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authorRalph Campbell <rcampbell@nvidia.com>2020-09-09 14:29:56 -0700
committerJonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>2020-09-16 12:19:51 -0600
commitf7ebd9ed7767e01db75fe313b78cd3882ab655e3 (patch)
treea0c69997041b6e6c3dab48fd71b8bfbfc1ff072e /Documentation/vm
parentdocs: stable-ABI: Document /sys/kernel/notes (diff)
downloadlinux-dev-f7ebd9ed7767e01db75fe313b78cd3882ab655e3.tar.xz
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mm/doc: add usage description for migrate_vma_*()
The migrate_vma_setup(), migrate_vma_pages(), and migrate_vma_finalize() API usage by device drivers is not well documented. Add a description for how device drivers are expected to use it. Signed-off-by: Ralph Campbell <rcampbell@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Alistair Popple <apopple@nvidia.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20200909212956.20104-1-rcampbell@nvidia.com Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/vm')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/vm/hmm.rst137
1 files changed, 133 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/vm/hmm.rst b/Documentation/vm/hmm.rst
index 7453acc1ea4f..dd9f76a4ef29 100644
--- a/Documentation/vm/hmm.rst
+++ b/Documentation/vm/hmm.rst
@@ -271,10 +271,139 @@ map those pages from the CPU side.
Migration to and from device memory
===================================
-Because the CPU cannot access device memory, migration must use the device DMA
-engine to perform copy from and to device memory. For this we need to use
-migrate_vma_setup(), migrate_vma_pages(), and migrate_vma_finalize() helpers.
-
+Because the CPU cannot access device memory directly, the device driver must
+use hardware DMA or device specific load/store instructions to migrate data.
+The migrate_vma_setup(), migrate_vma_pages(), and migrate_vma_finalize()
+functions are designed to make drivers easier to write and to centralize common
+code across drivers.
+
+Before migrating pages to device private memory, special device private
+``struct page`` need to be created. These will be used as special "swap"
+page table entries so that a CPU process will fault if it tries to access
+a page that has been migrated to device private memory.
+
+These can be allocated and freed with::
+
+ struct resource *res;
+ struct dev_pagemap pagemap;
+
+ res = request_free_mem_region(&iomem_resource, /* number of bytes */,
+ "name of driver resource");
+ pagemap.type = MEMORY_DEVICE_PRIVATE;
+ pagemap.range.start = res->start;
+ pagemap.range.end = res->end;
+ pagemap.nr_range = 1;
+ pagemap.ops = &device_devmem_ops;
+ memremap_pages(&pagemap, numa_node_id());
+
+ memunmap_pages(&pagemap);
+ release_mem_region(pagemap.range.start, range_len(&pagemap.range));
+
+There are also devm_request_free_mem_region(), devm_memremap_pages(),
+devm_memunmap_pages(), and devm_release_mem_region() when the resources can
+be tied to a ``struct device``.
+
+The overall migration steps are similar to migrating NUMA pages within system
+memory (see :ref:`Page migration <page_migration>`) but the steps are split
+between device driver specific code and shared common code:
+
+1. ``mmap_read_lock()``
+
+ The device driver has to pass a ``struct vm_area_struct`` to
+ migrate_vma_setup() so the mmap_read_lock() or mmap_write_lock() needs to
+ be held for the duration of the migration.
+
+2. ``migrate_vma_setup(struct migrate_vma *args)``
+
+ The device driver initializes the ``struct migrate_vma`` fields and passes
+ the pointer to migrate_vma_setup(). The ``args->flags`` field is used to
+ filter which source pages should be migrated. For example, setting
+ ``MIGRATE_VMA_SELECT_SYSTEM`` will only migrate system memory and
+ ``MIGRATE_VMA_SELECT_DEVICE_PRIVATE`` will only migrate pages residing in
+ device private memory. If the latter flag is set, the ``args->pgmap_owner``
+ field is used to identify device private pages owned by the driver. This
+ avoids trying to migrate device private pages residing in other devices.
+ Currently only anonymous private VMA ranges can be migrated to or from
+ system memory and device private memory.
+
+ One of the first steps migrate_vma_setup() does is to invalidate other
+ device's MMUs with the ``mmu_notifier_invalidate_range_start(()`` and
+ ``mmu_notifier_invalidate_range_end()`` calls around the page table
+ walks to fill in the ``args->src`` array with PFNs to be migrated.
+ The ``invalidate_range_start()`` callback is passed a
+ ``struct mmu_notifier_range`` with the ``event`` field set to
+ ``MMU_NOTIFY_MIGRATE`` and the ``migrate_pgmap_owner`` field set to
+ the ``args->pgmap_owner`` field passed to migrate_vma_setup(). This is
+ allows the device driver to skip the invalidation callback and only
+ invalidate device private MMU mappings that are actually migrating.
+ This is explained more in the next section.
+
+ While walking the page tables, a ``pte_none()`` or ``is_zero_pfn()``
+ entry results in a valid "zero" PFN stored in the ``args->src`` array.
+ This lets the driver allocate device private memory and clear it instead
+ of copying a page of zeros. Valid PTE entries to system memory or
+ device private struct pages will be locked with ``lock_page()``, isolated
+ from the LRU (if system memory since device private pages are not on
+ the LRU), unmapped from the process, and a special migration PTE is
+ inserted in place of the original PTE.
+ migrate_vma_setup() also clears the ``args->dst`` array.
+
+3. The device driver allocates destination pages and copies source pages to
+ destination pages.
+
+ The driver checks each ``src`` entry to see if the ``MIGRATE_PFN_MIGRATE``
+ bit is set and skips entries that are not migrating. The device driver
+ can also choose to skip migrating a page by not filling in the ``dst``
+ array for that page.
+
+ The driver then allocates either a device private struct page or a
+ system memory page, locks the page with ``lock_page()``, and fills in the
+ ``dst`` array entry with::
+
+ dst[i] = migrate_pfn(page_to_pfn(dpage)) | MIGRATE_PFN_LOCKED;
+
+ Now that the driver knows that this page is being migrated, it can
+ invalidate device private MMU mappings and copy device private memory
+ to system memory or another device private page. The core Linux kernel
+ handles CPU page table invalidations so the device driver only has to
+ invalidate its own MMU mappings.
+
+ The driver can use ``migrate_pfn_to_page(src[i])`` to get the
+ ``struct page`` of the source and either copy the source page to the
+ destination or clear the destination device private memory if the pointer
+ is ``NULL`` meaning the source page was not populated in system memory.
+
+4. ``migrate_vma_pages()``
+
+ This step is where the migration is actually "committed".
+
+ If the source page was a ``pte_none()`` or ``is_zero_pfn()`` page, this
+ is where the newly allocated page is inserted into the CPU's page table.
+ This can fail if a CPU thread faults on the same page. However, the page
+ table is locked and only one of the new pages will be inserted.
+ The device driver will see that the ``MIGRATE_PFN_MIGRATE`` bit is cleared
+ if it loses the race.
+
+ If the source page was locked, isolated, etc. the source ``struct page``
+ information is now copied to destination ``struct page`` finalizing the
+ migration on the CPU side.
+
+5. Device driver updates device MMU page tables for pages still migrating,
+ rolling back pages not migrating.
+
+ If the ``src`` entry still has ``MIGRATE_PFN_MIGRATE`` bit set, the device
+ driver can update the device MMU and set the write enable bit if the
+ ``MIGRATE_PFN_WRITE`` bit is set.
+
+6. ``migrate_vma_finalize()``
+
+ This step replaces the special migration page table entry with the new
+ page's page table entry and releases the reference to the source and
+ destination ``struct page``.
+
+7. ``mmap_read_unlock()``
+
+ The lock can now be released.
Memory cgroup (memcg) and rss accounting
========================================