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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-07 18:49:45 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-07 18:49:45 +0000 |
commit | 2c3c1048746a4622d8c89a29670120dc8fab93c4 (patch) | |
tree | 848558de17fb3008cdf4d861b01ac7781903ce39 /Documentation/mm/memory-model.rst | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | linux-upstream/6.1.76.tar.xz linux-upstream/6.1.76.zip |
Adding upstream version 6.1.76.upstream/6.1.76upstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/mm/memory-model.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/mm/memory-model.rst | 177 |
1 files changed, 177 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/mm/memory-model.rst b/Documentation/mm/memory-model.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..3779e562d --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/mm/memory-model.rst @@ -0,0 +1,177 @@ +.. 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 two memory models: +FLATMEM and SPARSEMEM. Each architecture defines what +memory models it supports, what the default memory model is and +whether it is possible to manually override that default. + +All the memory models track the status of physical page frames using +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 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` function. 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. + +An architecture 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 with physical memory starting at address different from 0. + +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 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 +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 sparse_init() to +initialize the memory sections and the memory maps. + +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 +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, +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. + +The virtually mapped memory map allows storing `struct page` objects +for persistent memory devices in pre-allocated storage on those +devices. This storage is represented with struct vmem_altmap +that is eventually passed to vmemmap_populate() through a long chain +of function calls. The vmemmap_populate() implementation may use the +`vmem_altmap` along with :c:func:`vmemmap_alloc_block_buf` helper to +allocate memory map on the persistent memory device. + +ZONE_DEVICE +=========== +The `ZONE_DEVICE` facility builds upon `SPARSEMEM_VMEMMAP` to offer +`struct page` `mem_map` services for device driver identified physical +address ranges. The "device" aspect of `ZONE_DEVICE` relates to the fact +that the page objects for these address ranges are never marked online, +and that a reference must be taken against the device, not just the page +to keep the memory pinned for active use. `ZONE_DEVICE`, via +:c:func:`devm_memremap_pages`, performs just enough memory hotplug to +turn on :c:func:`pfn_to_page`, :c:func:`page_to_pfn`, and +:c:func:`get_user_pages` service for the given range of pfns. Since the +page reference count never drops below 1 the page is never tracked as +free memory and the page's `struct list_head lru` space is repurposed +for back referencing to the host device / driver that mapped the memory. + +While `SPARSEMEM` presents memory as a collection of sections, +optionally collected into memory blocks, `ZONE_DEVICE` users have a need +for smaller granularity of populating the `mem_map`. Given that +`ZONE_DEVICE` memory is never marked online it is subsequently never +subject to its memory ranges being exposed through the sysfs memory +hotplug api on memory block boundaries. The implementation relies on +this lack of user-api constraint to allow sub-section sized memory +ranges to be specified to :c:func:`arch_add_memory`, the top-half of +memory hotplug. Sub-section support allows for 2MB as the cross-arch +common alignment granularity for :c:func:`devm_memremap_pages`. + +The users of `ZONE_DEVICE` are: + +* pmem: Map platform persistent memory to be used as a direct-I/O target + via DAX mappings. + +* hmm: Extend `ZONE_DEVICE` with `->page_fault()` and `->page_free()` + event callbacks to allow a device-driver to coordinate memory management + events related to device-memory, typically GPU memory. See + Documentation/mm/hmm.rst. + +* p2pdma: Create `struct page` objects to allow peer devices in a + PCI/-E topology to coordinate direct-DMA operations between themselves, + i.e. bypass host memory. |