On 06/12/2017 01:34 PM, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
On Mon, Jun 12, 2017 at 09:42:36AM -0700, Dave Hansen wrote:
On 06/12/2017 09:28 AM, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
The hypervisor is going to throw away the contents of these pages,
right?
It should be careful and only throw away contents that was there before
report_unused_page_block was invoked. Hypervisor is responsible for not
corrupting guest memory. But that's not something an mm patch should
worry about.
That makes sense. I'm struggling to imagine how the hypervisor makes
use of this information, though. Does it make the pages read-only
before this, and then it knows if there has not been a write *and* it
gets notified via this new mechanism that it can throw the page away?
Yes, and specifically, this is how it works for migration. Normally you
start by migrating all of memory, then send updates incrementally if
pages have been modified. This mechanism allows skipping some pages in
the 1st stage, if they get changed they will be migrated in the 2nd
stage.
OK, so the migration starts and marks everything read-only. All the
pages now have read-only valuable data, or read-only worthless data in
the case that the page is in the free lists. In order for a page to
become non-worthless, it has to have a write done to it, which the
hypervisor obviously knows about.
With this mechanism, the hypervisor knows it can discard pages which
have not had a write since they were known to have worthless contents.
Correct?