Linux 6.0-rc1
[linux-2.6-microblaze.git] / mm / mapping_dirty_helpers.c
1 // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2 #include <linux/pagewalk.h>
3 #include <linux/hugetlb.h>
4 #include <linux/bitops.h>
5 #include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
6 #include <asm/cacheflush.h>
7 #include <asm/tlbflush.h>
8
9 /**
10  * struct wp_walk - Private struct for pagetable walk callbacks
11  * @range: Range for mmu notifiers
12  * @tlbflush_start: Address of first modified pte
13  * @tlbflush_end: Address of last modified pte + 1
14  * @total: Total number of modified ptes
15  */
16 struct wp_walk {
17         struct mmu_notifier_range range;
18         unsigned long tlbflush_start;
19         unsigned long tlbflush_end;
20         unsigned long total;
21 };
22
23 /**
24  * wp_pte - Write-protect a pte
25  * @pte: Pointer to the pte
26  * @addr: The start of protecting virtual address
27  * @end: The end of protecting virtual address
28  * @walk: pagetable walk callback argument
29  *
30  * The function write-protects a pte and records the range in
31  * virtual address space of touched ptes for efficient range TLB flushes.
32  */
33 static int wp_pte(pte_t *pte, unsigned long addr, unsigned long end,
34                   struct mm_walk *walk)
35 {
36         struct wp_walk *wpwalk = walk->private;
37         pte_t ptent = *pte;
38
39         if (pte_write(ptent)) {
40                 pte_t old_pte = ptep_modify_prot_start(walk->vma, addr, pte);
41
42                 ptent = pte_wrprotect(old_pte);
43                 ptep_modify_prot_commit(walk->vma, addr, pte, old_pte, ptent);
44                 wpwalk->total++;
45                 wpwalk->tlbflush_start = min(wpwalk->tlbflush_start, addr);
46                 wpwalk->tlbflush_end = max(wpwalk->tlbflush_end,
47                                            addr + PAGE_SIZE);
48         }
49
50         return 0;
51 }
52
53 /**
54  * struct clean_walk - Private struct for the clean_record_pte function.
55  * @base: struct wp_walk we derive from
56  * @bitmap_pgoff: Address_space Page offset of the first bit in @bitmap
57  * @bitmap: Bitmap with one bit for each page offset in the address_space range
58  * covered.
59  * @start: Address_space page offset of first modified pte relative
60  * to @bitmap_pgoff
61  * @end: Address_space page offset of last modified pte relative
62  * to @bitmap_pgoff
63  */
64 struct clean_walk {
65         struct wp_walk base;
66         pgoff_t bitmap_pgoff;
67         unsigned long *bitmap;
68         pgoff_t start;
69         pgoff_t end;
70 };
71
72 #define to_clean_walk(_wpwalk) container_of(_wpwalk, struct clean_walk, base)
73
74 /**
75  * clean_record_pte - Clean a pte and record its address space offset in a
76  * bitmap
77  * @pte: Pointer to the pte
78  * @addr: The start of virtual address to be clean
79  * @end: The end of virtual address to be clean
80  * @walk: pagetable walk callback argument
81  *
82  * The function cleans a pte and records the range in
83  * virtual address space of touched ptes for efficient TLB flushes.
84  * It also records dirty ptes in a bitmap representing page offsets
85  * in the address_space, as well as the first and last of the bits
86  * touched.
87  */
88 static int clean_record_pte(pte_t *pte, unsigned long addr,
89                             unsigned long end, struct mm_walk *walk)
90 {
91         struct wp_walk *wpwalk = walk->private;
92         struct clean_walk *cwalk = to_clean_walk(wpwalk);
93         pte_t ptent = *pte;
94
95         if (pte_dirty(ptent)) {
96                 pgoff_t pgoff = ((addr - walk->vma->vm_start) >> PAGE_SHIFT) +
97                         walk->vma->vm_pgoff - cwalk->bitmap_pgoff;
98                 pte_t old_pte = ptep_modify_prot_start(walk->vma, addr, pte);
99
100                 ptent = pte_mkclean(old_pte);
101                 ptep_modify_prot_commit(walk->vma, addr, pte, old_pte, ptent);
102
103                 wpwalk->total++;
104                 wpwalk->tlbflush_start = min(wpwalk->tlbflush_start, addr);
105                 wpwalk->tlbflush_end = max(wpwalk->tlbflush_end,
106                                            addr + PAGE_SIZE);
107
108                 __set_bit(pgoff, cwalk->bitmap);
109                 cwalk->start = min(cwalk->start, pgoff);
110                 cwalk->end = max(cwalk->end, pgoff + 1);
111         }
112
113         return 0;
114 }
115
116 /*
117  * wp_clean_pmd_entry - The pagewalk pmd callback.
118  *
119  * Dirty-tracking should take place on the PTE level, so
120  * WARN() if encountering a dirty huge pmd.
121  * Furthermore, never split huge pmds, since that currently
122  * causes dirty info loss. The pagefault handler should do
123  * that if needed.
124  */
125 static int wp_clean_pmd_entry(pmd_t *pmd, unsigned long addr, unsigned long end,
126                               struct mm_walk *walk)
127 {
128         pmd_t pmdval = pmd_read_atomic(pmd);
129
130         if (!pmd_trans_unstable(&pmdval))
131                 return 0;
132
133         if (pmd_none(pmdval)) {
134                 walk->action = ACTION_AGAIN;
135                 return 0;
136         }
137
138         /* Huge pmd, present or migrated */
139         walk->action = ACTION_CONTINUE;
140         if (pmd_trans_huge(pmdval) || pmd_devmap(pmdval))
141                 WARN_ON(pmd_write(pmdval) || pmd_dirty(pmdval));
142
143         return 0;
144 }
145
146 /*
147  * wp_clean_pud_entry - The pagewalk pud callback.
148  *
149  * Dirty-tracking should take place on the PTE level, so
150  * WARN() if encountering a dirty huge puds.
151  * Furthermore, never split huge puds, since that currently
152  * causes dirty info loss. The pagefault handler should do
153  * that if needed.
154  */
155 static int wp_clean_pud_entry(pud_t *pud, unsigned long addr, unsigned long end,
156                               struct mm_walk *walk)
157 {
158         pud_t pudval = READ_ONCE(*pud);
159
160         if (!pud_trans_unstable(&pudval))
161                 return 0;
162
163         if (pud_none(pudval)) {
164                 walk->action = ACTION_AGAIN;
165                 return 0;
166         }
167
168 #ifdef CONFIG_HAVE_ARCH_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE_PUD
169         /* Huge pud */
170         walk->action = ACTION_CONTINUE;
171         if (pud_trans_huge(pudval) || pud_devmap(pudval))
172                 WARN_ON(pud_write(pudval) || pud_dirty(pudval));
173 #endif
174
175         return 0;
176 }
177
178 /*
179  * wp_clean_pre_vma - The pagewalk pre_vma callback.
180  *
181  * The pre_vma callback performs the cache flush, stages the tlb flush
182  * and calls the necessary mmu notifiers.
183  */
184 static int wp_clean_pre_vma(unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
185                             struct mm_walk *walk)
186 {
187         struct wp_walk *wpwalk = walk->private;
188
189         wpwalk->tlbflush_start = end;
190         wpwalk->tlbflush_end = start;
191
192         mmu_notifier_range_init(&wpwalk->range, MMU_NOTIFY_PROTECTION_PAGE, 0,
193                                 walk->vma, walk->mm, start, end);
194         mmu_notifier_invalidate_range_start(&wpwalk->range);
195         flush_cache_range(walk->vma, start, end);
196
197         /*
198          * We're not using tlb_gather_mmu() since typically
199          * only a small subrange of PTEs are affected, whereas
200          * tlb_gather_mmu() records the full range.
201          */
202         inc_tlb_flush_pending(walk->mm);
203
204         return 0;
205 }
206
207 /*
208  * wp_clean_post_vma - The pagewalk post_vma callback.
209  *
210  * The post_vma callback performs the tlb flush and calls necessary mmu
211  * notifiers.
212  */
213 static void wp_clean_post_vma(struct mm_walk *walk)
214 {
215         struct wp_walk *wpwalk = walk->private;
216
217         if (mm_tlb_flush_nested(walk->mm))
218                 flush_tlb_range(walk->vma, wpwalk->range.start,
219                                 wpwalk->range.end);
220         else if (wpwalk->tlbflush_end > wpwalk->tlbflush_start)
221                 flush_tlb_range(walk->vma, wpwalk->tlbflush_start,
222                                 wpwalk->tlbflush_end);
223
224         mmu_notifier_invalidate_range_end(&wpwalk->range);
225         dec_tlb_flush_pending(walk->mm);
226 }
227
228 /*
229  * wp_clean_test_walk - The pagewalk test_walk callback.
230  *
231  * Won't perform dirty-tracking on COW, read-only or HUGETLB vmas.
232  */
233 static int wp_clean_test_walk(unsigned long start, unsigned long end,
234                               struct mm_walk *walk)
235 {
236         unsigned long vm_flags = READ_ONCE(walk->vma->vm_flags);
237
238         /* Skip non-applicable VMAs */
239         if ((vm_flags & (VM_SHARED | VM_MAYWRITE | VM_HUGETLB)) !=
240             (VM_SHARED | VM_MAYWRITE))
241                 return 1;
242
243         return 0;
244 }
245
246 static const struct mm_walk_ops clean_walk_ops = {
247         .pte_entry = clean_record_pte,
248         .pmd_entry = wp_clean_pmd_entry,
249         .pud_entry = wp_clean_pud_entry,
250         .test_walk = wp_clean_test_walk,
251         .pre_vma = wp_clean_pre_vma,
252         .post_vma = wp_clean_post_vma
253 };
254
255 static const struct mm_walk_ops wp_walk_ops = {
256         .pte_entry = wp_pte,
257         .pmd_entry = wp_clean_pmd_entry,
258         .pud_entry = wp_clean_pud_entry,
259         .test_walk = wp_clean_test_walk,
260         .pre_vma = wp_clean_pre_vma,
261         .post_vma = wp_clean_post_vma
262 };
263
264 /**
265  * wp_shared_mapping_range - Write-protect all ptes in an address space range
266  * @mapping: The address_space we want to write protect
267  * @first_index: The first page offset in the range
268  * @nr: Number of incremental page offsets to cover
269  *
270  * Note: This function currently skips transhuge page-table entries, since
271  * it's intended for dirty-tracking on the PTE level. It will warn on
272  * encountering transhuge write-enabled entries, though, and can easily be
273  * extended to handle them as well.
274  *
275  * Return: The number of ptes actually write-protected. Note that
276  * already write-protected ptes are not counted.
277  */
278 unsigned long wp_shared_mapping_range(struct address_space *mapping,
279                                       pgoff_t first_index, pgoff_t nr)
280 {
281         struct wp_walk wpwalk = { .total = 0 };
282
283         i_mmap_lock_read(mapping);
284         WARN_ON(walk_page_mapping(mapping, first_index, nr, &wp_walk_ops,
285                                   &wpwalk));
286         i_mmap_unlock_read(mapping);
287
288         return wpwalk.total;
289 }
290 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(wp_shared_mapping_range);
291
292 /**
293  * clean_record_shared_mapping_range - Clean and record all ptes in an
294  * address space range
295  * @mapping: The address_space we want to clean
296  * @first_index: The first page offset in the range
297  * @nr: Number of incremental page offsets to cover
298  * @bitmap_pgoff: The page offset of the first bit in @bitmap
299  * @bitmap: Pointer to a bitmap of at least @nr bits. The bitmap needs to
300  * cover the whole range @first_index..@first_index + @nr.
301  * @start: Pointer to number of the first set bit in @bitmap.
302  * is modified as new bits are set by the function.
303  * @end: Pointer to the number of the last set bit in @bitmap.
304  * none set. The value is modified as new bits are set by the function.
305  *
306  * Note: When this function returns there is no guarantee that a CPU has
307  * not already dirtied new ptes. However it will not clean any ptes not
308  * reported in the bitmap. The guarantees are as follows:
309  * a) All ptes dirty when the function starts executing will end up recorded
310  *    in the bitmap.
311  * b) All ptes dirtied after that will either remain dirty, be recorded in the
312  *    bitmap or both.
313  *
314  * If a caller needs to make sure all dirty ptes are picked up and none
315  * additional are added, it first needs to write-protect the address-space
316  * range and make sure new writers are blocked in page_mkwrite() or
317  * pfn_mkwrite(). And then after a TLB flush following the write-protection
318  * pick up all dirty bits.
319  *
320  * This function currently skips transhuge page-table entries, since
321  * it's intended for dirty-tracking on the PTE level. It will warn on
322  * encountering transhuge dirty entries, though, and can easily be extended
323  * to handle them as well.
324  *
325  * Return: The number of dirty ptes actually cleaned.
326  */
327 unsigned long clean_record_shared_mapping_range(struct address_space *mapping,
328                                                 pgoff_t first_index, pgoff_t nr,
329                                                 pgoff_t bitmap_pgoff,
330                                                 unsigned long *bitmap,
331                                                 pgoff_t *start,
332                                                 pgoff_t *end)
333 {
334         bool none_set = (*start >= *end);
335         struct clean_walk cwalk = {
336                 .base = { .total = 0 },
337                 .bitmap_pgoff = bitmap_pgoff,
338                 .bitmap = bitmap,
339                 .start = none_set ? nr : *start,
340                 .end = none_set ? 0 : *end,
341         };
342
343         i_mmap_lock_read(mapping);
344         WARN_ON(walk_page_mapping(mapping, first_index, nr, &clean_walk_ops,
345                                   &cwalk.base));
346         i_mmap_unlock_read(mapping);
347
348         *start = cwalk.start;
349         *end = cwalk.end;
350
351         return cwalk.base.total;
352 }
353 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(clean_record_shared_mapping_range);