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authorHugh Dickins <hugh@veritas.com>2005-04-19 13:29:15 -0700
committerLinus Torvalds <torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org.(none)>2005-04-19 13:29:15 -0700
commite0da382c92626ad1d7f4b7527d19b80104d67a83 (patch)
treeb3f455518c286ee14cb2755ced8808487bca7911 /arch/i386/mm/pgtable.c
parent9f6c6fc505560465be0964eb4da1b6ca97bd3951 (diff)
[PATCH] freepgt: free_pgtables use vma list
Recent woes with some arches needing their own pgd_addr_end macro; and 4-level clear_page_range regression since 2.6.10's clear_page_tables; and its long-standing well-known inefficiency in searching throughout the higher-level page tables for those few entries to clear and free: all can be blamed on ignoring the list of vmas when we free page tables. Replace exit_mmap's clear_page_range of the total user address space by free_pgtables operating on the mm's vma list; unmap_region use it in the same way, giving floor and ceiling beyond which it may not free tables. This brings lmbench fork/exec/sh numbers back to 2.6.10 (unless preempt is enabled, in which case latency fixes spoil unmap_vmas throughput). Beware: the do_mmap_pgoff driver failure case must now use unmap_region instead of zap_page_range, since a page table might have been allocated, and can only be freed while it is touched by some vma. Move free_pgtables from mmap.c to memory.c, where its lower levels are adapted from the clear_page_range levels. (Most of free_pgtables' old code was actually for a non-existent case, prev not properly set up, dating from before hch gave us split_vma.) Pass mmu_gather** in the public interfaces, since we might want to add latency lockdrops later; but no attempt to do so yet, going by vma should itself reduce latency. But what if is_hugepage_only_range? Those ia64 and ppc64 cases need careful examination: put that off until a later patch of the series. What of x86_64's 32bit vdso page __map_syscall32 maps outside any vma? And the range to sparc64's flush_tlb_pgtables? It's less clear to me now that we need to do more than is done here - every PMD_SIZE ever occupied will be flushed, do we really have to flush every PGDIR_SIZE ever partially occupied? A shame to complicate it unnecessarily. Special thanks to David Miller for time spent repairing my ceilings. Signed-off-by: Hugh Dickins <hugh@veritas.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'arch/i386/mm/pgtable.c')
-rw-r--r--arch/i386/mm/pgtable.c2
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/arch/i386/mm/pgtable.c b/arch/i386/mm/pgtable.c
index 0742d54f8bb..dd81479ff88 100644
--- a/arch/i386/mm/pgtable.c
+++ b/arch/i386/mm/pgtable.c
@@ -255,6 +255,6 @@ void pgd_free(pgd_t *pgd)
if (PTRS_PER_PMD > 1)
for (i = 0; i < USER_PTRS_PER_PGD; ++i)
kmem_cache_free(pmd_cache, (void *)__va(pgd_val(pgd[i])-1));
- /* in the non-PAE case, clear_page_range() clears user pgd entries */
+ /* in the non-PAE case, free_pgtables() clears user pgd entries */
kmem_cache_free(pgd_cache, pgd);
}