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1= Transparent Hugepage Support =
2
3== Objective ==
4
5Performance critical computing applications dealing with large memory
6working sets are already running on top of libhugetlbfs and in turn
7hugetlbfs. Transparent Hugepage Support is an alternative means of
8using huge pages for the backing of virtual memory with huge pages
9that supports the automatic promotion and demotion of page sizes and
10without the shortcomings of hugetlbfs.
11
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12Currently it only works for anonymous memory mappings and tmpfs/shmem.
13But in the future it can expand to other filesystems.
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14
15The reason applications are running faster is because of two
16factors. The first factor is almost completely irrelevant and it's not
17of significant interest because it'll also have the downside of
18requiring larger clear-page copy-page in page faults which is a
19potentially negative effect. The first factor consists in taking a
20single page fault for each 2M virtual region touched by userland (so
21reducing the enter/exit kernel frequency by a 512 times factor). This
22only matters the first time the memory is accessed for the lifetime of
23a memory mapping. The second long lasting and much more important
24factor will affect all subsequent accesses to the memory for the whole
25runtime of the application. The second factor consist of two
26components: 1) the TLB miss will run faster (especially with
27virtualization using nested pagetables but almost always also on bare
28metal without virtualization) and 2) a single TLB entry will be
29mapping a much larger amount of virtual memory in turn reducing the
30number of TLB misses. With virtualization and nested pagetables the
31TLB can be mapped of larger size only if both KVM and the Linux guest
32are using hugepages but a significant speedup already happens if only
33one of the two is using hugepages just because of the fact the TLB
34miss is going to run faster.
35
36== Design ==
37
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38- "graceful fallback": mm components which don't have transparent hugepage
39 knowledge fall back to breaking huge pmd mapping into table of ptes and,
40 if necessary, split a transparent hugepage. Therefore these components
41 can continue working on the regular pages or regular pte mappings.
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42
43- if a hugepage allocation fails because of memory fragmentation,
44 regular pages should be gracefully allocated instead and mixed in
45 the same vma without any failure or significant delay and without
46 userland noticing
47
48- if some task quits and more hugepages become available (either
49 immediately in the buddy or through the VM), guest physical memory
50 backed by regular pages should be relocated on hugepages
51 automatically (with khugepaged)
52
53- it doesn't require memory reservation and in turn it uses hugepages
54 whenever possible (the only possible reservation here is kernelcore=
55 to avoid unmovable pages to fragment all the memory but such a tweak
56 is not specific to transparent hugepage support and it's a generic
57 feature that applies to all dynamic high order allocations in the
58 kernel)
59
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60Transparent Hugepage Support maximizes the usefulness of free memory
61if compared to the reservation approach of hugetlbfs by allowing all
62unused memory to be used as cache or other movable (or even unmovable
63entities). It doesn't require reservation to prevent hugepage
64allocation failures to be noticeable from userland. It allows paging
65and all other advanced VM features to be available on the
66hugepages. It requires no modifications for applications to take
67advantage of it.
68
69Applications however can be further optimized to take advantage of
70this feature, like for example they've been optimized before to avoid
71a flood of mmap system calls for every malloc(4k). Optimizing userland
72is by far not mandatory and khugepaged already can take care of long
73lived page allocations even for hugepage unaware applications that
74deals with large amounts of memory.
75
76In certain cases when hugepages are enabled system wide, application
77may end up allocating more memory resources. An application may mmap a
78large region but only touch 1 byte of it, in that case a 2M page might
79be allocated instead of a 4k page for no good. This is why it's
80possible to disable hugepages system-wide and to only have them inside
81MADV_HUGEPAGE madvise regions.
82
83Embedded systems should enable hugepages only inside madvise regions
84to eliminate any risk of wasting any precious byte of memory and to
85only run faster.
86
87Applications that gets a lot of benefit from hugepages and that don't
88risk to lose memory by using hugepages, should use
89madvise(MADV_HUGEPAGE) on their critical mmapped regions.
90
91== sysfs ==
92
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93Transparent Hugepage Support for anonymous memory can be entirely disabled
94(mostly for debugging purposes) or only enabled inside MADV_HUGEPAGE
95regions (to avoid the risk of consuming more memory resources) or enabled
96system wide. This can be achieved with one of:
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97
98echo always >/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/enabled
99echo madvise >/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/enabled
100echo never >/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/enabled
101
102It's also possible to limit defrag efforts in the VM to generate
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103anonymous hugepages in case they're not immediately free to madvise
104regions or to never try to defrag memory and simply fallback to regular
105pages unless hugepages are immediately available. Clearly if we spend CPU
106time to defrag memory, we would expect to gain even more by the fact we
107use hugepages later instead of regular pages. This isn't always
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108guaranteed, but it may be more likely in case the allocation is for a
109MADV_HUGEPAGE region.
110
111echo always >/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/defrag
444eb2a4 112echo defer >/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/defrag
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113echo madvise >/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/defrag
114echo never >/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/defrag
115
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116"always" means that an application requesting THP will stall on allocation
117failure and directly reclaim pages and compact memory in an effort to
118allocate a THP immediately. This may be desirable for virtual machines
119that benefit heavily from THP use and are willing to delay the VM start
120to utilise them.
121
122"defer" means that an application will wake kswapd in the background
123to reclaim pages and wake kcompact to compact memory so that THP is
124available in the near future. It's the responsibility of khugepaged
125to then install the THP pages later.
126
127"madvise" will enter direct reclaim like "always" but only for regions
128that are have used madvise(MADV_HUGEPAGE). This is the default behaviour.
129
130"never" should be self-explanatory.
131
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132By default kernel tries to use huge zero page on read page fault to
133anonymous mapping. It's possible to disable huge zero page by writing 0
134or enable it back by writing 1:
79da5407 135
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136echo 0 >/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/use_zero_page
137echo 1 >/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/use_zero_page
79da5407 138
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139Some userspace (such as a test program, or an optimized memory allocation
140library) may want to know the size (in bytes) of a transparent hugepage:
141
142cat /sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/hpage_pmd_size
143
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144khugepaged will be automatically started when
145transparent_hugepage/enabled is set to "always" or "madvise, and it'll
146be automatically shutdown if it's set to "never".
147
148khugepaged runs usually at low frequency so while one may not want to
149invoke defrag algorithms synchronously during the page faults, it
150should be worth invoking defrag at least in khugepaged. However it's
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151also possible to disable defrag in khugepaged by writing 0 or enable
152defrag in khugepaged by writing 1:
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154echo 0 >/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/khugepaged/defrag
155echo 1 >/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/khugepaged/defrag
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156
157You can also control how many pages khugepaged should scan at each
158pass:
159
160/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/khugepaged/pages_to_scan
161
162and how many milliseconds to wait in khugepaged between each pass (you
163can set this to 0 to run khugepaged at 100% utilization of one core):
164
165/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/khugepaged/scan_sleep_millisecs
166
167and how many milliseconds to wait in khugepaged if there's an hugepage
168allocation failure to throttle the next allocation attempt.
169
170/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/khugepaged/alloc_sleep_millisecs
171
172The khugepaged progress can be seen in the number of pages collapsed:
173
174/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/khugepaged/pages_collapsed
175
176for each pass:
177
178/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/khugepaged/full_scans
179
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180max_ptes_none specifies how many extra small pages (that are
181not already mapped) can be allocated when collapsing a group
182of small pages into one large page.
183
184/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/khugepaged/max_ptes_none
185
186A higher value leads to use additional memory for programs.
187A lower value leads to gain less thp performance. Value of
188max_ptes_none can waste cpu time very little, you can
189ignore it.
190
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191max_ptes_swap specifies how many pages can be brought in from
192swap when collapsing a group of pages into a transparent huge page.
193
194/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/khugepaged/max_ptes_swap
195
196A higher value can cause excessive swap IO and waste
197memory. A lower value can prevent THPs from being
198collapsed, resulting fewer pages being collapsed into
199THPs, and lower memory access performance.
200
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201== Boot parameter ==
202
203You can change the sysfs boot time defaults of Transparent Hugepage
204Support by passing the parameter "transparent_hugepage=always" or
205"transparent_hugepage=madvise" or "transparent_hugepage=never"
206(without "") to the kernel command line.
207
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208== Hugepages in tmpfs/shmem ==
209
210You can control hugepage allocation policy in tmpfs with mount option
211"huge=". It can have following values:
212
213 - "always":
214 Attempt to allocate huge pages every time we need a new page;
215
216 - "never":
217 Do not allocate huge pages;
218
219 - "within_size":
220 Only allocate huge page if it will be fully within i_size.
221 Also respect fadvise()/madvise() hints;
222
223 - "advise:
224 Only allocate huge pages if requested with fadvise()/madvise();
225
226The default policy is "never".
227
228"mount -o remount,huge= /mountpoint" works fine after mount: remounting
229huge=never will not attempt to break up huge pages at all, just stop more
230from being allocated.
231
232There's also sysfs knob to control hugepage allocation policy for internal
233shmem mount: /sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/shmem_enabled. The mount
234is used for SysV SHM, memfds, shared anonymous mmaps (of /dev/zero or
235MAP_ANONYMOUS), GPU drivers' DRM objects, Ashmem.
236
237In addition to policies listed above, shmem_enabled allows two further
238values:
239
240 - "deny":
241 For use in emergencies, to force the huge option off from
242 all mounts;
243 - "force":
244 Force the huge option on for all - very useful for testing;
245
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246== Need of application restart ==
247
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248The transparent_hugepage/enabled values and tmpfs mount option only affect
249future behavior. So to make them effective you need to restart any
250application that could have been using hugepages. This also applies to the
251regions registered in khugepaged.
1c9bf22c 252
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253== Monitoring usage ==
254
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255The number of anonymous transparent huge pages currently used by the
256system is available by reading the AnonHugePages field in /proc/meminfo.
257To identify what applications are using anonymous transparent huge pages,
258it is necessary to read /proc/PID/smaps and count the AnonHugePages fields
259for each mapping.
260
261The number of file transparent huge pages mapped to userspace is available
262by reading ShmemPmdMapped and ShmemHugePages fields in /proc/meminfo.
263To identify what applications are mapping file transparent huge pages, it
264is necessary to read /proc/PID/smaps and count the FileHugeMapped fields
265for each mapping.
266
267Note that reading the smaps file is expensive and reading it
268frequently will incur overhead.
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269
270There are a number of counters in /proc/vmstat that may be used to
271monitor how successfully the system is providing huge pages for use.
272
273thp_fault_alloc is incremented every time a huge page is successfully
274 allocated to handle a page fault. This applies to both the
275 first time a page is faulted and for COW faults.
276
277thp_collapse_alloc is incremented by khugepaged when it has found
278 a range of pages to collapse into one huge page and has
279 successfully allocated a new huge page to store the data.
280
281thp_fault_fallback is incremented if a page fault fails to allocate
282 a huge page and instead falls back to using small pages.
283
284thp_collapse_alloc_failed is incremented if khugepaged found a range
285 of pages that should be collapsed into one huge page but failed
286 the allocation.
287
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288thp_file_alloc is incremented every time a file huge page is successfully
289i allocated.
290
291thp_file_mapped is incremented every time a file huge page is mapped into
292 user address space.
293
a46e6376 294thp_split_page is incremented every time a huge page is split into base
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295 pages. This can happen for a variety of reasons but a common
296 reason is that a huge page is old and is being reclaimed.
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297 This action implies splitting all PMD the page mapped with.
298
299thp_split_page_failed is is incremented if kernel fails to split huge
300 page. This can happen if the page was pinned by somebody.
301
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302thp_deferred_split_page is incremented when a huge page is put onto split
303 queue. This happens when a huge page is partially unmapped and
304 splitting it would free up some memory. Pages on split queue are
305 going to be split under memory pressure.
306
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307thp_split_pmd is incremented every time a PMD split into table of PTEs.
308 This can happen, for instance, when application calls mprotect() or
309 munmap() on part of huge page. It doesn't split huge page, only
310 page table entry.
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312thp_zero_page_alloc is incremented every time a huge zero page is
313 successfully allocated. It includes allocations which where
314 dropped due race with other allocation. Note, it doesn't count
315 every map of the huge zero page, only its allocation.
316
317thp_zero_page_alloc_failed is incremented if kernel fails to allocate
318 huge zero page and falls back to using small pages.
319
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320As the system ages, allocating huge pages may be expensive as the
321system uses memory compaction to copy data around memory to free a
322huge page for use. There are some counters in /proc/vmstat to help
323monitor this overhead.
324
325compact_stall is incremented every time a process stalls to run
326 memory compaction so that a huge page is free for use.
327
328compact_success is incremented if the system compacted memory and
329 freed a huge page for use.
330
331compact_fail is incremented if the system tries to compact memory
332 but failed.
333
334compact_pages_moved is incremented each time a page is moved. If
335 this value is increasing rapidly, it implies that the system
336 is copying a lot of data to satisfy the huge page allocation.
337 It is possible that the cost of copying exceeds any savings
338 from reduced TLB misses.
339
340compact_pagemigrate_failed is incremented when the underlying mechanism
341 for moving a page failed.
342
343compact_blocks_moved is incremented each time memory compaction examines
344 a huge page aligned range of pages.
345
346It is possible to establish how long the stalls were using the function
347tracer to record how long was spent in __alloc_pages_nodemask and
348using the mm_page_alloc tracepoint to identify which allocations were
349for huge pages.
350
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351== get_user_pages and follow_page ==
352
353get_user_pages and follow_page if run on a hugepage, will return the
354head or tail pages as usual (exactly as they would do on
355hugetlbfs). Most gup users will only care about the actual physical
356address of the page and its temporary pinning to release after the I/O
357is complete, so they won't ever notice the fact the page is huge. But
358if any driver is going to mangle over the page structure of the tail
359page (like for checking page->mapping or other bits that are relevant
360for the head page and not the tail page), it should be updated to jump
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361to check head page instead. Taking reference on any head/tail page would
362prevent page from being split by anyone.
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363
364NOTE: these aren't new constraints to the GUP API, and they match the
365same constrains that applies to hugetlbfs too, so any driver capable
366of handling GUP on hugetlbfs will also work fine on transparent
367hugepage backed mappings.
368
369In case you can't handle compound pages if they're returned by
370follow_page, the FOLL_SPLIT bit can be specified as parameter to
371follow_page, so that it will split the hugepages before returning
372them. Migration for example passes FOLL_SPLIT as parameter to
373follow_page because it's not hugepage aware and in fact it can't work
374at all on hugetlbfs (but it instead works fine on transparent
375hugepages thanks to FOLL_SPLIT). migration simply can't deal with
376hugepages being returned (as it's not only checking the pfn of the
377page and pinning it during the copy but it pretends to migrate the
378memory in regular page sizes and with regular pte/pmd mappings).
379
380== Optimizing the applications ==
381
382To be guaranteed that the kernel will map a 2M page immediately in any
383memory region, the mmap region has to be hugepage naturally
384aligned. posix_memalign() can provide that guarantee.
385
386== Hugetlbfs ==
387
388You can use hugetlbfs on a kernel that has transparent hugepage
389support enabled just fine as always. No difference can be noted in
390hugetlbfs other than there will be less overall fragmentation. All
391usual features belonging to hugetlbfs are preserved and
392unaffected. libhugetlbfs will also work fine as usual.
393
394== Graceful fallback ==
395
89474d50 396Code walking pagetables but unaware about huge pmds can simply call
a46e6376 397split_huge_pmd(vma, pmd, addr) where the pmd is the one returned by
1c9bf22c 398pmd_offset. It's trivial to make the code transparent hugepage aware
a46e6376 399by just grepping for "pmd_offset" and adding split_huge_pmd where
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400missing after pmd_offset returns the pmd. Thanks to the graceful
401fallback design, with a one liner change, you can avoid to write
402hundred if not thousand of lines of complex code to make your code
403hugepage aware.
404
405If you're not walking pagetables but you run into a physical hugepage
406but you can't handle it natively in your code, you can split it by
407calling split_huge_page(page). This is what the Linux VM does before
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408it tries to swapout the hugepage for example. split_huge_page() can fail
409if the page is pinned and you must handle this correctly.
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410
411Example to make mremap.c transparent hugepage aware with a one liner
412change:
413
414diff --git a/mm/mremap.c b/mm/mremap.c
415--- a/mm/mremap.c
416+++ b/mm/mremap.c
417@@ -41,6 +41,7 @@ static pmd_t *get_old_pmd(struct mm_stru
418 return NULL;
419
420 pmd = pmd_offset(pud, addr);
a46e6376 421+ split_huge_pmd(vma, pmd, addr);
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422 if (pmd_none_or_clear_bad(pmd))
423 return NULL;
424
425== Locking in hugepage aware code ==
426
427We want as much code as possible hugepage aware, as calling
a46e6376 428split_huge_page() or split_huge_pmd() has a cost.
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429
430To make pagetable walks huge pmd aware, all you need to do is to call
431pmd_trans_huge() on the pmd returned by pmd_offset. You must hold the
432mmap_sem in read (or write) mode to be sure an huge pmd cannot be
433created from under you by khugepaged (khugepaged collapse_huge_page
434takes the mmap_sem in write mode in addition to the anon_vma lock). If
435pmd_trans_huge returns false, you just fallback in the old code
436paths. If instead pmd_trans_huge returns true, you have to take the
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437page table lock (pmd_lock()) and re-run pmd_trans_huge. Taking the
438page table lock will prevent the huge pmd to be converted into a
439regular pmd from under you (split_huge_pmd can run in parallel to the
1c9bf22c 440pagetable walk). If the second pmd_trans_huge returns false, you
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441should just drop the page table lock and fallback to the old code as
442before. Otherwise you can proceed to process the huge pmd and the
443hugepage natively. Once finished you can drop the page table lock.
444
445== Refcounts and transparent huge pages ==
446
447Refcounting on THP is mostly consistent with refcounting on other compound
448pages:
449
0139aa7b 450 - get_page()/put_page() and GUP operate in head page's ->_refcount.
a46e6376 451
0139aa7b 452 - ->_refcount in tail pages is always zero: get_page_unless_zero() never
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453 succeed on tail pages.
454
455 - map/unmap of the pages with PTE entry increment/decrement ->_mapcount
456 on relevant sub-page of the compound page.
457
458 - map/unmap of the whole compound page accounted in compound_mapcount
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459 (stored in first tail page). For file huge pages, we also increment
460 ->_mapcount of all sub-pages in order to have race-free detection of
461 last unmap of subpages.
a46e6376 462
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463PageDoubleMap() indicates that the page is *possibly* mapped with PTEs.
464
465For anonymous pages PageDoubleMap() also indicates ->_mapcount in all
466subpages is offset up by one. This additional reference is required to
467get race-free detection of unmap of subpages when we have them mapped with
468both PMDs and PTEs.
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469
470This is optimization required to lower overhead of per-subpage mapcount
471tracking. The alternative is alter ->_mapcount in all subpages on each
472map/unmap of the whole compound page.
473
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474For anonymous pages, we set PG_double_map when a PMD of the page got split
475for the first time, but still have PMD mapping. The additional references
476go away with last compound_mapcount.
477
478File pages get PG_double_map set on first map of the page with PTE and
479goes away when the page gets evicted from page cache.
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480
481split_huge_page internally has to distribute the refcounts in the head
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482page to the tail pages before clearing all PG_head/tail bits from the page
483structures. It can be done easily for refcounts taken by page table
484entries. But we don't have enough information on how to distribute any
485additional pins (i.e. from get_user_pages). split_huge_page() fails any
486requests to split pinned huge page: it expects page count to be equal to
487sum of mapcount of all sub-pages plus one (split_huge_page caller must
488have reference for head page).
489
0139aa7b 490split_huge_page uses migration entries to stabilize page->_refcount and
1b5946a8 491page->_mapcount of anonymous pages. File pages just got unmapped.
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492
493We safe against physical memory scanners too: the only legitimate way
494scanner can get reference to a page is get_page_unless_zero().
495
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496All tail pages have zero ->_refcount until atomic_add(). This prevents the
497scanner from getting a reference to the tail page up to that point. After the
498atomic_add() we don't care about the ->_refcount value. We already known how
499many references should be uncharged from the head page.
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500
501For head page get_page_unless_zero() will succeed and we don't mind. It's
502clear where reference should go after split: it will stay on head page.
503
504Note that split_huge_pmd() doesn't have any limitation on refcounting:
505pmd can be split at any point and never fails.
506
507== Partial unmap and deferred_split_huge_page() ==
508
509Unmapping part of THP (with munmap() or other way) is not going to free
510memory immediately. Instead, we detect that a subpage of THP is not in use
511in page_remove_rmap() and queue the THP for splitting if memory pressure
512comes. Splitting will free up unused subpages.
513
514Splitting the page right away is not an option due to locking context in
515the place where we can detect partial unmap. It's also might be
516counterproductive since in many cases partial unmap unmap happens during
517exit(2) if an THP crosses VMA boundary.
518
519Function deferred_split_huge_page() is used to queue page for splitting.
520The splitting itself will happen when we get memory pressure via shrinker
521interface.