Revision 706a1ea65e6faaf853427a0e931f59d604dd45e3 authored by Linus Torvalds on 23 August 2018, 21:55:01 UTC, committed by Linus Torvalds on 23 August 2018, 21:55:01 UTC
Merge fixes for missing TLB shootdowns.

This fixes a couple of cases that involved us possibly freeing page
table structures before the required TLB shootdown had been done.

There are a few cleanup patches to make the code easier to follow, and
to avoid some of the more problematic cases entirely when not necessary.

To make this easier for backports, it undoes the recent lazy TLB
patches, because the cleanups and fixes are more important, and Rik is
ok with re-doing them later when things have calmed down.

The missing TLB flush was only delayed, and the wrong ordering only
happened under memory pressure (and in theory under a couple of other
fairly theoretical situations), so this may have been all very unlikely
to have hit people in practice.

But getting the TLB shootdown wrong is _so_ hard to debug and see that I
consider this a crticial fix.

Many thanks to Jann Horn for having debugged this.

* tlb-fixes:
  x86/mm: Only use tlb_remove_table() for paravirt
  mm: mmu_notifier fix for tlb_end_vma
  mm/tlb, x86/mm: Support invalidating TLB caches for RCU_TABLE_FREE
  mm/tlb: Remove tlb_remove_table() non-concurrent condition
  mm: move tlb_table_flush to tlb_flush_mmu_free
  x86/mm/tlb: Revert the recent lazy TLB patches
2 parent s d40acad + 48a8b97
Raw File
xz.txt
============================
XZ data compression in Linux
============================

Introduction
============

XZ is a general purpose data compression format with high compression
ratio and relatively fast decompression. The primary compression
algorithm (filter) is LZMA2. Additional filters can be used to improve
compression ratio even further. E.g. Branch/Call/Jump (BCJ) filters
improve compression ratio of executable data.

The XZ decompressor in Linux is called XZ Embedded. It supports
the LZMA2 filter and optionally also BCJ filters. CRC32 is supported
for integrity checking. The home page of XZ Embedded is at
<http://tukaani.org/xz/embedded.html>, where you can find the
latest version and also information about using the code outside
the Linux kernel.

For userspace, XZ Utils provide a zlib-like compression library
and a gzip-like command line tool. XZ Utils can be downloaded from
<http://tukaani.org/xz/>.

XZ related components in the kernel
===================================

The xz_dec module provides XZ decompressor with single-call (buffer
to buffer) and multi-call (stateful) APIs. The usage of the xz_dec
module is documented in include/linux/xz.h.

The xz_dec_test module is for testing xz_dec. xz_dec_test is not
useful unless you are hacking the XZ decompressor. xz_dec_test
allocates a char device major dynamically to which one can write
.xz files from userspace. The decompressed output is thrown away.
Keep an eye on dmesg to see diagnostics printed by xz_dec_test.
See the xz_dec_test source code for the details.

For decompressing the kernel image, initramfs, and initrd, there
is a wrapper function in lib/decompress_unxz.c. Its API is the
same as in other decompress_*.c files, which is defined in
include/linux/decompress/generic.h.

scripts/xz_wrap.sh is a wrapper for the xz command line tool found
from XZ Utils. The wrapper sets compression options to values suitable
for compressing the kernel image.

For kernel makefiles, two commands are provided for use with
$(call if_needed). The kernel image should be compressed with
$(call if_needed,xzkern) which will use a BCJ filter and a big LZMA2
dictionary. It will also append a four-byte trailer containing the
uncompressed size of the file, which is needed by the boot code.
Other things should be compressed with $(call if_needed,xzmisc)
which will use no BCJ filter and 1 MiB LZMA2 dictionary.

Notes on compression options
============================

Since the XZ Embedded supports only streams with no integrity check or
CRC32, make sure that you don't use some other integrity check type
when encoding files that are supposed to be decoded by the kernel. With
liblzma, you need to use either LZMA_CHECK_NONE or LZMA_CHECK_CRC32
when encoding. With the xz command line tool, use --check=none or
--check=crc32.

Using CRC32 is strongly recommended unless there is some other layer
which will verify the integrity of the uncompressed data anyway.
Double checking the integrity would probably be waste of CPU cycles.
Note that the headers will always have a CRC32 which will be validated
by the decoder; you can only change the integrity check type (or
disable it) for the actual uncompressed data.

In userspace, LZMA2 is typically used with dictionary sizes of several
megabytes. The decoder needs to have the dictionary in RAM, thus big
dictionaries cannot be used for files that are intended to be decoded
by the kernel. 1 MiB is probably the maximum reasonable dictionary
size for in-kernel use (maybe more is OK for initramfs). The presets
in XZ Utils may not be optimal when creating files for the kernel,
so don't hesitate to use custom settings. Example::

	xz --check=crc32 --lzma2=dict=512KiB inputfile

An exception to above dictionary size limitation is when the decoder
is used in single-call mode. Decompressing the kernel itself is an
example of this situation. In single-call mode, the memory usage
doesn't depend on the dictionary size, and it is perfectly fine to
use a big dictionary: for maximum compression, the dictionary should
be at least as big as the uncompressed data itself.

Future plans
============

Creating a limited XZ encoder may be considered if people think it is
useful. LZMA2 is slower to compress than e.g. Deflate or LZO even at
the fastest settings, so it isn't clear if LZMA2 encoder is wanted
into the kernel.

Support for limited random-access reading is planned for the
decompression code. I don't know if it could have any use in the
kernel, but I know that it would be useful in some embedded projects
outside the Linux kernel.

Conformance to the .xz file format specification
================================================

There are a couple of corner cases where things have been simplified
at expense of detecting errors as early as possible. These should not
matter in practice all, since they don't cause security issues. But
it is good to know this if testing the code e.g. with the test files
from XZ Utils.

Reporting bugs
==============

Before reporting a bug, please check that it's not fixed already
at upstream. See <http://tukaani.org/xz/embedded.html> to get the
latest code.

Report bugs to <lasse.collin@tukaani.org> or visit #tukaani on
Freenode and talk to Larhzu. I don't actively read LKML or other
kernel-related mailing lists, so if there's something I should know,
you should email to me personally or use IRC.

Don't bother Igor Pavlov with questions about the XZ implementation
in the kernel or about XZ Utils. While these two implementations
include essential code that is directly based on Igor Pavlov's code,
these implementations aren't maintained nor supported by him.
back to top