[PATCH v1 5/7] s390/pgtable: support __HAVE_ARCH_PTE_SWP_EXCLUSIVE
David Hildenbrand
david at redhat.com
Wed Mar 16 04:14:04 AEDT 2022
On 15.03.22 18:12, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> On 15.03.22 17:58, David Hildenbrand wrote:
>>
>>>> This would mean that it is not OK to have bit 52 not zero for swap PTEs.
>>>> But if I read the POP correctly, all bits except for the DAT-protection
>>>> would be ignored for invalid PTEs, so maybe this comment needs some update
>>>> (for both bits 52 and also 55).
>>>>
>>>> Heiko might also have some more insight.
>>>
>>> Indeed, I wonder why we should get a specification exception when the
>>> PTE is invalid. I'll dig a bit into the PoP.
>>
>> SA22-7832-12 6-46 ("Translation-Specification Exception") is clearer
>>
>> "The page-table entry used for the translation is
>> valid, and bit position 52 does not contain zero."
>>
>> "The page-table entry used for the translation is
>> valid, EDAT-1 does not apply, the instruction-exe-
>> cution-protection facility is not installed, and bit
>> position 55 does not contain zero. It is model
>> dependent whether this condition is recognized."
>>
>
> I wonder if the following matches reality:
>
> diff --git a/arch/s390/include/asm/pgtable.h b/arch/s390/include/asm/pgtable.h
> index 008a6c856fa4..6a227a8c3712 100644
> --- a/arch/s390/include/asm/pgtable.h
> +++ b/arch/s390/include/asm/pgtable.h
> @@ -1669,18 +1669,16 @@ static inline int has_transparent_hugepage(void)
> /*
> * 64 bit swap entry format:
> * A page-table entry has some bits we have to treat in a special way.
> - * Bits 52 and bit 55 have to be zero, otherwise a specification
> - * exception will occur instead of a page translation exception. The
> - * specification exception has the bad habit not to store necessary
> - * information in the lowcore.
> * Bits 54 and 63 are used to indicate the page type.
> * A swap pte is indicated by bit pattern (pte & 0x201) == 0x200
> - * This leaves the bits 0-51 and bits 56-62 to store type and offset.
> - * We use the 5 bits from 57-61 for the type and the 52 bits from 0-51
> - * for the offset.
> - * | offset |01100|type |00|
> + * | offset |XX1XX|type |S0|
> * |0000000000111111111122222222223333333333444444444455|55555|55566|66|
> * |0123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901|23456|78901|23|
> + *
> + * Bits 0-51 store the offset.
> + * Bits 57-62 store the type.
^ 57-61, I should stop working for today :)
--
Thanks,
David / dhildenb
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