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1.. _highmem:
2
3====================
4High Memory Handling
5====================
6
7By: Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@chello.nl>
8
9.. contents:: :local:
10
11What Is High Memory?
12====================
13
14High memory (highmem) is used when the size of physical memory approaches or
15exceeds the maximum size of virtual memory.  At that point it becomes
16impossible for the kernel to keep all of the available physical memory mapped
17at all times.  This means the kernel needs to start using temporary mappings of
18the pieces of physical memory that it wants to access.
19
20The part of (physical) memory not covered by a permanent mapping is what we
21refer to as 'highmem'.  There are various architecture dependent constraints on
22where exactly that border lies.
23
24In the i386 arch, for example, we choose to map the kernel into every process's
25VM space so that we don't have to pay the full TLB invalidation costs for
26kernel entry/exit.  This means the available virtual memory space (4GiB on
27i386) has to be divided between user and kernel space.
28
29The traditional split for architectures using this approach is 3:1, 3GiB for
30userspace and the top 1GiB for kernel space::
31
32		+--------+ 0xffffffff
33		| Kernel |
34		+--------+ 0xc0000000
35		|        |
36		| User   |
37		|        |
38		+--------+ 0x00000000
39
40This means that the kernel can at most map 1GiB of physical memory at any one
41time, but because we need virtual address space for other things - including
42temporary maps to access the rest of the physical memory - the actual direct
43map will typically be less (usually around ~896MiB).
44
45Other architectures that have mm context tagged TLBs can have separate kernel
46and user maps.  Some hardware (like some ARMs), however, have limited virtual
47space when they use mm context tags.
48
49
50Temporary Virtual Mappings
51==========================
52
53The kernel contains several ways of creating temporary mappings:
54
55* vmap().  This can be used to make a long duration mapping of multiple
56  physical pages into a contiguous virtual space.  It needs global
57  synchronization to unmap.
58
59* kmap().  This permits a short duration mapping of a single page.  It needs
60  global synchronization, but is amortized somewhat.  It is also prone to
61  deadlocks when using in a nested fashion, and so it is not recommended for
62  new code.
63
64* kmap_atomic().  This permits a very short duration mapping of a single
65  page.  Since the mapping is restricted to the CPU that issued it, it
66  performs well, but the issuing task is therefore required to stay on that
67  CPU until it has finished, lest some other task displace its mappings.
68
69  kmap_atomic() may also be used by interrupt contexts, since it is does not
70  sleep and the caller may not sleep until after kunmap_atomic() is called.
71
72  It may be assumed that k[un]map_atomic() won't fail.
73
74
75Using kmap_atomic
76=================
77
78When and where to use kmap_atomic() is straightforward.  It is used when code
79wants to access the contents of a page that might be allocated from high memory
80(see __GFP_HIGHMEM), for example a page in the pagecache.  The API has two
81functions, and they can be used in a manner similar to the following::
82
83	/* Find the page of interest. */
84	struct page *page = find_get_page(mapping, offset);
85
86	/* Gain access to the contents of that page. */
87	void *vaddr = kmap_atomic(page);
88
89	/* Do something to the contents of that page. */
90	memset(vaddr, 0, PAGE_SIZE);
91
92	/* Unmap that page. */
93	kunmap_atomic(vaddr);
94
95Note that the kunmap_atomic() call takes the result of the kmap_atomic() call
96not the argument.
97
98If you need to map two pages because you want to copy from one page to
99another you need to keep the kmap_atomic calls strictly nested, like::
100
101	vaddr1 = kmap_atomic(page1);
102	vaddr2 = kmap_atomic(page2);
103
104	memcpy(vaddr1, vaddr2, PAGE_SIZE);
105
106	kunmap_atomic(vaddr2);
107	kunmap_atomic(vaddr1);
108
109
110Cost of Temporary Mappings
111==========================
112
113The cost of creating temporary mappings can be quite high.  The arch has to
114manipulate the kernel's page tables, the data TLB and/or the MMU's registers.
115
116If CONFIG_HIGHMEM is not set, then the kernel will try and create a mapping
117simply with a bit of arithmetic that will convert the page struct address into
118a pointer to the page contents rather than juggling mappings about.  In such a
119case, the unmap operation may be a null operation.
120
121If CONFIG_MMU is not set, then there can be no temporary mappings and no
122highmem.  In such a case, the arithmetic approach will also be used.
123
124
125i386 PAE
126========
127
128The i386 arch, under some circumstances, will permit you to stick up to 64GiB
129of RAM into your 32-bit machine.  This has a number of consequences:
130
131* Linux needs a page-frame structure for each page in the system and the
132  pageframes need to live in the permanent mapping, which means:
133
134* you can have 896M/sizeof(struct page) page-frames at most; with struct
135  page being 32-bytes that would end up being something in the order of 112G
136  worth of pages; the kernel, however, needs to store more than just
137  page-frames in that memory...
138
139* PAE makes your page tables larger - which slows the system down as more
140  data has to be accessed to traverse in TLB fills and the like.  One
141  advantage is that PAE has more PTE bits and can provide advanced features
142  like NX and PAT.
143
144The general recommendation is that you don't use more than 8GiB on a 32-bit
145machine - although more might work for you and your workload, you're pretty
146much on your own - don't expect kernel developers to really care much if things
147come apart.
148