diff options
author | Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org> | 2006-09-26 13:13:19 -0400 |
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committer | Jeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org> | 2006-09-26 13:13:19 -0400 |
commit | c226951b93f7cd7c3a10b17384535b617bd43fd0 (patch) | |
tree | 07b8796a5c99fbbf587b8d0dbcbc173cfe5e381e /include/linux/mm.h | |
parent | b0df3bd1e553e901ec7297267611a5db88240b38 (diff) | |
parent | e8216dee838c09776680a6f1a2e54d81f3cdfa14 (diff) |
Merge branch 'master' into upstream
Diffstat (limited to 'include/linux/mm.h')
-rw-r--r-- | include/linux/mm.h | 128 |
1 files changed, 93 insertions, 35 deletions
diff --git a/include/linux/mm.h b/include/linux/mm.h index 224178a000d..856f0ee7e84 100644 --- a/include/linux/mm.h +++ b/include/linux/mm.h @@ -15,6 +15,7 @@ #include <linux/fs.h> #include <linux/mutex.h> #include <linux/debug_locks.h> +#include <linux/backing-dev.h> struct mempolicy; struct anon_vma; @@ -218,7 +219,8 @@ struct inode; * Each physical page in the system has a struct page associated with * it to keep track of whatever it is we are using the page for at the * moment. Note that we have no way to track which tasks are using - * a page. + * a page, though if it is a pagecache page, rmap structures can tell us + * who is mapping it. */ struct page { unsigned long flags; /* Atomic flags, some possibly @@ -278,6 +280,12 @@ struct page { */ #include <linux/page-flags.h> +#ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_VM +#define VM_BUG_ON(cond) BUG_ON(cond) +#else +#define VM_BUG_ON(condition) do { } while(0) +#endif + /* * Methods to modify the page usage count. * @@ -292,12 +300,11 @@ struct page { */ /* - * Drop a ref, return true if the logical refcount fell to zero (the page has - * no users) + * Drop a ref, return true if the refcount fell to zero (the page has no users) */ static inline int put_page_testzero(struct page *page) { - BUG_ON(atomic_read(&page->_count) == 0); + VM_BUG_ON(atomic_read(&page->_count) == 0); return atomic_dec_and_test(&page->_count); } @@ -307,11 +314,10 @@ static inline int put_page_testzero(struct page *page) */ static inline int get_page_unless_zero(struct page *page) { + VM_BUG_ON(PageCompound(page)); return atomic_inc_not_zero(&page->_count); } -extern void FASTCALL(__page_cache_release(struct page *)); - static inline int page_count(struct page *page) { if (unlikely(PageCompound(page))) @@ -323,6 +329,7 @@ static inline void get_page(struct page *page) { if (unlikely(PageCompound(page))) page = (struct page *)page_private(page); + VM_BUG_ON(atomic_read(&page->_count) == 0); atomic_inc(&page->_count); } @@ -349,43 +356,55 @@ void split_page(struct page *page, unsigned int order); * For the non-reserved pages, page_count(page) denotes a reference count. * page_count() == 0 means the page is free. page->lru is then used for * freelist management in the buddy allocator. - * page_count() == 1 means the page is used for exactly one purpose - * (e.g. a private data page of one process). + * page_count() > 0 means the page has been allocated. + * + * Pages are allocated by the slab allocator in order to provide memory + * to kmalloc and kmem_cache_alloc. In this case, the management of the + * page, and the fields in 'struct page' are the responsibility of mm/slab.c + * unless a particular usage is carefully commented. (the responsibility of + * freeing the kmalloc memory is the caller's, of course). * - * A page may be used for kmalloc() or anyone else who does a - * __get_free_page(). In this case the page_count() is at least 1, and - * all other fields are unused but should be 0 or NULL. The - * management of this page is the responsibility of the one who uses - * it. + * A page may be used by anyone else who does a __get_free_page(). + * In this case, page_count still tracks the references, and should only + * be used through the normal accessor functions. The top bits of page->flags + * and page->virtual store page management information, but all other fields + * are unused and could be used privately, carefully. The management of this + * page is the responsibility of the one who allocated it, and those who have + * subsequently been given references to it. * - * The other pages (we may call them "process pages") are completely + * The other pages (we may call them "pagecache pages") are completely * managed by the Linux memory manager: I/O, buffers, swapping etc. * The following discussion applies only to them. * - * A page may belong to an inode's memory mapping. In this case, - * page->mapping is the pointer to the inode, and page->index is the - * file offset of the page, in units of PAGE_CACHE_SIZE. + * A pagecache page contains an opaque `private' member, which belongs to the + * page's address_space. Usually, this is the address of a circular list of + * the page's disk buffers. PG_private must be set to tell the VM to call + * into the filesystem to release these pages. * - * A page contains an opaque `private' member, which belongs to the - * page's address_space. Usually, this is the address of a circular - * list of the page's disk buffers. + * A page may belong to an inode's memory mapping. In this case, page->mapping + * is the pointer to the inode, and page->index is the file offset of the page, + * in units of PAGE_CACHE_SIZE. * - * For pages belonging to inodes, the page_count() is the number of - * attaches, plus 1 if `private' contains something, plus one for - * the page cache itself. + * If pagecache pages are not associated with an inode, they are said to be + * anonymous pages. These may become associated with the swapcache, and in that + * case PG_swapcache is set, and page->private is an offset into the swapcache. * - * Instead of keeping dirty/clean pages in per address-space lists, we instead - * now tag pages as dirty/under writeback in the radix tree. + * In either case (swapcache or inode backed), the pagecache itself holds one + * reference to the page. Setting PG_private should also increment the + * refcount. The each user mapping also has a reference to the page. * - * There is also a per-mapping radix tree mapping index to the page - * in memory if present. The tree is rooted at mapping->root. + * The pagecache pages are stored in a per-mapping radix tree, which is + * rooted at mapping->page_tree, and indexed by offset. + * Where 2.4 and early 2.6 kernels kept dirty/clean pages in per-address_space + * lists, we instead now tag pages as dirty/writeback in the radix tree. * - * All process pages can do I/O: + * All pagecache pages may be subject to I/O: * - inode pages may need to be read from disk, * - inode pages which have been modified and are MAP_SHARED may need - * to be written to disk, - * - private pages which have been modified may need to be swapped out - * to swap space and (later) to be read back into memory. + * to be written back to the inode on disk, + * - anonymous pages (including MAP_PRIVATE file mappings) which have been + * modified may need to be swapped out to swap space and (later) to be read + * back into memory. */ /* @@ -463,7 +482,7 @@ void split_page(struct page *page, unsigned int order); #define SECTIONS_MASK ((1UL << SECTIONS_WIDTH) - 1) #define ZONETABLE_MASK ((1UL << ZONETABLE_SHIFT) - 1) -static inline unsigned long page_zonenum(struct page *page) +static inline enum zone_type page_zonenum(struct page *page) { return (page->flags >> ZONES_PGSHIFT) & ZONES_MASK; } @@ -480,23 +499,29 @@ static inline struct zone *page_zone(struct page *page) return zone_table[page_zone_id(page)]; } +static inline unsigned long zone_to_nid(struct zone *zone) +{ + return zone->zone_pgdat->node_id; +} + static inline unsigned long page_to_nid(struct page *page) { if (FLAGS_HAS_NODE) return (page->flags >> NODES_PGSHIFT) & NODES_MASK; else - return page_zone(page)->zone_pgdat->node_id; + return zone_to_nid(page_zone(page)); } static inline unsigned long page_to_section(struct page *page) { return (page->flags >> SECTIONS_PGSHIFT) & SECTIONS_MASK; } -static inline void set_page_zone(struct page *page, unsigned long zone) +static inline void set_page_zone(struct page *page, enum zone_type zone) { page->flags &= ~(ZONES_MASK << ZONES_PGSHIFT); page->flags |= (zone & ZONES_MASK) << ZONES_PGSHIFT; } + static inline void set_page_node(struct page *page, unsigned long node) { page->flags &= ~(NODES_MASK << NODES_PGSHIFT); @@ -508,7 +533,7 @@ static inline void set_page_section(struct page *page, unsigned long section) page->flags |= (section & SECTIONS_MASK) << SECTIONS_PGSHIFT; } -static inline void set_page_links(struct page *page, unsigned long zone, +static inline void set_page_links(struct page *page, enum zone_type zone, unsigned long node, unsigned long pfn) { set_page_zone(page, zone); @@ -802,6 +827,39 @@ struct shrinker; extern struct shrinker *set_shrinker(int, shrinker_t); extern void remove_shrinker(struct shrinker *shrinker); +/* + * Some shared mappigns will want the pages marked read-only + * to track write events. If so, we'll downgrade vm_page_prot + * to the private version (using protection_map[] without the + * VM_SHARED bit). + */ +static inline int vma_wants_writenotify(struct vm_area_struct *vma) +{ + unsigned int vm_flags = vma->vm_flags; + + /* If it was private or non-writable, the write bit is already clear */ + if ((vm_flags & (VM_WRITE|VM_SHARED)) != ((VM_WRITE|VM_SHARED))) + return 0; + + /* The backer wishes to know when pages are first written to? */ + if (vma->vm_ops && vma->vm_ops->page_mkwrite) + return 1; + + /* The open routine did something to the protections already? */ + if (pgprot_val(vma->vm_page_prot) != + pgprot_val(protection_map[vm_flags & + (VM_READ|VM_WRITE|VM_EXEC|VM_SHARED)])) + return 0; + + /* Specialty mapping? */ + if (vm_flags & (VM_PFNMAP|VM_INSERTPAGE)) + return 0; + + /* Can the mapping track the dirty pages? */ + return vma->vm_file && vma->vm_file->f_mapping && + mapping_cap_account_dirty(vma->vm_file->f_mapping); +} + extern pte_t *FASTCALL(get_locked_pte(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, spinlock_t **ptl)); int __pud_alloc(struct mm_struct *mm, pgd_t *pgd, unsigned long address); |