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-.. _transhuge:
-
-============================
-Transparent Hugepage Support
-============================
-
-This document describes design principles for Transparent Hugepage (THP)
-support and its interaction with other parts of the memory management
-system.
-
-Design principles
-=================
-
-- "graceful fallback": mm components which don't have transparent hugepage
- knowledge fall back to breaking huge pmd mapping into table of ptes and,
- if necessary, split a transparent hugepage. Therefore these components
- can continue working on the regular pages or regular pte mappings.
-
-- if a hugepage allocation fails because of memory fragmentation,
- regular pages should be gracefully allocated instead and mixed in
- the same vma without any failure or significant delay and without
- userland noticing
-
-- if some task quits and more hugepages become available (either
- immediately in the buddy or through the VM), guest physical memory
- backed by regular pages should be relocated on hugepages
- automatically (with khugepaged)
-
-- it doesn't require memory reservation and in turn it uses hugepages
- whenever possible (the only possible reservation here is kernelcore=
- to avoid unmovable pages to fragment all the memory but such a tweak
- is not specific to transparent hugepage support and it's a generic
- feature that applies to all dynamic high order allocations in the
- kernel)
-
-get_user_pages and follow_page
-==============================
-
-get_user_pages and follow_page if run on a hugepage, will return the
-head or tail pages as usual (exactly as they would do on
-hugetlbfs). Most GUP users will only care about the actual physical
-address of the page and its temporary pinning to release after the I/O
-is complete, so they won't ever notice the fact the page is huge. But
-if any driver is going to mangle over the page structure of the tail
-page (like for checking page->mapping or other bits that are relevant
-for the head page and not the tail page), it should be updated to jump
-to check head page instead. Taking a reference on any head/tail page would
-prevent the page from being split by anyone.
-
-.. note::
- these aren't new constraints to the GUP API, and they match the
- same constraints that apply to hugetlbfs too, so any driver capable
- of handling GUP on hugetlbfs will also work fine on transparent
- hugepage backed mappings.
-
-Graceful fallback
-=================
-
-Code walking pagetables but unaware about huge pmds can simply call
-split_huge_pmd(vma, pmd, addr) where the pmd is the one returned by
-pmd_offset. It's trivial to make the code transparent hugepage aware
-by just grepping for "pmd_offset" and adding split_huge_pmd where
-missing after pmd_offset returns the pmd. Thanks to the graceful
-fallback design, with a one liner change, you can avoid to write
-hundreds if not thousands of lines of complex code to make your code
-hugepage aware.
-
-If you're not walking pagetables but you run into a physical hugepage
-that you can't handle natively in your code, you can split it by
-calling split_huge_page(page). This is what the Linux VM does before
-it tries to swapout the hugepage for example. split_huge_page() can fail
-if the page is pinned and you must handle this correctly.
-
-Example to make mremap.c transparent hugepage aware with a one liner
-change::
-
- diff --git a/mm/mremap.c b/mm/mremap.c
- --- a/mm/mremap.c
- +++ b/mm/mremap.c
- @@ -41,6 +41,7 @@ static pmd_t *get_old_pmd(struct mm_stru
- return NULL;
-
- pmd = pmd_offset(pud, addr);
- + split_huge_pmd(vma, pmd, addr);
- if (pmd_none_or_clear_bad(pmd))
- return NULL;
-
-Locking in hugepage aware code
-==============================
-
-We want as much code as possible hugepage aware, as calling
-split_huge_page() or split_huge_pmd() has a cost.
-
-To make pagetable walks huge pmd aware, all you need to do is to call
-pmd_trans_huge() on the pmd returned by pmd_offset. You must hold the
-mmap_lock in read (or write) mode to be sure a huge pmd cannot be
-created from under you by khugepaged (khugepaged collapse_huge_page
-takes the mmap_lock in write mode in addition to the anon_vma lock). If
-pmd_trans_huge returns false, you just fallback in the old code
-paths. If instead pmd_trans_huge returns true, you have to take the
-page table lock (pmd_lock()) and re-run pmd_trans_huge. Taking the
-page table lock will prevent the huge pmd being converted into a
-regular pmd from under you (split_huge_pmd can run in parallel to the
-pagetable walk). If the second pmd_trans_huge returns false, you
-should just drop the page table lock and fallback to the old code as
-before. Otherwise, you can proceed to process the huge pmd and the
-hugepage natively. Once finished, you can drop the page table lock.
-
-Refcounts and transparent huge pages
-====================================
-
-Refcounting on THP is mostly consistent with refcounting on other compound
-pages:
-
- - get_page()/put_page() and GUP operate on head page's ->_refcount.
-
- - ->_refcount in tail pages is always zero: get_page_unless_zero() never
- succeeds on tail pages.
-
- - map/unmap of the pages with PTE entry increment/decrement ->_mapcount
- on relevant sub-page of the compound page.
-
- - map/unmap of the whole compound page is accounted for in compound_mapcount
- (stored in first tail page). For file huge pages, we also increment
- ->_mapcount of all sub-pages in order to have race-free detection of
- last unmap of subpages.
-
-PageDoubleMap() indicates that the page is *possibly* mapped with PTEs.
-
-For anonymous pages, PageDoubleMap() also indicates ->_mapcount in all
-subpages is offset up by one. This additional reference is required to
-get race-free detection of unmap of subpages when we have them mapped with
-both PMDs and PTEs.
-
-This optimization is required to lower the overhead of per-subpage mapcount
-tracking. The alternative is to alter ->_mapcount in all subpages on each
-map/unmap of the whole compound page.
-
-For anonymous pages, we set PG_double_map when a PMD of the page is split
-for the first time, but still have a PMD mapping. The additional references
-go away with the last compound_mapcount.
-
-File pages get PG_double_map set on the first map of the page with PTE and
-goes away when the page gets evicted from the page cache.
-
-split_huge_page internally has to distribute the refcounts in the head
-page to the tail pages before clearing all PG_head/tail bits from the page
-structures. It can be done easily for refcounts taken by page table
-entries, but we don't have enough information on how to distribute any
-additional pins (i.e. from get_user_pages). split_huge_page() fails any
-requests to split pinned huge pages: it expects page count to be equal to
-the sum of mapcount of all sub-pages plus one (split_huge_page caller must
-have a reference to the head page).
-
-split_huge_page uses migration entries to stabilize page->_refcount and
-page->_mapcount of anonymous pages. File pages just get unmapped.
-
-We are safe against physical memory scanners too: the only legitimate way
-a scanner can get a reference to a page is get_page_unless_zero().
-
-All tail pages have zero ->_refcount until atomic_add(). This prevents the
-scanner from getting a reference to the tail page up to that point. After the
-atomic_add() we don't care about the ->_refcount value. We already know how
-many references should be uncharged from the head page.
-
-For head page get_page_unless_zero() will succeed and we don't mind. It's
-clear where references should go after split: it will stay on the head page.
-
-Note that split_huge_pmd() doesn't have any limitations on refcounting:
-pmd can be split at any point and never fails.
-
-Partial unmap and deferred_split_huge_page()
-============================================
-
-Unmapping part of THP (with munmap() or other way) is not going to free
-memory immediately. Instead, we detect that a subpage of THP is not in use
-in page_remove_rmap() and queue the THP for splitting if memory pressure
-comes. Splitting will free up unused subpages.
-
-Splitting the page right away is not an option due to locking context in
-the place where we can detect partial unmap. It also might be
-counterproductive since in many cases partial unmap happens during exit(2) if
-a THP crosses a VMA boundary.
-
-The function deferred_split_huge_page() is used to queue a page for splitting.
-The splitting itself will happen when we get memory pressure via shrinker
-interface.