Re: [RFC PATCH] Update the cachetlb.txt file WRT flush_dcache_pageand update_mmu_cache

From: Catalin Marinas
Date: Mon May 10 2010 - 06:17:38 EST


On Mon, 2010-05-10 at 09:06 +0100, FUJITA Tomonori wrote:
> On Fri, 07 May 2010 14:24:18 +0100
> Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> > @@ -312,15 +324,15 @@ maps this page at its virtual address.
> > This allows these interfaces to be implemented much more
> > efficiently. It allows one to "defer" (perhaps indefinitely)
> > the actual flush if there are currently no user processes
> > - mapping this page. See sparc64's flush_dcache_page and
> > - update_mmu_cache implementations for an example of how to go
> > + mapping this page. See IA-64's flush_dcache_page and
> > + set_pte_at implementations for an example of how to go
> > about doing this.
>
> cachetlb.txt says that flush_dcache_page() is the API to solve the
> D-cache aliasing issue. Using IA64 as an example for the API here
> looks strange since IA64 (PIPT) doesn't have D-cache aliasing
> issue.

Once we fix the ARM implementation, we could use it as an example :). It
has processors with both D-cache aliasing and separate I/D caches.

> I don't think that just replacing sparc64 with IA64 helps much here
> since we still have the problem that the whole cache handling
> (architectures, subsystems, file systems) is inconsistent. I think
> that we need to agree on it first.

Yes, this need to be agreed and hopefully this thread is a starting
point for such discussion.

The main problem I encountered on ARM was I/D cache coherency on a PIPT
processor and IA-64 and PowerPC fixed it by combining
flush_dcache_page() with set_pte_at().

IMHO, the D-cache aliasing isn't that much different from the I/D cache
coherency. We can view the I-cache as yet another alias of the D-cache
which needs explicit flushing. As I said on a few occasions, including
this patch, the flush_dcache_page() isn't always called from PIO
drivers. Adding a PIO API didn't seem very popular as it requires a lot
of drivers to be modified.

In most situations, just doing flushing in set_pte_at() would suffice
and flush_dcache_page() can be ignored. There are two situations where I
still see flush_dcache_page() useful:

1. SMP systems where the cache maintenance operations aren't
automatically broadcast in hardware
2. The kernel modifies a page cache page that is already mapped in
user space

(1) can be worked around on some architectures (though not sure about
all of them).

Is (2) a valid scenario?

--
Catalin

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