Re: ARM pagetable setting in Linux

From: Will Deacon
Date: Wed Jun 26 2013 - 13:17:23 EST


[adding the ARM list -- please try and remember to do that in future]

On Wed, Jun 26, 2013 at 03:41:40AM +0100, Wang, Yalin wrote:
> Hi Will,

Hello,

> I have a question about arm pagetable setting in Linux .
>
> From armV6, there is TTBR0 and TTBR1 translation base address registers in mmu .
> But I found linux only use TTBR0 for translation base address ,
> Could we use TTBR0 and TTBR1 to split user task and kernel pagetables (swapper_pg_dir)ï
>
> But I found this need set TTBCR.N ,
> If PAGE_OFFSET==0xc0000000 , set TTBCR.N=0x2 ,
> Will not work , because only ensure 0--0x00FFFFFF MVA use TTBCR0
> And other MVAãwill use TTBCR1 ,
> But if we set PAGE_OFFSET==0x80000000 (2GB split ) ,
> And set TTBCR.N=0x1 ,
> This will make sure user task MVA use TTBCR0 and kernel MVA
> Use TTBCR1 , this will make some improvement for the system .
>
> 1. Because we donât need copy kernel first âlevel pagetables into every
> User taskâs pagetables and flush tlb (for example fork() a new process).

Well, you still need the TLB maintenance for setting up CoW, so this win is
probably not very big.

> 2. And donât need handle kernel page fault because that user taskâs kernel
> Pagetable when it is not set up , need copy again( for example vmalloc() ioremap() kmap() will change
> Kernel pagetables and need update to every task pagetables ) .

Is that really a fastpath?

> 3. We even can only allocate 8KB first level pagetables for user task to save
> Memorys .

That would be a nice gain, but there are a number of factors here:

1. Pre-ARMv6 only have one ttbr, so you'd end up needing to support
both configurations in the same kernel source.

2. The module area lives below PAGE_OFFSET, so you still have to
deal with that correctly (mitigating some of your earlier points)

3. PAGE_OFFSET is not fixed at 2GB, so you constrain your use-case
even further.

4. We do actually use TTBR1 to hold an identity mapping at the
moment. This could probably be fixed, but would require some
thought.

There's undoubtedly other problems that haven't immediately come to me but,
all in all, I don't think this is a significant enough win to justify the
effort and maintenance headache.

Cheers,

Will
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