On Tue, Nov 28, 2017 at 11:05 AM, Peter Zijlstra <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 28, 2017 at 10:13:30AM -0800, Dave Hansen wrote:
>> Thanks for looking at this, Peter. I've been resisting doing this for a
>> bit and it's an embarrassingly small amount of code.
>
> Right, well, its not complete yet, and it might be complete crap :-)
>
>> On 11/28/2017 08:39 AM, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
>> > @@ -220,7 +221,21 @@ For 32-bit we have the following conventions - kernel is built with
>> > .macro SWITCH_TO_USER_CR3 scratch_reg:req
>> > STATIC_JUMP_IF_FALSE .Lend_\@, kaiser_enabled_key, def=1
>> > mov %cr3, \scratch_reg
>> > - ADJUST_USER_CR3 \scratch_reg
>> > + push \scratch_reg
>>
>> Do we have a good stack in all the spots that we need to do this? It
>> may have changed with the trampoline stack, but I'm 100% sure that it
>> wasn't so in the recent past.
>
> Dunno really. I figured I'd give it a go and see what happens. So far
> the machine still works. But I was hoping Andy would have an opinion on
> this.
I thought we had a stack in all these places even before the
trampoline. There was an issue with *entry*, but I think exit has
always been okay.
>
>> Let me see if I'm reading the assembly right.
>
> Yep, seems you can read asm :-)
>
>
>> > +DECLARE_PER_CPU(unsigned long, __asid_flush);
>>
>> Could we spare enough space to make this something like
>> user_asid_flush_pending_mask?
>
> Yeah, if I can get it all working we'll bikeshed on a name ;-)
>
>> It took me a minute to realize that it was a mask. Also, since we only
>> have 6 asids, should we bit a bit more stingy with the type?
>
> I picked unsigned long because our bitops (__set_bit in this case, use
> it), and I know we're LE and could simply use a shorter type, but meh.
>
>> It took me a minute to realize that mixing these is still OK, even if
>> the mm associated with the ASID changes. It's because once the ASID is
>> stale, it doesn't matter *why* it is stale. Just that the next guy who
>> *uses* it needs to do the flush. You can do 1,000 tlb flushes, a
>> context switch, a tlb flush and another context switch, but if you only
>> go out to userspace once, you only need 1 ASID flush. That fits
>> perfectly with this bit that gets set a bunch of times and only cleared
>> once at exit to userspace.
>
> Just so.
>
> I'm now staring at the RESTORE_CR3 stuff, and that appears to be called
> in the NMI handling where the stack is not to be used (if I read it
> right), so that's going to be a little more tricky.
I think it should be fine. A very old version of the patches had that
problem, but, in -tip, the nmi RESTORE_CR3 is in the fancy
recursion-protected region, and the stack is okay. The idea is that
we're already on the old (possibly user) CR3 before we do the crazy
recursion-checking bits. But that's fine, since all that's accessed
there is the IST stack, and that's in the cpu_entry_area and thus safe
regardless of CR3.
Side question: on extremely quick read, you're doing bt then btr. Why
not just do a single btr and be done with it? Are you trying to avoid
getting exclusive access to the cacheline when not needed?
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