From 6bed6f598e87d2799c5fc9bef331b5e4e9f8ed16 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Sergey Bugaev Date: Wed, 11 Oct 2023 01:20:19 -0400 Subject: open_issues/gnumach_vm_map_entry_forward_merging.mdwn: edited one of sergey's emails into this wiki page. Message-ID: <20231011052019.1790-1-jbranso@dismail.de> --- .../gnumach_vm_map_entry_forward_merging.mdwn | 187 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 187 insertions(+) (limited to 'open_issues/gnumach_vm_map_entry_forward_merging.mdwn') diff --git a/open_issues/gnumach_vm_map_entry_forward_merging.mdwn b/open_issues/gnumach_vm_map_entry_forward_merging.mdwn index 7739f4d1..b34bd61e 100644 --- a/open_issues/gnumach_vm_map_entry_forward_merging.mdwn +++ b/open_issues/gnumach_vm_map_entry_forward_merging.mdwn @@ -10,6 +10,193 @@ License|/fdl]]."]]"""]] [[!tag open_issue_gnumach]] +Mach is not always able to merge/coalesce mappings (VM entries) that +are made next to each other, leading to potentially very large numbers +of VM entries, which may slow down the VM functionality. This is said +to particularly affect ext2fs and bash. + +The basic idea of Mach designers is that entry coalescing is only an +optimization anyway, not a hard guarantee. We can apply it in the +common simple case, and just refuse to do it in any remotely complex +cases (copies, shadows, multiply referenced objects, pageout in +progress, ...). + +Suppose you define a special test program that intentionally maps +parts of a file next to each other and watches the resulting VM map +entries, and just ran a full Hurd system and observed results. + +One can stress test ext2fs in particular to check for VM entry +merging: + + # grep NR -r /usr &> /dev/null + # vminfo 8 | wc -l + +That grep opens and reads lots of files to simulate a long-running +machine (perhaps a build server); then one can look at the number of +mappings in ext2fs afterwards. Depending on how much your /usr is +populated, you will get different numbers. An older Hurd from say +2022, the above comand would result in 5,000-20,000 entries depending +on the machine! In June 2023, GNUMach gained some forward merging +functinality, which lowered the number of mappings down to 93 entries! + +(It is a separate question of why ext2fs makes that many mappings in +the first place. There could possible by a leak in ext2fs that would +be responsible for this, but none have been found so far. Possibly +another problem is that we have an unbounded node cache in libdiskfs +and Mach caching VM objects, which also keeps the node alive.) + +These are the simple forward merging cases that GNUMach now supports: + +- Forward merging: in `vm_map_enter`, merging with the next entry, in + addition to merging with the previous entry that was already there; + +- For forward merging, a `VM_OBJECT_NULL` can be merged in front of a + non-null VM object, provided the second entry has large enough + offset into the object to 'mount' the the first entry in front of + it; + +- A VM object can always be merged with itself (provded offsets/sizes + match) -- this allows merging entries referencing non-anonymous VM + objects too, such a file mappings; + +- Operations such as `vm_protect` do "clipping", which means splitting + up VM map entries, in case the specified region lands in the middle + of an entry -- but they were never "gluing" (merging, coalescing) + entries back together if the region is later vm_protect'ed back. Now + this is done (and we try to coalesce in some other cases too). This + should particularly help with "program break" (brk) in glibc, which + vm_protect's the pages allocated for the brk back and forth all the + time. + +- As another optimization, throw away unmapped physical pages when + there are no other references to the object (provided there is no + pager). Previously the pages would remain in core until the object + was either unmapped completely, or until another mapping was to be + created in place of the unmapped one and coalescing kicked in. + +- Also shrink the size of `struct vm_page` somewhat. This was a low + hanging fruit. + +`vm_map_coalesce_entry()` is analogous to `vm_map_simplify_entry()` in +other versions of Mach, but different enough to warrant a different +name. The same "coalesce" wording was used as in +`vm_object_coalesce()`, which is appropriate given that the former is +a wrapper for the latter. + +### The following provides clarifies some inaccuracies in old IRC logs: + + any request, be it e.g. `mmap()`, or `mprotect()`, can easily split + entries + +`mmap ()` cannot split entries to my knowledge, unless we're talking about +`MAP_FIXED` and unampping parts of the existing mappings. + + my ext2fs has ~6500 entries, but I guess this is related to + mapping blocks from the filesystem, right? + +No. Neither libdiskfs nor ext2fs ever map the store contents into memory +(arguably maybe they should); they just read them with `store_read ()`, +and then dispose of the the read buffers properly. The excessive number +of VM map entries, as far as I can see, is just heap memory. + + (I'm perplexed about how the kernel can merge two memory objects if + disctinct port names exist in the tasks' name space -- that's what + `mem_obj` is, right?) + + if, say, 584 and 585 above are port names which the task expects to be + able to access and do stuff with, what will happen to them when the + memory objects are merged? + +`mem_obj` in `vminfo` output is the VM object *name* port, not the +pager port (arguably `vminfo` should name it something other than +`mem_obj`). The name port is basically useful for seeing if two VM +regions have the exact same VM object mapped, and not much +else. Previously, it was also possible, as a GNU Mach extension, to +pass the name port into `vm_map ()`, but this was dropped for security +reasons. When Mach is built with `MACH_VM_DEBUG`, a name port can also +be used to query information about a VM object. + +Mach can't merge two memory objects. Mach doesn't merge *memory objects* +at all, it only merges/coalesces *VM objects*. The difference is subtle, +but important in certain contexts like this one: a "VM object" refers to +Mach's internal representation (`struct vm_object`), and a "memory object" +refers to the memory manager's implementation. There is normally a +1-to-1 correspondence between the two, but this is not always the case: +internal VM objects start without a memory object (pager) port at all, +and only get one created if/when they're paged out. There can be +multiple VM objects referencing the same backing memory object due to +copying and shadowing. + +So what Mach could do is merge the internal VM objects, by altering +page offsets to paste pages of one of the objects after the pager of +the other. But this is not implemented yet. What Mach actually does is +it avoids creating those internal VM objects and entries in the first +place, instead extending an already existing VM object and entry to +cover the new mapping. + + but at least, if two `vm_objects` are created but reference the same + externel memory object, the vm should be able to merge them back + +That never ever happens. There can only be a single `vm_object` for a +memory object. (In a single instance of Mach, that is -- if multiple +Machs access the same memory object over network-transparent IPC, each +is going to have its own `vm_object` representing the memory object.) + +See `vm_object_enter()` function, which looks up an existing VM object for +a memory object, and creates one if it doesn't yet exist. + + ok so if I get it right, the entries shown by `vmstat` are the + `vm_object`, and the mem_obj listed is a send right to the memory + object they're referencing ? + + yes + +No. The entries shown are VM map entries (`struct vm_map_entry`). There +can be entries that reference no VM object at all (`VM_OBJECT_NULL`), or +multiple entries that reference the same VM object. In fact this is +visible in the example above, the two entries mapped at `0x1311000` and at +`0x1314000` reference the same VM object, whose name port is 586. + +`mem_obj` listed is a send right to the *name* port of the VM object, not +to the memory object. Letting a task get the memory object port would be +disastrous for security (see the "No read-only mappings" vulnerability). + + i'm not sure about the type of the integer showed (port name or simply + an index) + +It is a port name (in vminfo's IPC name space) of the VM object name +port. + + if every `vm_allocate` request implies the creation of a memory object + from the default pager + +Not immediately, no. Only if the memory has to be paged out. Otherwise +an internal VM object is created without a memory object. + + and a `vm_object` is not a capability, but just an internal kernel + structure used to record the composition of the address space + +It is a kernel structure, but it also is a capability in the same way as +a task or a thread is a capability -- it is exposed as a port. +Specifically, a `memory_object_control_t` port is directly converted to a +`struct vm_object` by MIG. This would perhaps be clearer if +`memory_object_control_t` was instead named `vm_object_t`. The VM object +name port is also converted to a VM object, but this is only used in the +`MACH_VM_DEBUG RPCs`. + + i wonder when `vm_map_enter()` gets null objects though :/ + +Whenever you do `vm_map ()` with `MACH_PORT_NULL` for the object, or on +`vm_allocate ()` which is a shortcut for the same. + + the default pager backs `vm_objects` providing zero filled memory + +If that was the case, there would not be a need for a pager, Mach could +just hand out zero-filled pages. The anonymous mappings do start out +zero-filled, that is true. The default pager gets involved when the +pages are dirtied (so they no longer zero-filled) and there's memory +shortage so the pages have to paged out. + # IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2011-07-20 -- cgit v1.2.3