[PATCH V5 0/7] Allow user to request memory to be locked on page fault

Vlastimil Babka vbabka at suse.cz
Tue Jul 28 21:23:29 AEST 2015


On 07/28/2015 01:17 PM, Michal Hocko wrote:
> [I am sorry but I didn't get to this sooner.]
>
> On Mon 27-07-15 10:54:09, Eric B Munson wrote:
>> Now that VM_LOCKONFAULT is a modifier to VM_LOCKED and
>> cannot be specified independentally, it might make more sense to mirror
>> that relationship to userspace.  Which would lead to soemthing like the
>> following:
>
> A modifier makes more sense.
>
>> To lock and populate a region:
>> mlock2(start, len, 0);
>>
>> To lock on fault a region:
>> mlock2(start, len, MLOCK_ONFAULT);
>>
>> If LOCKONFAULT is seen as a modifier to mlock, then having the flags
>> argument as 0 mean do mlock classic makes more sense to me.
>>
>> To mlock current on fault only:
>> mlockall(MCL_CURRENT | MCL_ONFAULT);
>>
>> To mlock future on fault only:
>> mlockall(MCL_FUTURE | MCL_ONFAULT);
>>
>> To lock everything on fault:
>> mlockall(MCL_CURRENT | MCL_FUTURE | MCL_ONFAULT);
>
> Makes sense to me. The only remaining and still tricky part would be
> the munlock{all}(flags) behavior. What should munlock(MLOCK_ONFAULT)
> do? Keep locked and poppulate the range or simply ignore the flag an
> just unlock?

munlock(all) already lost both MLOCK_LOCKED and MLOCK_ONFAULT flags in 
this revision, so I suppose in the next revision it will also not accept 
MLOCK_ONFAULT, and will just munlock whatever was mlocked in either mode.

> I can see some sense to allow munlockall(MCL_FUTURE[|MLOCK_ONFAULT]),
> munlockall(MCL_CURRENT) resp. munlockall(MCL_CURRENT|MCL_FUTURE) but
> other combinations sound weird to me.

The effect of munlockall(MCL_FUTURE|MLOCK_ONFAULT), which you probably 
intended for converting the onfault to full prepopulation for future 
mappings, can be achieved by calling mlockall(MCL_FUTURE) (without 
MLOCK_ONFAULT).

> Anyway munlock with flags opens new doors of trickiness.





More information about the Linuxppc-dev mailing list