• Kirill A. Shutemov's avatar
    mm: Add support for unaccepted memory · dcdfdd40
    Kirill A. Shutemov authored
    UEFI Specification version 2.9 introduces the concept of memory
    acceptance. Some Virtual Machine platforms, such as Intel TDX or AMD
    SEV-SNP, require memory to be accepted before it can be used by the
    guest. Accepting happens via a protocol specific to the Virtual Machine
    platform.
    
    There are several ways the kernel can deal with unaccepted memory:
    
     1. Accept all the memory during boot. It is easy to implement and it
        doesn't have runtime cost once the system is booted. The downside is
        very long boot time.
    
        Accept can be parallelized to multiple CPUs to keep it manageable
        (i.e. via DEFERRED_STRUCT_PAGE_INIT), but it tends to saturate
        memory bandwidth and does not scale beyond the point.
    
     2. Accept a block of memory on the first use. It requires more
        infrastructure and changes in page allocator to make it work, but
        it provides good boot time.
    
        On-demand memory accept means latency spikes every time kernel steps
        onto a new memory block. The spikes will go away once workload data
        set size gets stabilized or all memory gets accepted.
    
     3. Accept all memory in background. Introduce a thread (or multiple)
        that gets memory accepted proactively. It will minimize time the
        system experience latency spikes on memory allocation while keeping
        low boot time.
    
        This approach cannot function on its own. It is an extension of #2:
        background memory acceptance requires functional scheduler, but the
        page allocator may need to tap into unaccepted memory before that.
    
        The downside of the approach is that these threads also steal CPU
        cycles and memory bandwidth from the user's workload and may hurt
        user experience.
    
    Implement #1 and #2 for now. #2 is the default. Some workloads may want
    to use #1 with accept_memory=eager in kernel command line. #3 can be
    implemented later based on user's demands.
    
    Support of unaccepted memory requires a few changes in core-mm code:
    
      - memblock accepts memory on allocation. It serves early boot memory
        allocations and doesn't limit them to pre-accepted pool of memory.
    
      - page allocator accepts memory on the first allocation of the page.
        When kernel runs out of accepted memory, it accepts memory until the
        high watermark is reached. It helps to minimize fragmentation.
    
    EFI code will provide two helpers if the platform supports unaccepted
    memory:
    
     - accept_memory() makes a range of physical addresses accepted.
    
     - range_contains_unaccepted_memory() checks anything within the range
       of physical addresses requires acceptance.
    Signed-off-by: default avatarKirill A. Shutemov <kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarBorislav Petkov (AMD) <bp@alien8.de>
    Reviewed-by: default avatarVlastimil Babka <vbabka@suse.cz>
    Acked-by: Mike Rapoport <rppt@linux.ibm.com>	# memblock
    Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230606142637.5171-2-kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com
    dcdfdd40
node.c 25.2 KB