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← Revision 15 as of 2024-11-20 05:30:27 ⇥
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Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
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|| 13-15 || not yet assigned || || | || 13 || Managed || Pointer to struct mgdesc || || 14-15 || not yet assigned || || |
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This looks very similar to today. The only addition is the pfn, which we can use for getting the struct page if needed. | This looks very similar to today. The only addition is the pfn, which we can use for getting the struct page if needed, the pincount and the order. This is 80 bytes, so we get 51 per 4KiB page. |
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=== Managed memory === This is miscellaneous memory which needs a small amount of extra information, eg a list_head. We don't want/need to allocate a separate memdesc type for each of these; it's like a type 0, but with additional metadata. {{{ struct mgdesc { unsigned long flags; unsigned long data[3]; }; }}} The flags will contain an 8-bit field to allow the user to check that this really is their memory. The flags also contain section/node/zone, so users cannot use arbitrary bits in this field (a more full description of how many bits are available in this field will exist at some point). The 3 data fields may be used by the owner without restriction. |
The ultimate goal of the folios project is to turn struct page into:
struct page { u64 memdesc; };
Bits 0-3 of memdesc are a type field that describes what the remaining bits are used for.
type |
Meaning |
Remaining bits |
0 |
Misc |
See below |
1 |
Buddy |
Embedded struct buddy |
2 |
File |
Pointer to struct folio |
3 |
Anon |
Pointer to struct anon_folio |
4 |
KSM |
Pointer to struct ksm (TBD) |
5 |
Slab |
Pointer to struct slab |
6 |
Bump |
Pointer to struct bump (TBD) |
7 |
Movable |
Pointer to struct movable (TBD) |
8 |
Pointer to struct ptdesc |
|
9 |
HWPoison |
Pointer to struct hwpoison (TBD) |
10 |
PerCPU |
Pointer to struct pcpudesc (TBD) |
11 |
Pointer to struct acctmem |
|
12 |
ZPDesc |
Pointer to struct zpdesc |
13 |
Managed |
Pointer to struct mgdesc |
14-15 |
not yet assigned |
|
Misc memory
Type 0 is used for memory which needs no further data associated with it. Bits 4-10 are used as a subtype to determine what the memory is used for:
Subtype |
Meaning |
0 |
|
1 |
A Zero Page (maybe PTE or PMD) |
2 |
Unknown (probably device driver) |
3 |
Vmalloc |
4 |
Guard |
5 |
Offline |
6 |
kmalloc_large (unless acctmem) |
7 |
Exact |
8 |
brd |
9-127 |
not yet assigned |
Bit 11 is set if the page may be mapped to userspace.
Bits 12-17 are used to store the order of the page. The high bits are used to store section/node/zone information, as is done today with the page flags.
XXX: How to indicate that a page was allocated from reserves like pfmemalloc today?
NOTE! There is no refcount for this kind of memory! Nor mapcount! get_page() / put_page() will throw an error for them. You can free the pages, and they will go straight back to the page allocator. If you need a refcount, allocate a folio instead. You can still map them to userspace, but they will be treated like a PFNMAP.
struct buddy
Type 1 is used for pages which are in the MatthewWilcox/BuddyAllocator. This is either one or two words of data which is used to manage the pages (see the link for more detail).
Memdesc pointers
All structs pointed to from a memdesc must be allocated from a slab which has its alignment set to 16 bytes (in order to allow the bottom 4 bits to be used for the type). That implies that they are a multiple of 16 bytes in size. The slab must also have the TYPESAFE_BY_RCU flag set as some page walkers will attempt to look up the memdesc from the page while holding only the RCU read lock.
File and Anon
File and anon memory will both use struct folio (for now?)
struct folio { unsigned long flags; struct list_head lru; struct address_space *mapping; pgoff_t index; void *private; atomic_t _refcount; atomic_t _mapcount; atomic_t pincount; unsigned char order; unsigned long pfn; unsigned long memcg_data; };
This looks very similar to today. The only addition is the pfn, which we can use for getting the struct page if needed, the pincount and the order. This is 80 bytes, so we get 51 per 4KiB page.
KSM
TBD
Slab
There's a minor recursion problem for the slab memdesc. This can be avoided by special-casing the struct slab allocation; any time we need to allocate a new slab for the slab memdesc cache, we _do not_ allocate a struct slab for it; we use the first object in the allocated memory for its own struct slab.
Bump
This was known as page_pool or netpool. Patches for this are forthcoming.
AcctMem
Folios and slabs are also accounted to a memcg, but if your code calls alloc_pages(GFP_KERNEL_ACCOUNT), we will allocate a struct acctmem and return a pointer to the first struct page, just as we do today. Only core code refers to the memcg_data today, so no device driver changes will be needed.
struct acctmem { unsigned long flags; unsigned long memcg_data; };
One of the flags will denote kmalloc_large. Other uses of the flags field will include section/node/zone.
Managed memory
This is miscellaneous memory which needs a small amount of extra information, eg a list_head. We don't want/need to allocate a separate memdesc type for each of these; it's like a type 0, but with additional metadata.
struct mgdesc { unsigned long flags; unsigned long data[3]; };
The flags will contain an 8-bit field to allow the user to check that this really is their memory. The flags also contain section/node/zone, so users cannot use arbitrary bits in this field (a more full description of how many bits are available in this field will exist at some point). The 3 data fields may be used by the owner without restriction.
Allocating memory
Device drivers that do not touch the contents of struct page can continue calling alloc_pages() as they do today. They will get back a struct page pointer which will have subtype "Unknown" but they won't care.
We'll add a new memdesc_alloc_pages() family which allocate the memory and set each page->memdesc to the passed-in memdesc. So each memdesc allocator will first use slab to allocate a memdesc, then allocate the pages that point to that memdesc.
alloc_pages_exact
We'll follow the same approach as today; allocate a buddy of sufficient size, but we'll expose a new primitive buddy_free_tail() which will release the tail pages back to the buddy allocator.
Freeing memory
Folios (file/anon/ksm) have a refcount. These should be freed with folio_put(). Other memdescs may not have a refcount (eg slab).
Misc allocations (type 0) are simply passed back to the page allocator which will turn them into Buddy pages.
Splitting folios
It is going to be stupidly expensive to split an order-9 allocation into 512 order-0 allocations. We'll have to allocate 512 folios. We may want to optimise split_page() to only allocate folios for pages we're not going to immediately free.
Mapping memory into userspace
File, anon memory and KSM memory is rmappable. The rmap does not apply to other kinds of memory (networking, device driver, vmalloc, etc). These kinds of memory should be added to VM_MIXEDMAP or VM_PFNMAP mappings only.
Things to remember
ext4 attaches a buffer_head to memory allocated from slab. virt_to_folio() should probably return NULL in this case?