On 6/2/20 4:18 PM, Kirill A. Shutemov wrote:
On Tue, May 26, 2020 at 07:27:15AM -0700, Dave Hansen wrote:
On 5/25/20 8:08 AM, Kirill A. Shutemov wrote:
- if (not_addressable) {
pr_err("%lldGB of physical memory is not addressable in the paging mode\n",
not_addressable >> 30);
if (!pgtable_l5_enabled())
pr_err("Consider enabling 5-level paging\n");
Could this happen at all when l5 is enabled? Does it mean we need kmap() for 64-bit?
It's future-profing. Who knows what paging modes we would have in the future.
Future-proofing and firmware-proofing. :)
In any case, are we *really* limited to 52 bits of physical memory with 5-level paging?
Yes. It's architectural. SDM says "MAXPHYADDR is at most 52" (Vol 3A, 4.1.4).
Right you are.
I'm glad it's in the architecture. Makes all of this a lot easier!
So shouldn't it technically be this:
#define MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS (pgtable_l5_enabled() ? 55 : 46)
?
Bits above 52 are ignored in the page table entries and accessible to software. Some of them got claimed by HW features (XD-bit, protection keys), but such features require explicit opt-in on software side.
Kernel could claim bits 53-55 for the physical address, but it doesn't get us anything: if future HW would provide such feature it would require opt-in. On other hand claiming them now means we cannot use them for other purposes as SW bit. I don't see a point.
Yep, agreed.