On Tue, Jun 14, 2022 at 12:32 AM Chao Peng <chao.p.p...@linux.intel.com> wrote: > > On Thu, Jun 09, 2022 at 08:29:06PM +0000, Sean Christopherson wrote: > > On Wed, Jun 08, 2022, Vishal Annapurve wrote: > > > > One argument is that userspace can simply rely on cgroups to detect > > misbehaving > > guests, but (a) those types of OOMs will be a nightmare to debug and (b) an > > OOM > > kill from the host is typically considered a _host_ issue and will be > > treated as > > a missed SLO. > > > > An idea for handling this in the kernel without too much complexity would > > be to > > add F_SEAL_FAULT_ALLOCATIONS (terrible name) that would prevent page faults > > from > > allocating pages, i.e. holes can only be filled by an explicit fallocate(). > > Minor > > faults, e.g. due to NUMA balancing stupidity, and major faults due to swap > > would > > still work, but writes to previously unreserved/unallocated memory would > > get a > > SIGSEGV on something it has mapped. That would allow the userspace VMM to > > prevent > > unintentional allocations without having to coordinate unmapping/remapping > > across > > multiple processes. > > Since this is mainly for shared memory and the motivation is catching > misbehaved access, can we use mprotect(PROT_NONE) for this? We can mark > those range backed by private fd as PROT_NONE during the conversion so > subsequence misbehaved accesses will be blocked instead of causing double > allocation silently.
This patch series is fairly close to implementing a rather more efficient solution. I'm not familiar enough with hypervisor userspace to really know if this would work, but: What if shared guest memory could also be file-backed, either in the same fd or with a second fd covering the shared portion of a memslot? This would allow changes to the backing store (punching holes, etc) to be some without mmap_lock or host-userspace TLB flushes? Depending on what the guest is doing with its shared memory, userspace might need the memory mapped or it might not. --Andy