Re: [PATCH 0/5] make *_gate_vma accept mm_struct instead of task_struct
H. Peter Anvin
hpa at zytor.com
Fri Mar 11 04:15:56 EST 2011
TIF_IA32 is set during the execution of a 32-bit system call - so touched on each compat system call. Is this the actual flag you want? A 32-bit address space flag is different from TIF_IA32.
--
Sent from my mobile phone. Please pardon any lack of formatting.
Stephen Wilson <wilsons at start.ca> wrote:
On Thu, Mar 10, 2011 at 08:00:32AM -0800, Andi Kleen wrote: > On Tue, Mar 08, 2011 at 07:31:56PM -0500, Stephen Wilson wrote: > > > > Morally, the question of whether an address lies in a gate vma should be asked > > with respect to an mm, not a particular task. > > > > Practically, dropping the dependency on task_struct will help make current and > > future operations on mm's more flexible and convenient. In particular, it > > allows some code paths to avoid the need to hold task_lock. > > > > The only architecture this change impacts in any significant way is x86_64. > > The principle change on that architecture is to mirror TIF_IA32 via > > a new flag in mm_context_t. > > The problem is -- you're adding a likely cache miss on mm_struct for > every 32bit compat syscall now, even if they don't need mm_struct > currently (and a lot of them do not) Unless there's a very good > justification to make up for this performance issue elsewhere > (including numbers) this seems like !
a bad
idea. I do not think this will result in cache misses on the scale you suggest. I am simply mirroring the *state* of the TIF_IA32 flag in mm_struct, not testing/accessing it in the same way. The only place where this flag is accessed (outside the exec() syscall path) is in x86/mm/init_64.c, get_gate_vma(), which in turn is needed by a few, relatively heavy weight, page locking/pinning routines on the mm side (get_user_pages, for example). Patches 3 and 4 in the series show the extent of the change. Or am I missing something? > > /proc/pid/mem. I will be posting the second series to lkml shortly. These > > Making every syscall slower for /proc/pid/mem doesn't seem like a good > tradeoff to me. Please solve this in some other way. > > -Andi -- steve
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