Re: [PATCH] x86/mm/init: respect memblock reserved regions when destroyingmappings

From: Jeremy Fitzhardinge
Date: Fri Feb 04 2011 - 20:19:05 EST


On 02/04/2011 03:35 AM, Stefano Stabellini wrote:
> On Thu, 3 Feb 2011, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
>> On 02/03/2011 03:25 AM, Stefano Stabellini wrote:
>>>> How on Earth would you end up with a reserved region *inside the BRK*?
>>> I think in practice you cannot, but you can have reserved regions at
>>> _end, that is the main problem I am trying to solve.
>>> If we have a reserved region at _end and _end is not PMD aligned, then
>>> we have a problem.
>>>
>>> I thought that checking for reserved regions before destroying the
>>> mapping would be a decent solution (because it wouldn't affect the
>>> normal case); so I ended up checking between _brk_end and _end too.
>>>
>>> Other alternative solutions I thought about but that I discarded because
>>> they also affect the normal case are:
>>>
>>> - never destroy mappings that could go over _end;
>>> - always PMD align _end.
>>>
>>> If none of the above are acceptable, I welcome other suggestions :-)
>>>
>> Sounds like the code does the right thing, but the description needs to
>> be improved.
>>
> I tried to improve both the commit message and the comments within the
> code, this is the result:
>
>
> commit d0136be7b48953f27202dbde285a7379d06cfe98
> Author: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Date: Tue Jan 25 12:05:11 2011 +0000
>
> x86/mm/init: respect memblock reserved regions when destroying mappings
>
> In init_memory_mapping we destroy the mappings between _brk_end and
> _end, but if _end is not PMD aligned we also destroy mappings for
> potentially reserved regions between _end and the following PMD.
>
> In order to avoid this problem, before clearing any PMDs we check if the
> corresponding memory area has been reserved and we only destroy the
> mapping if hasn't.
>
> We found this issue because under Xen we have a valid mapping at _end,
> and if _end is not PMD aligned the current code destroys the initial
> part of it.

This description makes more sense, even if the code does exactly the
same thing.

>
> In practice this fix does not have any impact on native.
>
> Signed-off-by: Stefano Stabellini <stefano.stabellini@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>
> diff --git a/arch/x86/mm/init.c b/arch/x86/mm/init.c
> index 947f42a..65c34f4 100644
> --- a/arch/x86/mm/init.c
> +++ b/arch/x86/mm/init.c
> @@ -283,6 +283,8 @@ unsigned long __init_refok init_memory_mapping(unsigned long start,
> if (!after_bootmem && !start) {
> pud_t *pud;
> pmd_t *pmd;
> + unsigned long addr;
> + u64 size, memblock_addr;
>
> mmu_cr4_features = read_cr4();
>
> @@ -291,11 +293,22 @@ unsigned long __init_refok init_memory_mapping(unsigned long start,
> * located on different 2M pages. cleanup_highmap(), however,
> * can only consider _end when it runs, so destroy any
> * mappings beyond _brk_end here.
> + *
> + * If _end is not PMD aligned, we also destroy the mapping of
> + * the memory area between _end the next PMD, so before clearing
> + * the PMD we make sure that the corresponding memory region has
> + * not been reserved.
> */
> pud = pud_offset(pgd_offset_k(_brk_end), _brk_end);
> pmd = pmd_offset(pud, _brk_end - 1);
> - while (++pmd <= pmd_offset(pud, (unsigned long)_end - 1))
> - pmd_clear(pmd);
> + addr = (_brk_end + PMD_SIZE - 1) & PMD_MASK;

I guess its OK if this is >_end, because the pmd offset will be greater
than _end's. But is there an edge condition if the pmd_offset goes off
the end of the pud, and pud page itself happens to be at the end of the
address space and it wraps?

> + while (++pmd <= pmd_offset(pud, (unsigned long)_end - 1)) {
Could _end be in a different pud from _brk_end? Could this walk off the
pud page?

Or is it moot, and there's a guarantee that the whole space is mapped
out of the same pud page? I guess the original code has the same
concern, so this patch leaves the status quo unchanged.

J


> + memblock_addr = memblock_x86_find_in_range_size(__pa(addr),
> + &size, PMD_SIZE);
> + if (memblock_addr == (u64) __pa(addr) && size >= PMD_SIZE)
> + pmd_clear(pmd);
> + addr += PMD_SIZE;
> + }
> }
> #endif
> __flush_tlb_all();

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