[RESEND PATCH V2 0/3] Allow user to request memory to be locked on page fault

Eric B Munson emunson at akamai.com
Tue Jun 16 00:39:34 AEST 2015


On Thu, 11 Jun 2015, Andrew Morton wrote:

> On Thu, 11 Jun 2015 15:21:30 -0400 Eric B Munson <emunson at akamai.com> wrote:
> 
> > > Ditto mlockall(MCL_ONFAULT) followed by munlock().  I'm not sure
> > > that even makes sense but the behaviour should be understood and
> > > tested.
> >
> > I have extended the kselftest for lock-on-fault to try both of these
> > scenarios and they work as expected.  The VMA is split and the VM
> > flags are set appropriately for the resulting VMAs.
> 
> munlock() should do vma merging as well.  I *think* we implemented
> that.  More tests for you to add ;)
> 
> How are you testing the vma merging and splitting, btw?  Parsing
> the profcs files?

The lock-on-fault test now covers VMA splitting and merging by parsing
/proc/self/maps.  VMA splitting and merging works as it should with both
MAP_LOCKONFAULT and MCL_ONFAULT.

> 
> > > What's missing here is a syscall to set VM_LOCKONFAULT on an
> > > arbitrary range of memory - mlock() for lock-on-fault.  It's a
> > > shame that mlock() didn't take a `mode' argument.  Perhaps we
> > > should add such a syscall - that would make the mmap flag unneeded
> > > but I suppose it should be kept for symmetry.
> > 
> > Do you want such a system call as part of this set?  I would need some
> > time to make sure I had thought through all the possible corners one
> > could get into with such a call, so it would delay a V3 quite a bit.
> > Otherwise I can send a V3 out immediately.
> 
> I think the way to look at this is to pretend that mm/mlock.c doesn't
> exist and ask "how should we design these features".
> 
> And that would be:
> 
> - mmap() takes a `flags' argument: MAP_LOCKED|MAP_LOCKONFAULT.
> 
> - mlock() takes a `flags' argument.  Presently that's
>   MLOCK_LOCKED|MLOCK_LOCKONFAULT.
> 
> - munlock() takes a `flags' arument.  MLOCK_LOCKED|MLOCK_LOCKONFAULT
>   to specify which flags are being cleared.
> 
> - mlockall() and munlockall() ditto.
> 
> 
> IOW, LOCKED and LOCKEDONFAULT are treated identically and independently.
> 
> Now, that's how we would have designed all this on day one.  And I
> think we can do this now, by adding new mlock2() and munlock2()
> syscalls.  And we may as well deprecate the old mlock() and munlock(),
> not that this matters much.
> 
> *should* we do this?  I'm thinking "yes" - it's all pretty simple
> boilerplate and wrappers and such, and it gets the interface correct,
> and extensible.
> 
> What do others think?

I am working on V3 which will introduce the new system calls.
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