KVM: MMU: lazily drop large spte

Currently, kvm zaps the large spte if write-protected is needed, the later
read can fault on that spte. Actually, we can make the large spte readonly
instead of making them not present, the page fault caused by read access can
be avoided

The idea is from Avi:
| As I mentioned before, write-protecting a large spte is a good idea,
| since it moves some work from protect-time to fault-time, so it reduces
| jitter.  This removes the need for the return value.

Reviewed-by: Gleb Natapov <gleb@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Xiao Guangrong <xiaoguangrong@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcelo Tosatti <mtosatti@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Xiao Guangrong 2013-02-05 15:11:09 +08:00 committed by Marcelo Tosatti
parent 5037878e22
commit caf6900f2d

View File

@ -1106,8 +1106,7 @@ static void drop_large_spte(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, u64 *sptep)
/*
* Write-protect on the specified @sptep, @pt_protect indicates whether
* spte writ-protection is caused by protecting shadow page table.
* @flush indicates whether tlb need be flushed.
* spte write-protection is caused by protecting shadow page table.
*
* Note: write protection is difference between drity logging and spte
* protection:
@ -1116,10 +1115,9 @@ static void drop_large_spte(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, u64 *sptep)
* - for spte protection, the spte can be writable only after unsync-ing
* shadow page.
*
* Return true if the spte is dropped.
* Return true if tlb need be flushed.
*/
static bool
spte_write_protect(struct kvm *kvm, u64 *sptep, bool *flush, bool pt_protect)
static bool spte_write_protect(struct kvm *kvm, u64 *sptep, bool pt_protect)
{
u64 spte = *sptep;
@ -1129,17 +1127,11 @@ spte_write_protect(struct kvm *kvm, u64 *sptep, bool *flush, bool pt_protect)
rmap_printk("rmap_write_protect: spte %p %llx\n", sptep, *sptep);
if (__drop_large_spte(kvm, sptep)) {
*flush |= true;
return true;
}
if (pt_protect)
spte &= ~SPTE_MMU_WRITEABLE;
spte = spte & ~PT_WRITABLE_MASK;
*flush |= mmu_spte_update(sptep, spte);
return false;
return mmu_spte_update(sptep, spte);
}
static bool __rmap_write_protect(struct kvm *kvm, unsigned long *rmapp,
@ -1151,11 +1143,8 @@ static bool __rmap_write_protect(struct kvm *kvm, unsigned long *rmapp,
for (sptep = rmap_get_first(*rmapp, &iter); sptep;) {
BUG_ON(!(*sptep & PT_PRESENT_MASK));
if (spte_write_protect(kvm, sptep, &flush, pt_protect)) {
sptep = rmap_get_first(*rmapp, &iter);
continue;
}
flush |= spte_write_protect(kvm, sptep, pt_protect);
sptep = rmap_get_next(&iter);
}
@ -2596,6 +2585,8 @@ static int __direct_map(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, gpa_t v, int write,
break;
}
drop_large_spte(vcpu, iterator.sptep);
if (!is_shadow_present_pte(*iterator.sptep)) {
u64 base_addr = iterator.addr;