From: Oscar Salvador <osalvador@suse.de>
To: Uday Shankar <ushankar@purestorage.com>
Cc: Muchun Song <muchun.song@linux.dev>,
Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>,
Joern Engel <joern@purestorage.com>,
linux-mm@kvack.org
Subject: Re: [bug report?] unintuitive behavior when mapping over hugepage-backed PROT_NONE regions
Date: Thu, 6 Feb 2025 10:01:05 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <Z6R6USWFfyjWljth@localhost.localdomain> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <Z6RUOjNaBpTYUAs6@dev-ushankar.dev.purestorage.com>
On Wed, Feb 05, 2025 at 11:18:34PM -0700, Uday Shankar wrote:
> I was debugging an issue with a malloc implementation when I noticed
> some unintuitive behavior that happens when someone attempts to
> overwrite part of a hugepage-backed PROT_NONE mapping with another
> mapping. I've isolated the issue and reproduced it with the following
> program:
...
> First, we map a 2G PROT_NONE region using hugepages. This succeeds. Then
> we try to map a 4096-length PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE region at the
> beginning of the PROT_NONE region, still using hugepages. This fails, as
> expected, because 4096 is much smaller than the hugepage size configured
> on the system (this is x86 with a default hugepage size of 2M). The
Not really, see how ksys_mmap_pgoff() aligns len to huge_page_size if we
set MAP_HUGETLB.
It fails with ENOMEM because likely you did not preallocate any hugetlb
pages, so by the time we do hugetlbfs_file_mmap()->hugetlb_reserve_pages(),
it sees that we do not have enough hugetlb pages in the pool to be reserved,
so it bails out.
> surprising thing is the difference in /proc/pid/smaps before and after
> the failed mmap. Even though the mmap failed, the value in
> /proc/pid/smaps changed, with a 2M-sized bite being taken out the front
> of the mapping. This feels unintuitive to me, as I'd expect a failed
> mmap to have no effect on the virtual memory mappings of the calling
> process whatsoever.
That is because the above happens after __mmap_prepare(), which is
responsible of unmapping any overlapping areas, is executed.
I guess this is done this way because rolling back at this point would be
quite tricky.
--
Oscar Salvador
SUSE Labs
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2025-02-06 9:01 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 16+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2025-02-06 6:18 Uday Shankar
2025-02-06 9:01 ` Oscar Salvador [this message]
2025-02-06 18:11 ` Jörn Engel
2025-02-06 18:54 ` Oscar Salvador
2025-02-07 10:29 ` Lorenzo Stoakes
2025-02-07 10:49 ` Vlastimil Babka
2025-02-07 12:33 ` Lorenzo Stoakes
2025-02-06 19:44 ` Uday Shankar
2025-02-07 13:12 ` Lorenzo Stoakes
2025-02-07 19:35 ` Jörn Engel
2025-02-08 16:02 ` Lorenzo Stoakes
2025-02-08 17:37 ` Jörn Engel
2025-02-08 17:40 ` Lorenzo Stoakes
2025-02-08 17:53 ` Jörn Engel
2025-02-08 18:00 ` Lorenzo Stoakes
2025-02-08 21:16 ` Jörn Engel
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