1 /* 2 * Copyright 2013 Red Hat Inc. 3 * 4 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 5 * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 6 * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or 7 * (at your option) any later version. 8 * 9 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 10 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 11 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 12 * GNU General Public License for more details. 13 * 14 * Authors: Jérôme Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com> 15 */ 16 /* 17 * Heterogeneous Memory Management (HMM) 18 * 19 * See Documentation/vm/hmm.rst for reasons and overview of what HMM is and it 20 * is for. Here we focus on the HMM API description, with some explanation of 21 * the underlying implementation. 22 * 23 * Short description: HMM provides a set of helpers to share a virtual address 24 * space between CPU and a device, so that the device can access any valid 25 * address of the process (while still obeying memory protection). HMM also 26 * provides helpers to migrate process memory to device memory, and back. Each 27 * set of functionality (address space mirroring, and migration to and from 28 * device memory) can be used independently of the other. 29 * 30 * 31 * HMM address space mirroring API: 32 * 33 * Use HMM address space mirroring if you want to mirror range of the CPU page 34 * table of a process into a device page table. Here, "mirror" means "keep 35 * synchronized". Prerequisites: the device must provide the ability to write- 36 * protect its page tables (at PAGE_SIZE granularity), and must be able to 37 * recover from the resulting potential page faults. 38 * 39 * HMM guarantees that at any point in time, a given virtual address points to 40 * either the same memory in both CPU and device page tables (that is: CPU and 41 * device page tables each point to the same pages), or that one page table (CPU 42 * or device) points to no entry, while the other still points to the old page 43 * for the address. The latter case happens when the CPU page table update 44 * happens first, and then the update is mirrored over to the device page table. 45 * This does not cause any issue, because the CPU page table cannot start 46 * pointing to a new page until the device page table is invalidated. 47 * 48 * HMM uses mmu_notifiers to monitor the CPU page tables, and forwards any 49 * updates to each device driver that has registered a mirror. It also provides 50 * some API calls to help with taking a snapshot of the CPU page table, and to 51 * synchronize with any updates that might happen concurrently. 52 * 53 * 54 * HMM migration to and from device memory: 55 * 56 * HMM provides a set of helpers to hotplug device memory as ZONE_DEVICE, with 57 * a new MEMORY_DEVICE_PRIVATE type. This provides a struct page for each page 58 * of the device memory, and allows the device driver to manage its memory 59 * using those struct pages. Having struct pages for device memory makes 60 * migration easier. Because that memory is not addressable by the CPU it must 61 * never be pinned to the device; in other words, any CPU page fault can always 62 * cause the device memory to be migrated (copied/moved) back to regular memory. 63 * 64 * A new migrate helper (migrate_vma()) has been added (see mm/migrate.c) that 65 * allows use of a device DMA engine to perform the copy operation between 66 * regular system memory and device memory. 67 */ 68 #ifndef LINUX_HMM_H 69 #define LINUX_HMM_H 70 71 #include <linux/kconfig.h> 72 #include <asm/pgtable.h> 73 74 #if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_HMM) 75 76 #include <linux/device.h> 77 #include <linux/migrate.h> 78 #include <linux/memremap.h> 79 #include <linux/completion.h> 80 81 struct hmm; 82 83 /* 84 * hmm_pfn_flag_e - HMM flag enums 85 * 86 * Flags: 87 * HMM_PFN_VALID: pfn is valid. It has, at least, read permission. 88 * HMM_PFN_WRITE: CPU page table has write permission set 89 * HMM_PFN_DEVICE_PRIVATE: private device memory (ZONE_DEVICE) 90 * 91 * The driver provide a flags array, if driver valid bit for an entry is bit 92 * 3 ie (entry & (1 << 3)) is true if entry is valid then driver must provide 93 * an array in hmm_range.flags with hmm_range.flags[HMM_PFN_VALID] == 1 << 3. 94 * Same logic apply to all flags. This is same idea as vm_page_prot in vma 95 * except that this is per device driver rather than per architecture. 96 */ 97 enum hmm_pfn_flag_e { 98 HMM_PFN_VALID = 0, 99 HMM_PFN_WRITE, 100 HMM_PFN_DEVICE_PRIVATE, 101 HMM_PFN_FLAG_MAX 102 }; 103 104 /* 105 * hmm_pfn_value_e - HMM pfn special value 106 * 107 * Flags: 108 * HMM_PFN_ERROR: corresponding CPU page table entry points to poisoned memory 109 * HMM_PFN_NONE: corresponding CPU page table entry is pte_none() 110 * HMM_PFN_SPECIAL: corresponding CPU page table entry is special; i.e., the 111 * result of vmf_insert_pfn() or vm_insert_page(). Therefore, it should not 112 * be mirrored by a device, because the entry will never have HMM_PFN_VALID 113 * set and the pfn value is undefined. 114 * 115 * Driver provide entry value for none entry, error entry and special entry, 116 * driver can alias (ie use same value for error and special for instance). It 117 * should not alias none and error or special. 118 * 119 * HMM pfn value returned by hmm_vma_get_pfns() or hmm_vma_fault() will be: 120 * hmm_range.values[HMM_PFN_ERROR] if CPU page table entry is poisonous, 121 * hmm_range.values[HMM_PFN_NONE] if there is no CPU page table 122 * hmm_range.values[HMM_PFN_SPECIAL] if CPU page table entry is a special one 123 */ 124 enum hmm_pfn_value_e { 125 HMM_PFN_ERROR, 126 HMM_PFN_NONE, 127 HMM_PFN_SPECIAL, 128 HMM_PFN_VALUE_MAX 129 }; 130 131 /* 132 * struct hmm_range - track invalidation lock on virtual address range 133 * 134 * @vma: the vm area struct for the range 135 * @list: all range lock are on a list 136 * @start: range virtual start address (inclusive) 137 * @end: range virtual end address (exclusive) 138 * @pfns: array of pfns (big enough for the range) 139 * @flags: pfn flags to match device driver page table 140 * @values: pfn value for some special case (none, special, error, ...) 141 * @pfn_shifts: pfn shift value (should be <= PAGE_SHIFT) 142 * @valid: pfns array did not change since it has been fill by an HMM function 143 */ 144 struct hmm_range { 145 struct vm_area_struct *vma; 146 struct list_head list; 147 unsigned long start; 148 unsigned long end; 149 uint64_t *pfns; 150 const uint64_t *flags; 151 const uint64_t *values; 152 uint8_t pfn_shift; 153 bool valid; 154 }; 155 156 /* 157 * hmm_pfn_to_page() - return struct page pointed to by a valid HMM pfn 158 * @range: range use to decode HMM pfn value 159 * @pfn: HMM pfn value to get corresponding struct page from 160 * Returns: struct page pointer if pfn is a valid HMM pfn, NULL otherwise 161 * 162 * If the HMM pfn is valid (ie valid flag set) then return the struct page 163 * matching the pfn value stored in the HMM pfn. Otherwise return NULL. 164 */ 165 static inline struct page *hmm_pfn_to_page(const struct hmm_range *range, 166 uint64_t pfn) 167 { 168 if (pfn == range->values[HMM_PFN_NONE]) 169 return NULL; 170 if (pfn == range->values[HMM_PFN_ERROR]) 171 return NULL; 172 if (pfn == range->values[HMM_PFN_SPECIAL]) 173 return NULL; 174 if (!(pfn & range->flags[HMM_PFN_VALID])) 175 return NULL; 176 return pfn_to_page(pfn >> range->pfn_shift); 177 } 178 179 /* 180 * hmm_pfn_to_pfn() - return pfn value store in a HMM pfn 181 * @range: range use to decode HMM pfn value 182 * @pfn: HMM pfn value to extract pfn from 183 * Returns: pfn value if HMM pfn is valid, -1UL otherwise 184 */ 185 static inline unsigned long hmm_pfn_to_pfn(const struct hmm_range *range, 186 uint64_t pfn) 187 { 188 if (pfn == range->values[HMM_PFN_NONE]) 189 return -1UL; 190 if (pfn == range->values[HMM_PFN_ERROR]) 191 return -1UL; 192 if (pfn == range->values[HMM_PFN_SPECIAL]) 193 return -1UL; 194 if (!(pfn & range->flags[HMM_PFN_VALID])) 195 return -1UL; 196 return (pfn >> range->pfn_shift); 197 } 198 199 /* 200 * hmm_pfn_from_page() - create a valid HMM pfn value from struct page 201 * @range: range use to encode HMM pfn value 202 * @page: struct page pointer for which to create the HMM pfn 203 * Returns: valid HMM pfn for the page 204 */ 205 static inline uint64_t hmm_pfn_from_page(const struct hmm_range *range, 206 struct page *page) 207 { 208 return (page_to_pfn(page) << range->pfn_shift) | 209 range->flags[HMM_PFN_VALID]; 210 } 211 212 /* 213 * hmm_pfn_from_pfn() - create a valid HMM pfn value from pfn 214 * @range: range use to encode HMM pfn value 215 * @pfn: pfn value for which to create the HMM pfn 216 * Returns: valid HMM pfn for the pfn 217 */ 218 static inline uint64_t hmm_pfn_from_pfn(const struct hmm_range *range, 219 unsigned long pfn) 220 { 221 return (pfn << range->pfn_shift) | 222 range->flags[HMM_PFN_VALID]; 223 } 224 225 226 #if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_HMM_MIRROR) 227 /* 228 * Mirroring: how to synchronize device page table with CPU page table. 229 * 230 * A device driver that is participating in HMM mirroring must always 231 * synchronize with CPU page table updates. For this, device drivers can either 232 * directly use mmu_notifier APIs or they can use the hmm_mirror API. Device 233 * drivers can decide to register one mirror per device per process, or just 234 * one mirror per process for a group of devices. The pattern is: 235 * 236 * int device_bind_address_space(..., struct mm_struct *mm, ...) 237 * { 238 * struct device_address_space *das; 239 * 240 * // Device driver specific initialization, and allocation of das 241 * // which contains an hmm_mirror struct as one of its fields. 242 * ... 243 * 244 * ret = hmm_mirror_register(&das->mirror, mm, &device_mirror_ops); 245 * if (ret) { 246 * // Cleanup on error 247 * return ret; 248 * } 249 * 250 * // Other device driver specific initialization 251 * ... 252 * } 253 * 254 * Once an hmm_mirror is registered for an address space, the device driver 255 * will get callbacks through sync_cpu_device_pagetables() operation (see 256 * hmm_mirror_ops struct). 257 * 258 * Device driver must not free the struct containing the hmm_mirror struct 259 * before calling hmm_mirror_unregister(). The expected usage is to do that when 260 * the device driver is unbinding from an address space. 261 * 262 * 263 * void device_unbind_address_space(struct device_address_space *das) 264 * { 265 * // Device driver specific cleanup 266 * ... 267 * 268 * hmm_mirror_unregister(&das->mirror); 269 * 270 * // Other device driver specific cleanup, and now das can be freed 271 * ... 272 * } 273 */ 274 275 struct hmm_mirror; 276 277 /* 278 * enum hmm_update_event - type of update 279 * @HMM_UPDATE_INVALIDATE: invalidate range (no indication as to why) 280 */ 281 enum hmm_update_event { 282 HMM_UPDATE_INVALIDATE, 283 }; 284 285 /* 286 * struct hmm_update - HMM update informations for callback 287 * 288 * @start: virtual start address of the range to update 289 * @end: virtual end address of the range to update 290 * @event: event triggering the update (what is happening) 291 * @blockable: can the callback block/sleep ? 292 */ 293 struct hmm_update { 294 unsigned long start; 295 unsigned long end; 296 enum hmm_update_event event; 297 bool blockable; 298 }; 299 300 /* 301 * struct hmm_mirror_ops - HMM mirror device operations callback 302 * 303 * @update: callback to update range on a device 304 */ 305 struct hmm_mirror_ops { 306 /* release() - release hmm_mirror 307 * 308 * @mirror: pointer to struct hmm_mirror 309 * 310 * This is called when the mm_struct is being released. 311 * The callback should make sure no references to the mirror occur 312 * after the callback returns. 313 */ 314 void (*release)(struct hmm_mirror *mirror); 315 316 /* sync_cpu_device_pagetables() - synchronize page tables 317 * 318 * @mirror: pointer to struct hmm_mirror 319 * @update: update informations (see struct hmm_update) 320 * Returns: -EAGAIN if update.blockable false and callback need to 321 * block, 0 otherwise. 322 * 323 * This callback ultimately originates from mmu_notifiers when the CPU 324 * page table is updated. The device driver must update its page table 325 * in response to this callback. The update argument tells what action 326 * to perform. 327 * 328 * The device driver must not return from this callback until the device 329 * page tables are completely updated (TLBs flushed, etc); this is a 330 * synchronous call. 331 */ 332 int (*sync_cpu_device_pagetables)(struct hmm_mirror *mirror, 333 const struct hmm_update *update); 334 }; 335 336 /* 337 * struct hmm_mirror - mirror struct for a device driver 338 * 339 * @hmm: pointer to struct hmm (which is unique per mm_struct) 340 * @ops: device driver callback for HMM mirror operations 341 * @list: for list of mirrors of a given mm 342 * 343 * Each address space (mm_struct) being mirrored by a device must register one 344 * instance of an hmm_mirror struct with HMM. HMM will track the list of all 345 * mirrors for each mm_struct. 346 */ 347 struct hmm_mirror { 348 struct hmm *hmm; 349 const struct hmm_mirror_ops *ops; 350 struct list_head list; 351 }; 352 353 int hmm_mirror_register(struct hmm_mirror *mirror, struct mm_struct *mm); 354 void hmm_mirror_unregister(struct hmm_mirror *mirror); 355 356 357 /* 358 * To snapshot the CPU page table, call hmm_vma_get_pfns(), then take a device 359 * driver lock that serializes device page table updates, then call 360 * hmm_vma_range_done(), to check if the snapshot is still valid. The same 361 * device driver page table update lock must also be used in the 362 * hmm_mirror_ops.sync_cpu_device_pagetables() callback, so that CPU page 363 * table invalidation serializes on it. 364 * 365 * YOU MUST CALL hmm_vma_range_done() ONCE AND ONLY ONCE EACH TIME YOU CALL 366 * hmm_vma_get_pfns() WITHOUT ERROR ! 367 * 368 * IF YOU DO NOT FOLLOW THE ABOVE RULE THE SNAPSHOT CONTENT MIGHT BE INVALID ! 369 */ 370 int hmm_vma_get_pfns(struct hmm_range *range); 371 bool hmm_vma_range_done(struct hmm_range *range); 372 373 374 /* 375 * Fault memory on behalf of device driver. Unlike handle_mm_fault(), this will 376 * not migrate any device memory back to system memory. The HMM pfn array will 377 * be updated with the fault result and current snapshot of the CPU page table 378 * for the range. 379 * 380 * The mmap_sem must be taken in read mode before entering and it might be 381 * dropped by the function if the block argument is false. In that case, the 382 * function returns -EAGAIN. 383 * 384 * Return value does not reflect if the fault was successful for every single 385 * address or not. Therefore, the caller must to inspect the HMM pfn array to 386 * determine fault status for each address. 387 * 388 * Trying to fault inside an invalid vma will result in -EINVAL. 389 * 390 * See the function description in mm/hmm.c for further documentation. 391 */ 392 int hmm_vma_fault(struct hmm_range *range, bool block); 393 394 /* Below are for HMM internal use only! Not to be used by device driver! */ 395 void hmm_mm_destroy(struct mm_struct *mm); 396 397 static inline void hmm_mm_init(struct mm_struct *mm) 398 { 399 mm->hmm = NULL; 400 } 401 #else /* IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_HMM_MIRROR) */ 402 static inline void hmm_mm_destroy(struct mm_struct *mm) {} 403 static inline void hmm_mm_init(struct mm_struct *mm) {} 404 #endif /* IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_HMM_MIRROR) */ 405 406 #if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_DEVICE_PRIVATE) || IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_DEVICE_PUBLIC) 407 struct hmm_devmem; 408 409 struct page *hmm_vma_alloc_locked_page(struct vm_area_struct *vma, 410 unsigned long addr); 411 412 /* 413 * struct hmm_devmem_ops - callback for ZONE_DEVICE memory events 414 * 415 * @free: call when refcount on page reach 1 and thus is no longer use 416 * @fault: call when there is a page fault to unaddressable memory 417 * 418 * Both callback happens from page_free() and page_fault() callback of struct 419 * dev_pagemap respectively. See include/linux/memremap.h for more details on 420 * those. 421 * 422 * The hmm_devmem_ops callback are just here to provide a coherent and 423 * uniq API to device driver and device driver should not register their 424 * own page_free() or page_fault() but rely on the hmm_devmem_ops call- 425 * back. 426 */ 427 struct hmm_devmem_ops { 428 /* 429 * free() - free a device page 430 * @devmem: device memory structure (see struct hmm_devmem) 431 * @page: pointer to struct page being freed 432 * 433 * Call back occurs whenever a device page refcount reach 1 which 434 * means that no one is holding any reference on the page anymore 435 * (ZONE_DEVICE page have an elevated refcount of 1 as default so 436 * that they are not release to the general page allocator). 437 * 438 * Note that callback has exclusive ownership of the page (as no 439 * one is holding any reference). 440 */ 441 void (*free)(struct hmm_devmem *devmem, struct page *page); 442 /* 443 * fault() - CPU page fault or get user page (GUP) 444 * @devmem: device memory structure (see struct hmm_devmem) 445 * @vma: virtual memory area containing the virtual address 446 * @addr: virtual address that faulted or for which there is a GUP 447 * @page: pointer to struct page backing virtual address (unreliable) 448 * @flags: FAULT_FLAG_* (see include/linux/mm.h) 449 * @pmdp: page middle directory 450 * Returns: VM_FAULT_MINOR/MAJOR on success or one of VM_FAULT_ERROR 451 * on error 452 * 453 * The callback occurs whenever there is a CPU page fault or GUP on a 454 * virtual address. This means that the device driver must migrate the 455 * page back to regular memory (CPU accessible). 456 * 457 * The device driver is free to migrate more than one page from the 458 * fault() callback as an optimization. However if device decide to 459 * migrate more than one page it must always priotirize the faulting 460 * address over the others. 461 * 462 * The struct page pointer is only given as an hint to allow quick 463 * lookup of internal device driver data. A concurrent migration 464 * might have already free that page and the virtual address might 465 * not longer be back by it. So it should not be modified by the 466 * callback. 467 * 468 * Note that mmap semaphore is held in read mode at least when this 469 * callback occurs, hence the vma is valid upon callback entry. 470 */ 471 vm_fault_t (*fault)(struct hmm_devmem *devmem, 472 struct vm_area_struct *vma, 473 unsigned long addr, 474 const struct page *page, 475 unsigned int flags, 476 pmd_t *pmdp); 477 }; 478 479 /* 480 * struct hmm_devmem - track device memory 481 * 482 * @completion: completion object for device memory 483 * @pfn_first: first pfn for this resource (set by hmm_devmem_add()) 484 * @pfn_last: last pfn for this resource (set by hmm_devmem_add()) 485 * @resource: IO resource reserved for this chunk of memory 486 * @pagemap: device page map for that chunk 487 * @device: device to bind resource to 488 * @ops: memory operations callback 489 * @ref: per CPU refcount 490 * @page_fault: callback when CPU fault on an unaddressable device page 491 * 492 * This an helper structure for device drivers that do not wish to implement 493 * the gory details related to hotplugging new memoy and allocating struct 494 * pages. 495 * 496 * Device drivers can directly use ZONE_DEVICE memory on their own if they 497 * wish to do so. 498 * 499 * The page_fault() callback must migrate page back, from device memory to 500 * system memory, so that the CPU can access it. This might fail for various 501 * reasons (device issues, device have been unplugged, ...). When such error 502 * conditions happen, the page_fault() callback must return VM_FAULT_SIGBUS and 503 * set the CPU page table entry to "poisoned". 504 * 505 * Note that because memory cgroup charges are transferred to the device memory, 506 * this should never fail due to memory restrictions. However, allocation 507 * of a regular system page might still fail because we are out of memory. If 508 * that happens, the page_fault() callback must return VM_FAULT_OOM. 509 * 510 * The page_fault() callback can also try to migrate back multiple pages in one 511 * chunk, as an optimization. It must, however, prioritize the faulting address 512 * over all the others. 513 */ 514 typedef vm_fault_t (*dev_page_fault_t)(struct vm_area_struct *vma, 515 unsigned long addr, 516 const struct page *page, 517 unsigned int flags, 518 pmd_t *pmdp); 519 520 struct hmm_devmem { 521 struct completion completion; 522 unsigned long pfn_first; 523 unsigned long pfn_last; 524 struct resource *resource; 525 struct device *device; 526 struct dev_pagemap pagemap; 527 const struct hmm_devmem_ops *ops; 528 struct percpu_ref ref; 529 dev_page_fault_t page_fault; 530 }; 531 532 /* 533 * To add (hotplug) device memory, HMM assumes that there is no real resource 534 * that reserves a range in the physical address space (this is intended to be 535 * use by unaddressable device memory). It will reserve a physical range big 536 * enough and allocate struct page for it. 537 * 538 * The device driver can wrap the hmm_devmem struct inside a private device 539 * driver struct. 540 */ 541 struct hmm_devmem *hmm_devmem_add(const struct hmm_devmem_ops *ops, 542 struct device *device, 543 unsigned long size); 544 struct hmm_devmem *hmm_devmem_add_resource(const struct hmm_devmem_ops *ops, 545 struct device *device, 546 struct resource *res); 547 548 /* 549 * hmm_devmem_page_set_drvdata - set per-page driver data field 550 * 551 * @page: pointer to struct page 552 * @data: driver data value to set 553 * 554 * Because page can not be on lru we have an unsigned long that driver can use 555 * to store a per page field. This just a simple helper to do that. 556 */ 557 static inline void hmm_devmem_page_set_drvdata(struct page *page, 558 unsigned long data) 559 { 560 page->hmm_data = data; 561 } 562 563 /* 564 * hmm_devmem_page_get_drvdata - get per page driver data field 565 * 566 * @page: pointer to struct page 567 * Return: driver data value 568 */ 569 static inline unsigned long hmm_devmem_page_get_drvdata(const struct page *page) 570 { 571 return page->hmm_data; 572 } 573 574 575 /* 576 * struct hmm_device - fake device to hang device memory onto 577 * 578 * @device: device struct 579 * @minor: device minor number 580 */ 581 struct hmm_device { 582 struct device device; 583 unsigned int minor; 584 }; 585 586 /* 587 * A device driver that wants to handle multiple devices memory through a 588 * single fake device can use hmm_device to do so. This is purely a helper and 589 * it is not strictly needed, in order to make use of any HMM functionality. 590 */ 591 struct hmm_device *hmm_device_new(void *drvdata); 592 void hmm_device_put(struct hmm_device *hmm_device); 593 #endif /* CONFIG_DEVICE_PRIVATE || CONFIG_DEVICE_PUBLIC */ 594 #else /* IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_HMM) */ 595 static inline void hmm_mm_destroy(struct mm_struct *mm) {} 596 static inline void hmm_mm_init(struct mm_struct *mm) {} 597 #endif /* IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_HMM) */ 598 599 #endif /* LINUX_HMM_H */ 600