditions. A page is
+considered referenced if it has been recently accessed via a process address
+space, in which case one or more PTEs it is mapped to will have the Accessed bit
+set, or marked accessed explicitly by the kernel (see mark_page_accessed()). The
+latter happens when:
+
+ - a userspace process reads or writes a page using a system call (e.g. read(2)
+ or write(2))
+
+ - a page that is used for storing filesystem buffers is read or written,
+ because a process needs filesystem metadata stored in it (e.g. lists a
+ directory tree)
+
+ - a page is accessed by a device driver using get_user_pages()
+
+When a dirty page is written to swap or disk as a result of memory reclaim or
+exceeding the dirty memory limit, it is not marked referenced.
+
+The idle memory tracking feature adds a new page flag, the Idle flag. This flag
+is set manually, by writing to /sys/kernel/mm/page_idle/bitmap (see the USER API
+section), and cleared automatically whenever a page is referenced as defined
+above.
+
+When a page is marked idle, the Accessed bit must be cleared in all PTEs it is
+mapped to, otherwise we will not be able to detect accesses to the page coming
+from a process address space. To avoid interference with the reclaimer, which,
+as noted above, uses the Accessed bit to promote actively referenced pages, one
+more page flag is introduced, the Young flag. When the PTE Accessed bit is
+cleared as a result of setting or updating a page's Idle flag, the Young flag
+is set on the page. The reclaimer treats the Young flag as an extra PTE
+Accessed bit and therefore will consider such a page as referenced.
+
+Since the idle memory tracking feature is based on the memory reclaimer logic,
+it only works with pages that are on an LRU list, other pages are silently
+ignored. That means it will ignore a user memory page if it is isolated, but
+since there are usually not many of them, it should not affect the overall
+result noticeably. In order not to stall scanning of the idle page bitmap,
+locked pages may be skipped too.
diff --git a/Documentation/vm/pagemap.txt b/Documentation/vm/pagemap.txt
index 6bfbc172c..0e1e55588 100644
--- a/Documentation/vm/pagemap.txt
+++ b/Documentation/vm/pagemap.txt
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ pagemap is a new (as of 2.6.25) set of interfaces in the kernel that allow
userspace programs to examine the page tables and related information by
reading files in /proc.
-There are three components to pagemap:
+There are four components to pagemap:
* /proc/pid/pagemap. This file lets a userspace process find out which
physical frame each virtual page is mapped to. It contains one 64-bit
@@ -16,11 +16,17 @@ There are three components to pagemap:
* Bits 0-4 swap type if swapped
* Bits 5-54 swap offset if swapped
* Bit 55 pte is soft-dirty (see Documentation/vm/soft-dirty.txt)
- * Bits 56-60 zero
- * Bit 61 page is file-page or shared-anon
+ * Bit 56 page exclusively mapped (since 4.2)
+ * Bits 57-60 zero
+ * Bit 61 page is file-page or shared-anon (since 3.5)
* Bit 62 page swapped
* Bit 63 page present
+ Since Linux 4.0 only users with the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability can get PFNs.
+ In 4.0 and 4.1 opens by unprivileged fail with -EPERM. Starting from
+ 4.2 the PFN field is zeroed if the user does not have CAP_SYS_ADMIN.
+ Reason: information about PFNs helps in exploiting Rowhammer vulnerability.
+
If the page is not present but in swap, then the PFN contains an
encoding of the swap file number and the page's offset into the
swap. Unmapped pages return a null PFN. This allows determining
@@ -64,6 +70,11 @@ There are three components to pagemap:
22. THP
23. BALLOON
24. ZERO_PAGE
+ 25. IDLE
+
+ * /proc/kpagecgroup. This file contains a 64-bit inode number of the
+ memory cgroup each page is charged to, indexed by PFN. Only available when
+ CONFIG_MEMCG is set.
Short descriptions to the page flags:
@@ -110,6 +121,12 @@ Short descriptions to the page flags:
24. ZERO_PAGE
zero page for pfn_zero or huge_zero page
+25. IDLE
+ page has not been accessed since it was marked idle (see
+ Documentation/vm/idle_page_tracking.txt). Note that this flag may be
+ stale in case the page was accessed via a PTE. To make sure the flag
+ is up-to-date one has to read /sys/kernel/mm/page_idle/bitmap first.
+
[IO related page flags]
1. ERROR IO error occurred
3. UPTODATE page has up-to-date data
@@ -159,3 +176,8 @@ Other notes:
Reading from any of the files will return -EINVAL if you are not starting
the read on an 8-byte boundary (e.g., if you sought an odd number of bytes
into the file), or if the size of the read is not a multiple of 8 bytes.
+
+Before Linux 3.11 pagemap bits 55-60 were used for "page-shift" (which is
+always 12 at most architectures). Since Linux 3.11 their meaning changes
+after first clear of soft-dirty bits. Since Linux 4.2 they are used for
+flags unconditionally.
diff --git a/Documentation/vm/userfaultfd.txt b/Documentation/vm/userfaultfd.txt
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..70a3c94d1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/vm/userfaultfd.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,144 @@
+= Userfaultfd =
+
+== Objective ==
+
+Userfaults allow the implementation of on-demand paging from userland
+and more generally they allow userland to take control of various
+memory page faults, something otherwise only the kernel code could do.
+
+For example userfaults allows a proper and more optimal implementation
+of the PROT_NONE+SIGSEGV trick.
+
+== Design ==
+
+Userfaults are delivered and resolved through the userfaultfd syscall.
+
+The userfaultfd (aside from registering and unregistering virtual
+memory ranges) provides two primary functionalities:
+
+1) read/POLLIN protocol to notify a userland thread of the faults
+ happening
+
+2) various UFFDIO_* ioctls that can manage the virtual memory regions
+ registered in the userfaultfd that allows userland to efficiently
+ resolve the userfaults it receives via 1) or to manage the virtual
+ memory in the background
+
+The real advantage of userfaults if compared to regular virtual memory
+management of mremap/mprotect is that the userfaults in all their
+operations never involve heavyweight structures like vmas (in fact the
+userfaultfd runtime load never takes the mmap_sem for writing).
+
+Vmas are not suitable for page- (or hugepage) granular fault tracking
+when dealing with virtual address spaces that could span
+Terabytes. Too many vmas would be needed for that.
+
+The userfaultfd once opened by invoking the syscall, can also be
+passed using unix domain sockets to a manager process, so the same
+manager process could handle the userfaults of a multitude of
+different processes without them being aware about what is going on
+(well of course unless they later try to use the userfaultfd
+themselves on the same region the manager is already tracking, which
+is a corner case that would currently return -EBUSY).
+
+== API ==
+
+When first opened the userfaultfd must be enabled invoking the
+UFFDIO_API ioctl specifying a uffdio_api.api value set to UFFD_API (or
+a later API version) which will specify the read/POLLIN protocol
+userland intends to speak on the UFFD and the uffdio_api.features
+userland requires. The UFFDIO_API ioctl if successful (i.e. if the
+requested uffdio_api.api is spoken also by the running kernel and the
+requested features are going to be enabled) will return into
+uffdio_api.features and uffdio_api.ioctls two 64bit bitmasks of
+respectively all the available features of the read(2) protocol and
+the generic ioctl available.
+
+Once the userfaultfd has been enabled the UFFDIO_REGISTER ioctl should
+be invoked (if present in the returned uffdio_api.ioctls bitmask) to
+register a memory range in the userfaultfd by setting the
+uffdio_register structure accordingly. The uffdio_register.mode
+bitmask will specify to the kernel which kind of faults to track for
+the range (UFFDIO_REGISTER_MODE_MISSING would track missing
+pages). The UFFDIO_REGISTER ioctl will return the
+uffdio_register.ioctls bitmask of ioctls that are suitable to resolve
+userfaults on the range registered. Not all ioctls will necessarily be
+supported for all memory types depending on the underlying virtual
+memory backend (anonymous memory vs tmpfs vs real filebacked
+mappings).
+
+Userland can use the uffdio_register.ioctls to manage the virtual
+address space in the background (to add or potentially also remove
+memory from the userfaultfd registered range). This means a userfault
+could be triggering just before userland maps in the background the
+user-faulted page.
+
+The primary ioctl to resolve userfaults is UFFDIO_COPY. That
+atomically copies a page into the userfault registered range and wakes
+up the blocked userfaults (unless uffdio_copy.mode &
+UFFDIO_COPY_MODE_DONTWAKE is set). Other ioctl works similarly to
+UFFDIO_COPY. They're atomic as in guaranteeing that nothing can see an
+half copied page since it'll keep userfaulting until the copy has
+finished.
+
+== QEMU/KVM ==
+
+QEMU/KVM is using the userfaultfd syscall to implement postcopy live
+migration. Postcopy live migration is one form of memory
+externalization consisting of a virtual machine running with part or
+all of its memory residing on a different node in the cloud. The
+userfaultfd abstraction is generic enough that not a single line of
+KVM kernel code had to be modified in order to add postcopy live
+migration to QEMU.
+
+Guest async page faults, FOLL_NOWAIT and all other GUP features work
+just fine in combination with userfaults. Userfaults trigger async
+page faults in the guest scheduler so those guest processes that
+aren't waiting for userfaults (i.e. network bound) can keep running in
+the guest vcpus.
+
+It is generally beneficial to run one pass of precopy live migration
+just before starting postcopy live migration, in order to avoid
+generating userfaults for readonly guest regions.
+
+The implementation of postcopy live migration currently uses one
+single bidirectional socket but in the future two different sockets
+will be used (to reduce the latency of the userfaults to the minimum
+possible without having to decrease /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_wmem).
+
+The QEMU in the source node writes all pages that it knows are missing
+in the destination node, into the socket, and the migration thread of
+the QEMU running in the destination node runs UFFDIO_COPY|ZEROPAGE
+ioctls on the userfaultfd in order to map the received pages into the
+guest (UFFDIO_ZEROCOPY is used if the source page was a zero page).
+
+A different postcopy thread in the destination node listens with
+poll() to the userfaultfd in parallel. When a POLLIN event is
+generated after a userfault triggers, the postcopy thread read() from
+the userfaultfd and receives the fault address (or -EAGAIN in case the
+userfault was already resolved and waken by a UFFDIO_COPY|ZEROPAGE run
+by the parallel QEMU migration thread).
+
+After the QEMU postcopy thread (running in the destination node) gets
+the userfault address it writes the information about the missing page
+into the socket. The QEMU source node receives the information and
+roughly "seeks" to that page address and continues sending all
+remaining missing pages from that new page offset. Soon after that
+(just the time to flush the tcp_wmem queue through the network) the
+migration thread in the QEMU running in the destination node will
+receive the page that triggered the userfault and it'll map it as
+usual with the UFFDIO_COPY|ZEROPAGE (without actually knowing if it
+was spontaneously sent by the source or if it was an urgent page
+requested through an userfault).
+
+By the time the userfaults start, the QEMU in the destination node
+doesn't need to keep any per-page state bitmap relative to the live
+migration around and a single per-page bitmap has to be maintained in
+the QEMU running in the source node to know which pages are still
+missing in the destination node. The bitmap in the source node is
+checked to find which missing pages to send in round robin and we seek
+over it when receiving incoming userfaults. After sending each page of
+course the bitmap is updated accordingly. It's also useful to avoid
+sending the same page twice (in case the userfault is read by the
+postcopy thread just before UFFDIO_COPY|ZEROPAGE runs in the migration
+thread).
diff --git a/Documentation/vm/zswap.txt b/Documentation/vm/zswap.txt
index 8458c0861..89fff7d61 100644
--- a/Documentation/vm/zswap.txt
+++ b/Documentation/vm/zswap.txt
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ can also be enabled and disabled at runtime using the sysfs interface.
An example command to enable zswap at runtime, assuming sysfs is mounted
at /sys, is:
-echo 1 > /sys/modules/zswap/parameters/enabled
+echo 1 > /sys/module/zswap/parameters/enabled
When zswap is disabled at runtime it will stop storing pages that are
being swapped out. However, it will _not_ immediately write out or fault
@@ -49,14 +49,26 @@ Zswap receives pages for compression through the Frontswap API and is able to
evict pages from its own compressed pool on an LRU basis and write them back to
the backing swap device in the case that the compressed pool is full.
-Zswap makes use of zbud for the managing the compressed memory pool. Each
-allocation in zbud is not directly accessible by address. Rather, a handle is
+Zswap makes use of zpool for the managing the compressed memory pool. Each
+allocation in zpool is not directly accessible by address. Rather, a handle is
returned by the allocation routine and that handle must be mapped before being
accessed. The compressed memory pool grows on demand and shrinks as compressed
-pages are freed. The pool is not preallocated.
+pages are freed. The pool is not preallocated. By default, a zpool of type
+zbud is created, but it can be selected at boot time by setting the "zpool"
+attribute, e.g. zswap.zpool=zbud. It can also be changed at runtime using the
+sysfs "zpool" attribute, e.g.
+
+echo zbud > /sys/module/zswap/parameters/zpool
+
+The zbud type zpool allocates exactly 1 page to store 2 compressed pages, which
+means the compression ratio will always be 2:1 or worse (because of half-full
+zbud pages). The zsmalloc type zpool has a more complex compressed page
+storage method, and it can achieve greater storage densities. However,
+zsmalloc does not implement compressed page eviction, so once zswap fills it
+cannot evict the oldest page, it can only reject new pages.
When a swap page is passed from frontswap to zswap, zswap maintains a mapping
-of the swap entry, a combination of the swap type and swap offset, to the zbud
+of the swap entry, a combination of the swap type and swap offset, to the zpool
handle that references that compressed swap page. This mapping is achieved
with a red-black tree per swap type. The swap offset is the search key for the
tree nodes.
@@ -74,9 +86,17 @@ controlled policy:
* max_pool_percent - The maximum percentage of memory that the compressed
pool can occupy.
-Zswap allows the compressor to be selected at kernel boot time by setting the
-“compressor” attribute. The default compressor is lzo. e.g.
-zswap.compressor=deflate
+The default compressor is lzo, but it can be selected at boot time by setting
+the “compressor” attribute, e.g. zswap.compressor=lzo. It can also be changed
+at runtime using the sysfs "compressor" attribute, e.g.
+
+echo lzo > /sys/module/zswap/parameters/compressor
+
+When the zpool and/or compressor parameter is changed at runtime, any existing
+compressed pages are not modified; they are left in their own zpool. When a
+request is made for a page in an old zpool, it is uncompressed using its
+original compressor. Once all pages are removed from an old zpool, the zpool
+and its compressor are freed.
A debugfs interface is provided for various statistic about pool size, number
of pages stored, and various counters for the reasons pages are rejected.