Re: [PATCH 00/13] KVM: MMU: fast page fault

From: Marcelo Tosatti
Date: Mon Apr 09 2012 - 15:49:53 EST


On Tue, Apr 10, 2012 at 02:13:41AM +0800, Xiao Guangrong wrote:
> On 04/10/2012 01:58 AM, Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
>
> > On Mon, Apr 09, 2012 at 04:12:46PM +0300, Avi Kivity wrote:
> >> On 03/29/2012 11:20 AM, Xiao Guangrong wrote:
> >>> * Idea
> >>> The present bit of page fault error code (EFEC.P) indicates whether the
> >>> page table is populated on all levels, if this bit is set, we can know
> >>> the page fault is caused by the page-protection bits (e.g. W/R bit) or
> >>> the reserved bits.
> >>>
> >>> In KVM, in most cases, all this kind of page fault (EFEC.P = 1) can be
> >>> simply fixed: the page fault caused by reserved bit
> >>> (EFFC.P = 1 && EFEC.RSV = 1) has already been filtered out in fast mmio
> >>> path. What we need do to fix the rest page fault (EFEC.P = 1 && RSV != 1)
> >>> is just increasing the corresponding access on the spte.
> >>>
> >>> This pachset introduces a fast path to fix this kind of page fault: it
> >>> is out of mmu-lock and need not walk host page table to get the mapping
> >>> from gfn to pfn.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>
> >> This patchset is really worrying to me.
> >>
> >> It introduces a lot of concurrency into data structures that were not
> >> designed for it. Even if it is correct, it will be very hard to
> >> convince ourselves that it is correct, and if it isn't, to debug those
> >> subtle bugs. It will also be much harder to maintain the mmu code than
> >> it is now.
> >>
> >> There are a lot of things to check. Just as an example, we need to be
> >> sure that if we use rcu_dereference() twice in the same code path, that
> >> any inconsistencies due to a write in between are benign. Doing that is
> >> a huge task.
> >>
> >> But I appreciate the performance improvement and would like to see a
> >> simpler version make it in. This needs to reduce the amount of data
> >> touched in the fast path so it is easier to validate, and perhaps reduce
> >> the number of cases that the fast path works on.
> >>
> >> I would like to see the fast path as simple as
> >>
> >> rcu_read_lock();
> >>
> >> (lockless shadow walk)
> >> spte = ACCESS_ONCE(*sptep);
> >>
> >> if (!(spte & PT_MAY_ALLOW_WRITES))
> >> goto slow;
> >>
> >> gfn = kvm_mmu_page_get_gfn(sp, sptep - sp->sptes)
> >> mark_page_dirty(kvm, gfn);
> >>
> >> new_spte = spte & ~(PT64_MAY_ALLOW_WRITES | PT_WRITABLE_MASK);
> >> if (cmpxchg(sptep, spte, new_spte) != spte)
> >> goto slow;
> >>
> >> rcu_read_unlock();
> >> return;
> >>
> >> slow:
> >> rcu_read_unlock();
> >> slow_path();
> >>
> >> It now becomes the responsibility of the slow path to maintain *sptep &
> >> PT_MAY_ALLOW_WRITES, but that path has a simpler concurrency model. It
> >> can be as simple as a clear_bit() before we update sp->gfns[] or if we
> >> add host write protection.
> >>
> >> Sorry, it's too complicated for me. Marcelo, what's your take?
> >
> > The improvement is small and limited to special cases (migration should
> > be rare and framebuffer memory accounts for a small percentage of total
> > memory).
> >
> > For one, how can this be safe against mmu notifier methods?
> >
> > KSM |VCPU0 | VCPU1
> > | fault | fault
> > | cow-page |
> > | set spte RW |
> > | |
> > write protect host pte | |
> > grab mmu_lock | |
> > remove writeable bit in spte | |
> > increase mmu_notifier_seq | | spte = read-only spte
> > release mmu_lock | | cmpxchg succeeds, RO->RW!
> >
> > MMU notifiers rely on the fault path sequence being
> >
> > read host pte
> > read mmu_notifier_seq
> > spin_lock(mmu_lock)
> > if (mmu_notifier_seq changed)
> > goodbye, host pte value is stale
> > spin_unlock(mmu_lock)
> >
> > By the example above, you cannot rely on the spte value alone,
> > mmu_notifier_seq must be taken into account.
>
>
> No.
>
> When KSM change the host page to read-only, the HOST_WRITABLE bit
> of spte should be removed, that means, the spte should be changed
> that can be watched by cmpxchg.
>
> Note: we mark spte to be writeable only if spte.HOST_WRITABLE is
> set.

Right.
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