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Message-ID: <a4def881-1df0-6835-4b9a-dc957c979683@infradead.org>
Date: Wed, 24 Apr 2019 18:08:46 -0700
From: Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@...radead.org>
To: Mike Rapoport <rppt@...ux.ibm.com>,
Jonathan Corbet <corbet@....net>
Cc: linux-doc@...r.kernel.org, linux-mm@...ck.org,
linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH] docs/vm: add documentation of memory models
On 4/24/19 3:28 AM, Mike Rapoport wrote:
> Describe what {FLAT,DISCONTIG,SPARSE}MEM are and how they manage to
> maintain pfn <-> struct page correspondence.
>
> Signed-off-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@...ux.ibm.com>
> ---
> Documentation/vm/index.rst | 1 +
> Documentation/vm/memory-model.rst | 171 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> 2 files changed, 172 insertions(+)
> create mode 100644 Documentation/vm/memory-model.rst
>
Hi Mike,
I have a few minor edits below...
> diff --git a/Documentation/vm/memory-model.rst b/Documentation/vm/memory-model.rst
> new file mode 100644
> index 0000000..914c52a
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/Documentation/vm/memory-model.rst
> @@ -0,0 +1,171 @@
> +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
> +
> +.. _physical_memory_model:
> +
> +=====================
> +Physical Memory Model
> +=====================
> +
> +Physical memory in a system may be addressed in different ways. The
> +simplest case is when the physical memory starts at address 0 and
> +spans a contiguous range up to the maximal address. It could be,
> +however, that this range contains small holes that are not accessible
> +for the CPU. Then there could be several contiguous ranges at
> +completely distinct addresses. And, don't forget about NUMA, where
> +different memory banks are attached to different CPUs.
> +
> +Linux abstracts this diversity using one of the three memory models:
> +FLATMEM, DISCONTIGMEM and SPARSEMEM. Each architecture defines what
> +memory models it supports, what is the default memory model and
> +whether it possible to manually override that default.
> +
> +All the memory models track the status of physical page frames using
> +:c:type:`struct page` arranged in one or more arrays.
> +
> +Regardless of the selected memory model, there exists one-to-one
> +mapping between the physical page frame number (PFN) and the
> +corresponding `struct page`.
> +
> +Each memory model defines :c:func:`pfn_to_page` and :c:func:`page_to_pfn`
> +helpers that allow the conversion from PFN to `struct page` and vise
vice
> +versa.
> +
> +FLATMEM
> +=======
> +
> +The simplest memory model is FLATMEM. This model is suitable for
> +non-NUMA systems with contiguous, or mostly contiguous, physical
> +memory.
> +
> +In the FLATMEM memory model, there is a global `mem_map` array that
> +maps the entire physical memory. For most architectures, the holes
> +have entries in the `mem_map` array. The `struct page` objects
> +corresponding to the holes are never fully initialized.
> +
> +To allocate the `mem_map` array, architecture specific setup code
> +should call :c:func:`free_area_init_node` function or its convenience
> +wrapper :c:func:`free_area_init`. Yet, the mappings array is not
> +usable until the call to :c:func:`memblock_free_all` that hands all
> +the memory to the page allocator.
> +
> +If an architecture enables `CONFIG_ARCH_HAS_HOLES_MEMORYMODEL` option,
> +it may free parts of the `mem_map` array that do not cover the
> +actual physical pages. In such case, the architecture specific
> +:c:func:`pfn_valid` implementation should take the holes in the
> +`mem_map` into account.
> +
> +With FLATMEM, the conversion between a PFN and the `struct page` is
> +straightforward: `PFN - ARCH_PFN_OFFSET` is an index to the
> +`mem_map` array.
> +
> +The `ARCH_PFN_OFFSET` defines the first page frame number for
> +systems that their physical memory does not start at 0.
s/that/when/ ? Seems awkward as is.
> +
> +DISCONTIGMEM
> +============
> +
> +The DISCONTIGMEM model treats the physical memory as a collection of
> +`nodes` similarly to how Linux NUMA support does. For each node Linux
> +constructs an independent memory management subsystem represented by
> +`struct pglist_data` (or `pg_data_t` for short). Among other
> +things, `pg_data_t` holds the `node_mem_map` array that maps
> +physical pages belonging to that node. The `node_start_pfn` field of
> +`pg_data_t` is the number of the first page frame belonging to that
> +node.
> +
> +The architecture setup code should call :c:func:`free_area_init_node` for
> +each node in the system to initialize the `pg_data_t` object and its
> +`node_mem_map`.
> +
> +Every `node_mem_map` behaves exactly as FLATMEM's `mem_map` -
> +every physical page frame in a node has a `struct page` entry in the
> +`node_mem_map` array. When DISCONTIGMEM is enabled, a portion of the
> +`flags` field of the `struct page` encodes the node number of the
> +node hosting that page.
> +
> +The conversion between a PFN and the `struct page` in the
> +DISCONTIGMEM model became slightly more complex as it has to determine
> +which node hosts the physical page and which `pg_data_t` object
> +holds the `struct page`.
> +
> +Architectures that support DISCONTIGMEM provide :c:func:`pfn_to_nid`
> +to convert PFN to the node number. The opposite conversion helper
> +:c:func:`page_to_nid` is generic as it uses the node number encoded in
> +page->flags.
> +
> +Once the node number is known, the PFN can be used to index
> +appropriate `node_mem_map` array to access the `struct page` and
> +the offset of the `struct page` from the `node_mem_map` plus
> +`node_start_pfn` is the PFN of that page.
> +
> +SPARSEMEM
> +=========
> +
> +SPARSEMEM is the most versatile memory model available in Linux and it
> +is the only memory model that supports several advanced features such
> +as hot-plug and hot-remove of the physical memory, alternative memory
> +maps for non-volatile memory devices and deferred initialization of
> +the memory map for larger systems.
> +
> +The SPARSEMEM model presents the physical memory as a collection of
> +sections. A section is represented with :c:type:`struct mem_section`
> +that contains `section_mem_map` that is, logically, a pointer to an
> +array of struct pages. However, it is stored with some other magic
> +that aids the sections management. The section size and maximal number
> +of section is specified using `SECTION_SIZE_BITS` and
> +`MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS` constants defined by each architecture that
> +supports SPARSEMEM. While `MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS` is an actual width of a
> +physical address that an architecture supports, the
> +`SECTION_SIZE_BITS` is an arbitrary value.
> +
> +The maximal number of sections is denoted `NR_MEM_SECTIONS` and
> +defined as
> +
> +.. math::
> +
> + NR\_MEM\_SECTIONS = 2 ^ {(MAX\_PHYSMEM\_BITS - SECTION\_SIZE\_BITS)}
> +
> +The `mem_section` objects are arranged in a two dimensional array
two-dimensional
> +called `mem_sections`. The size and placement of this array depend
> +on `CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_EXTREME` and the maximal possible number of
> +sections:
> +
> +* When `CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_EXTREME` is disabled, the `mem_sections`
> + array is static and has `NR_MEM_SECTIONS` rows. Each row holds a
> + single `mem_section` object.
> +* When `CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_EXTREME` is enabled, the `mem_sections`
> + array is dynamically allocated. Each row contains PAGE_SIZE worth of
> + `mem_section` objects and the number of rows is calculated to fit
> + all the memory sections.
> +
> +The architecture setup code should call :c:func:`memory_present` for
> +each active memory range or use :c:func:`memblocks_present` or
> +:c:func:`sparse_memory_present_with_active_regions` wrappers to
> +initialize the memory sections. Next, the actual memory maps should be
> +set up using :c:func:`sparse_init`.
> +
> +With SPARSEMEM there are two possible ways to convert a PFN to the
> +corresponding `struct page` - a "classic sparse" and "sparse
> +vmemmap". The selection is made at build time and it is determined by
> +the value of `CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_VMEMMAP`.
> +
> +The classic sparse encodes the section number of a page in page->flags
> +and uses high bits of a PFN to access the section that maps that page
> +frame. Inside a section, the PFN is the index to the array of pages.
> +
> +The sparse vmemmap uses a virtually mapped memory map to optimize
> +pfn_to_page and page_to_pfn operations. There is a global `struct
> +page *vmemmap` pointer that points to a virtually contiguous array of
> +`struct page` objects. A PFN is an index to that array and the the
> +offset of the `struct page` from `vmemmap` is the PFN of that
> +page.
> +
> +To use vmemmap, an architecture has to reserve a range of virtual
> +addresses that will map the physical pages containing the memory
> +map. and make sure that `vmemmap` points to that range. In addition,
map and
> +the architecture should implement :c:func:`vmemmap_populate` method
> +that will allocate the physical memory and create page tables for the
> +virtual memory map. If an architecture does not have any special
> +requirements for the vmemmap mappings, it can use default
> +:c:func:`vmemmap_populate_basepages` provided by the generic memory
> +management.
>
thanks.
--
~Randy
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