1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3.. _physical_memory_model: 4 5===================== 6Physical Memory Model 7===================== 8 9Physical memory in a system may be addressed in different ways. The 10simplest case is when the physical memory starts at address 0 and 11spans a contiguous range up to the maximal address. It could be, 12however, that this range contains small holes that are not accessible 13for the CPU. Then there could be several contiguous ranges at 14completely distinct addresses. And, don't forget about NUMA, where 15different memory banks are attached to different CPUs. 16 17Linux abstracts this diversity using one of the three memory models: 18FLATMEM, DISCONTIGMEM and SPARSEMEM. Each architecture defines what 19memory models it supports, what the default memory model is and 20whether it is possible to manually override that default. 21 22.. note:: 23 At time of this writing, DISCONTIGMEM is considered deprecated, 24 although it is still in use by several architectures. 25 26All the memory models track the status of physical page frames using 27struct page arranged in one or more arrays. 28 29Regardless of the selected memory model, there exists one-to-one 30mapping between the physical page frame number (PFN) and the 31corresponding `struct page`. 32 33Each memory model defines :c:func:`pfn_to_page` and :c:func:`page_to_pfn` 34helpers that allow the conversion from PFN to `struct page` and vice 35versa. 36 37FLATMEM 38======= 39 40The simplest memory model is FLATMEM. This model is suitable for 41non-NUMA systems with contiguous, or mostly contiguous, physical 42memory. 43 44In the FLATMEM memory model, there is a global `mem_map` array that 45maps the entire physical memory. For most architectures, the holes 46have entries in the `mem_map` array. The `struct page` objects 47corresponding to the holes are never fully initialized. 48 49To allocate the `mem_map` array, architecture specific setup code should 50call :c:func:`free_area_init` function. Yet, the mappings array is not 51usable until the call to :c:func:`memblock_free_all` that hands all the 52memory to the page allocator. 53 54If an architecture enables `CONFIG_ARCH_HAS_HOLES_MEMORYMODEL` option, 55it may free parts of the `mem_map` array that do not cover the 56actual physical pages. In such case, the architecture specific 57:c:func:`pfn_valid` implementation should take the holes in the 58`mem_map` into account. 59 60With FLATMEM, the conversion between a PFN and the `struct page` is 61straightforward: `PFN - ARCH_PFN_OFFSET` is an index to the 62`mem_map` array. 63 64The `ARCH_PFN_OFFSET` defines the first page frame number for 65systems with physical memory starting at address different from 0. 66 67DISCONTIGMEM 68============ 69 70The DISCONTIGMEM model treats the physical memory as a collection of 71`nodes` similarly to how Linux NUMA support does. For each node Linux 72constructs an independent memory management subsystem represented by 73`struct pglist_data` (or `pg_data_t` for short). Among other 74things, `pg_data_t` holds the `node_mem_map` array that maps 75physical pages belonging to that node. The `node_start_pfn` field of 76`pg_data_t` is the number of the first page frame belonging to that 77node. 78 79The architecture setup code should call :c:func:`free_area_init_node` for 80each node in the system to initialize the `pg_data_t` object and its 81`node_mem_map`. 82 83Every `node_mem_map` behaves exactly as FLATMEM's `mem_map` - 84every physical page frame in a node has a `struct page` entry in the 85`node_mem_map` array. When DISCONTIGMEM is enabled, a portion of the 86`flags` field of the `struct page` encodes the node number of the 87node hosting that page. 88 89The conversion between a PFN and the `struct page` in the 90DISCONTIGMEM model became slightly more complex as it has to determine 91which node hosts the physical page and which `pg_data_t` object 92holds the `struct page`. 93 94Architectures that support DISCONTIGMEM provide :c:func:`pfn_to_nid` 95to convert PFN to the node number. The opposite conversion helper 96:c:func:`page_to_nid` is generic as it uses the node number encoded in 97page->flags. 98 99Once the node number is known, the PFN can be used to index 100appropriate `node_mem_map` array to access the `struct page` and 101the offset of the `struct page` from the `node_mem_map` plus 102`node_start_pfn` is the PFN of that page. 103 104SPARSEMEM 105========= 106 107SPARSEMEM is the most versatile memory model available in Linux and it 108is the only memory model that supports several advanced features such 109as hot-plug and hot-remove of the physical memory, alternative memory 110maps for non-volatile memory devices and deferred initialization of 111the memory map for larger systems. 112 113The SPARSEMEM model presents the physical memory as a collection of 114sections. A section is represented with struct mem_section 115that contains `section_mem_map` that is, logically, a pointer to an 116array of struct pages. However, it is stored with some other magic 117that aids the sections management. The section size and maximal number 118of section is specified using `SECTION_SIZE_BITS` and 119`MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS` constants defined by each architecture that 120supports SPARSEMEM. While `MAX_PHYSMEM_BITS` is an actual width of a 121physical address that an architecture supports, the 122`SECTION_SIZE_BITS` is an arbitrary value. 123 124The maximal number of sections is denoted `NR_MEM_SECTIONS` and 125defined as 126 127.. math:: 128 129 NR\_MEM\_SECTIONS = 2 ^ {(MAX\_PHYSMEM\_BITS - SECTION\_SIZE\_BITS)} 130 131The `mem_section` objects are arranged in a two-dimensional array 132called `mem_sections`. The size and placement of this array depend 133on `CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_EXTREME` and the maximal possible number of 134sections: 135 136* When `CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_EXTREME` is disabled, the `mem_sections` 137 array is static and has `NR_MEM_SECTIONS` rows. Each row holds a 138 single `mem_section` object. 139* When `CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_EXTREME` is enabled, the `mem_sections` 140 array is dynamically allocated. Each row contains PAGE_SIZE worth of 141 `mem_section` objects and the number of rows is calculated to fit 142 all the memory sections. 143 144The architecture setup code should call sparse_init() to 145initialize the memory sections and the memory maps. 146 147With SPARSEMEM there are two possible ways to convert a PFN to the 148corresponding `struct page` - a "classic sparse" and "sparse 149vmemmap". The selection is made at build time and it is determined by 150the value of `CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_VMEMMAP`. 151 152The classic sparse encodes the section number of a page in page->flags 153and uses high bits of a PFN to access the section that maps that page 154frame. Inside a section, the PFN is the index to the array of pages. 155 156The sparse vmemmap uses a virtually mapped memory map to optimize 157pfn_to_page and page_to_pfn operations. There is a global `struct 158page *vmemmap` pointer that points to a virtually contiguous array of 159`struct page` objects. A PFN is an index to that array and the 160offset of the `struct page` from `vmemmap` is the PFN of that 161page. 162 163To use vmemmap, an architecture has to reserve a range of virtual 164addresses that will map the physical pages containing the memory 165map and make sure that `vmemmap` points to that range. In addition, 166the architecture should implement :c:func:`vmemmap_populate` method 167that will allocate the physical memory and create page tables for the 168virtual memory map. If an architecture does not have any special 169requirements for the vmemmap mappings, it can use default 170:c:func:`vmemmap_populate_basepages` provided by the generic memory 171management. 172 173The virtually mapped memory map allows storing `struct page` objects 174for persistent memory devices in pre-allocated storage on those 175devices. This storage is represented with struct vmem_altmap 176that is eventually passed to vmemmap_populate() through a long chain 177of function calls. The vmemmap_populate() implementation may use the 178`vmem_altmap` along with :c:func:`vmemmap_alloc_block_buf` helper to 179allocate memory map on the persistent memory device. 180 181ZONE_DEVICE 182=========== 183The `ZONE_DEVICE` facility builds upon `SPARSEMEM_VMEMMAP` to offer 184`struct page` `mem_map` services for device driver identified physical 185address ranges. The "device" aspect of `ZONE_DEVICE` relates to the fact 186that the page objects for these address ranges are never marked online, 187and that a reference must be taken against the device, not just the page 188to keep the memory pinned for active use. `ZONE_DEVICE`, via 189:c:func:`devm_memremap_pages`, performs just enough memory hotplug to 190turn on :c:func:`pfn_to_page`, :c:func:`page_to_pfn`, and 191:c:func:`get_user_pages` service for the given range of pfns. Since the 192page reference count never drops below 1 the page is never tracked as 193free memory and the page's `struct list_head lru` space is repurposed 194for back referencing to the host device / driver that mapped the memory. 195 196While `SPARSEMEM` presents memory as a collection of sections, 197optionally collected into memory blocks, `ZONE_DEVICE` users have a need 198for smaller granularity of populating the `mem_map`. Given that 199`ZONE_DEVICE` memory is never marked online it is subsequently never 200subject to its memory ranges being exposed through the sysfs memory 201hotplug api on memory block boundaries. The implementation relies on 202this lack of user-api constraint to allow sub-section sized memory 203ranges to be specified to :c:func:`arch_add_memory`, the top-half of 204memory hotplug. Sub-section support allows for 2MB as the cross-arch 205common alignment granularity for :c:func:`devm_memremap_pages`. 206 207The users of `ZONE_DEVICE` are: 208 209* pmem: Map platform persistent memory to be used as a direct-I/O target 210 via DAX mappings. 211 212* hmm: Extend `ZONE_DEVICE` with `->page_fault()` and `->page_free()` 213 event callbacks to allow a device-driver to coordinate memory management 214 events related to device-memory, typically GPU memory. See 215 Documentation/vm/hmm.rst. 216 217* p2pdma: Create `struct page` objects to allow peer devices in a 218 PCI/-E topology to coordinate direct-DMA operations between themselves, 219 i.e. bypass host memory. 220