[PATCH v4 06/12] mm: introduce generic lazy_mmu helpers
Ryan Roberts
ryan.roberts at arm.com
Tue Nov 25 01:36:32 AEDT 2025
On 24/11/2025 12:47, Kevin Brodsky wrote:
> On 10/11/2025 11:45, Kevin Brodsky wrote:
>>>> diff --git a/arch/arm64/mm/mmu.c b/arch/arm64/mm/mmu.c
>>>> index b8d37eb037fc..d9c8e94f140f 100644
>>>> --- a/arch/arm64/mm/mmu.c
>>>> +++ b/arch/arm64/mm/mmu.c
>>>> @@ -731,7 +731,7 @@ int split_kernel_leaf_mapping(unsigned long start, unsigned long end)
>>>> return -EINVAL;
>>>>
>>>> mutex_lock(&pgtable_split_lock);
>>>> - arch_enter_lazy_mmu_mode();
>>>> + lazy_mmu_mode_enable();
>>>>
>>>> /*
>>>> * The split_kernel_leaf_mapping_locked() may sleep, it is not a
>>> This is a bit unfortunate, IMHO. The rest of this comment explains that although
>>> you're not supposed to sleep inside lazy mmu mode, it's fine for arm64's
>>> implementation. But we are no longer calling arm64's implementation; we are
>>> calling a generic function, which does who knows what.
>>>
>>> I think it all still works, but we are no longer containing our assumptions in
>>> arm64 code. We are relying on implementation details of generic code.
>> I see your point. The change itself is still correct (and required
>> considering patch 8), but maybe the documentation of the generic
>> interface should be clarified to guarantee that the generic layer can
>> itself cope with sleeping - without any guarantee regarding the
>> behaviour of arch_*_lazy_mmu_mode.
>
> Re-reading the existing comment in <linux/pgtable.h>, I think it already
> makes clear that sleeping is not forbidden by design:
>
>> * In the general case, no lock is guaranteed to be held between entry
>> and exit
>> * of the lazy mode. So the implementation must assume preemption may
>> be enabled
>> * and cpu migration is possible; it must take steps to be robust
>> against this.
>
> The arch implementation may disable preemption, but arm64 code can rely
> on the arm64 implementation allowing sleeping.
Yeah ok, I buy that!
>
> - Kevin
>
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