Le 29/05/2024 à 10:02, Oscar Salvador a écrit :
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>
> On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 03:30:06PM +0200, Christophe Leroy wrote:
>> In order to fit better with standard Linux page tables layout, add
>> support for 8M pages using contiguous PTE entries in a standard
>> page table. Page tables will then be populated with 1024 similar
>> entries and two PMD entries will point to that page table.
>>
>> The PMD entries also get a flag to tell it is addressing an 8M page,
>> this is required for the HW tablewalk assistance.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Christophe Leroy <[email protected]>
>> Reviewed-by: Oscar Salvador <[email protected]>
>> ---
> ...
>> +#define __HAVE_ARCH_HUGE_PTEP_GET
>> +static inline pte_t huge_ptep_get(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, pte_t *ptep)
>> +{
>> + if (ptep_is_8m_pmdp(mm, addr, ptep))
>> + ptep = pte_offset_kernel((pmd_t *)ptep, 0);
>
> Yes, you are right that this should have had the addr aligned down.
>
> I can speak for others, but for me it is more clear to think of it this way:
>
> 1) check if ptep points to the first PMD entry for address
> 2) if it does, we know that the PMD describes a 8MB hugepage
> 3) return the PMD
But it is not exactly the way I see it, maybe I'm wrong but from my
point of view:
1) check if ptep points to the first PMD entry for address
2) if it does, we know that the PMD relates to a 8MB hugepage
3) Return the first PTE in the page table pointed by the said PMD entry.
>
> That is why I thought that directly calling pmd_page_vaddr() gave a more clear
> overview.
>
> Now, feel free to ignore this if you think this is not clear or adds confusion,
> I just wanted to give my insight reflecting on what I considered more
> logical.
For me using pte_offset_kernel() make it more clear that we want a PTE
in a page table, and not some raw information at a given address pointed
to by a huge-PMD.
Am I wrong ?
>
>
> --
> Oscar Salvador
> SUSE Labs