1 /*
2 * Copyright (c) 2020 Apple Inc. All rights reserved.
3 *
4 * @APPLE_OSREFERENCE_LICENSE_HEADER_START@
5 *
6 * This file contains Original Code and/or Modifications of Original Code
7 * as defined in and that are subject to the Apple Public Source License
8 * Version 2.0 (the 'License'). You may not use this file except in
9 * compliance with the License. The rights granted to you under the License
10 * may not be used to create, or enable the creation or redistribution of,
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12 * circumvent, violate, or enable the circumvention or violation of, any
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14 *
15 * Please obtain a copy of the License at
16 * http://www.opensource.apple.com/apsl/ and read it before using this file.
17 *
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20 * EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AND APPLE HEREBY DISCLAIMS ALL SUCH WARRANTIES,
21 * INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
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27 */
28 #include <arm/cpu_data_internal.h>
29 #include <kern/queue.h>
30 #include <libkern/OSAtomic.h>
31 #include <libkern/section_keywords.h>
32 #include <pexpert/device_tree.h>
33 #include <os/atomic_private.h>
34 #include <vm/cpm.h>
35 #include <vm/vm_kern.h>
36 #include <vm/vm_protos.h>
37 #include <vm/vm_object.h>
38 #include <vm/vm_page.h>
39 #include <vm/vm_pageout.h>
40
41 #include <arm/pmap/pmap_internal.h>
42
43 /**
44 * Physical Page Attribute Table.
45 *
46 * Array that contains a set of flags for each kernel-managed physical VM page.
47 *
48 * @note There can be a disparity between the VM page size and the underlying
49 * hardware page size for a specific address space. In those cases, it's
50 * possible that multiple hardware pages will share the same set of
51 * attributes. The VM operates on regions of memory by the VM page size
52 * and is aware that all hardware pages within each VM page share
53 * attributes.
54 */
55 SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(volatile pp_attr_t*) pp_attr_table = (volatile pp_attr_t*)NULL;
56
57 /**
58 * Physical to Virtual Table.
59 *
60 * Data structure that contains a list of virtual mappings for each kernel-
61 * managed physical page. Other flags and metadata are also stored in this
62 * structure on a per-physical-page basis.
63 *
64 * This structure is arranged as an array of pointers, where each pointer can
65 * point to one of three different types of data (single mapping, multiple
66 * mappings, or page table descriptor). Metadata about each page (including the
67 * type of pointer) are located in the lower and upper bits of the pointer.
68 * These bits need to be set/masked out to be able to dereference the pointer,
69 * so it's recommended to use the provided API in pmap_data.h to access the
70 * pv_head_table since it handles these details for you.
71 */
72 SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(pv_entry_t * *) pv_head_table = (pv_entry_t**)NULL;
73
74 /**
75 * Queue chain of userspace page table pages that can be quickly reclaimed by
76 * pmap_page_reclaim() in cases where the a page can't easily be allocated
77 * the normal way, but the caller needs a page quickly.
78 */
79 static queue_head_t pt_page_list MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA;
80
81 /* Lock for pt_page_list. */
82 static MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA SIMPLE_LOCK_DECLARE(pt_pages_lock, 0);
83
84 /* Simple linked-list structure used in various page free lists. */
85 typedef struct page_free_entry {
86 /**
87 * The first word in an empty page on a free list is used as a pointer to
88 * the next free page in the list.
89 */
90 struct page_free_entry *next;
91 } page_free_entry_t;
92
93 /* Represents a NULL entry in various page free lists. */
94 #define PAGE_FREE_ENTRY_NULL ((page_free_entry_t *) 0)
95
96 /**
97 * pmap_page_reclaim() is called in critical, latency-sensitive code paths when
98 * either the VM doesn't have any pages available (on non-PPL systems), or the
99 * PPL page free lists are empty (on PPL systems). Before it attempts to reclaim
100 * a userspace page table page (which will have performance penalties), it will
101 * first try allocating a page from this high-priority free list.
102 *
103 * When the pmap is starved for memory and starts relying on
104 * pmap_page_reclaim() to allocate memory, then the next page being freed will
105 * be placed onto this list for usage only by pmap_page_reclaim(). Typically
106 * that page will be a userspace page table that was just reclaimed.
107 */
108 static page_free_entry_t *pmap_page_reclaim_list MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = PAGE_FREE_ENTRY_NULL;
109
110 /**
111 * Current number of pending requests to reclaim a page table page. This is used
112 * as an indicator to pmap_pages_free() to place any freed pages into the high
113 * priority pmap_page_reclaim() free list so that the next invocations of
114 * pmap_page_reclaim() can use them. Typically this will be a userspace page
115 * table that was just reclaimed.
116 */
117 static unsigned int pmap_pages_request_count MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = 0;
118
119 /**
120 * Total number of pages that have been requested from pmap_page_reclaim() since
121 * cold boot.
122 */
123 static unsigned long long pmap_pages_request_acum MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = 0;
124
125 /* Lock for the pmap_page_reclaim() high-priority free list. */
126 static MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA SIMPLE_LOCK_DECLARE(pmap_page_reclaim_lock, 0);
127
128 #if XNU_MONITOR
129 /**
130 * The PPL cannot invoke the VM in order to allocate memory, so we must maintain
131 * a list of free pages that the PPL owns. The kernel can give the PPL
132 * additional pages by grabbing pages from the VM and marking them as PPL-owned.
133 * See pmap_alloc_page_for_ppl() for more information.
134 */
135 static page_free_entry_t *pmap_ppl_free_page_list MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = PAGE_FREE_ENTRY_NULL;
136
137 /* The current number of pages in the PPL page free list. */
138 uint64_t pmap_ppl_free_page_count MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = 0;
139
140 /* Lock for the PPL page free list. */
141 static MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA SIMPLE_LOCK_DECLARE(pmap_ppl_free_page_lock, 0);
142 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
143
144 /**
145 * This VM object will contain every VM page being used by the pmap. This acts
146 * as a convenient place to put pmap pages to keep the VM from reusing them, as
147 * well as providing a way for looping over every page being used by the pmap.
148 */
149 struct vm_object pmap_object_store VM_PAGE_PACKED_ALIGNED;
150
151 /* Pointer to the pmap's VM object that can't be modified after machine_lockdown(). */
152 SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(vm_object_t) pmap_object = &pmap_object_store;
153
154 /**
155 * Global variables strictly used for debugging purposes. These variables keep
156 * track of the total number of pages that have been allocated from the VM for
157 * pmap usage since cold boot, as well as how many are currently in use by the
158 * pmap. Once a page is given back to the VM, then the inuse_pmap_pages_count
159 * will be decremented.
160 *
161 * Even if a page is sitting in one of the pmap's various free lists and hasn't
162 * been allocated for usage, these are still considered "used" by the pmap, from
163 * the perspective of the VM.
164 */
165 static uint64_t alloc_pmap_pages_count __attribute__((aligned(8))) = 0LL;
166 unsigned int inuse_pmap_pages_count = 0;
167
168 /**
169 * Default watermark values used to keep a healthy supply of physical-to-virtual
170 * entries (PVEs) always available. These values can be overriden by the device
171 * tree (see pmap_compute_pv_targets() for more info).
172 */
173 #if XNU_MONITOR
174 /*
175 * Increase the padding for PPL devices to accommodate increased mapping
176 * pressure from IOMMUs. This isn't strictly necessary, but will reduce the need
177 * to retry mappings due to PV allocation failure.
178 */
179 #define PV_KERN_LOW_WATER_MARK_DEFAULT (0x400)
180 #define PV_ALLOC_CHUNK_INITIAL (0x400)
181 #define PV_KERN_ALLOC_CHUNK_INITIAL (0x400)
182 #else /* XNU_MONITOR */
183 #define PV_KERN_LOW_WATER_MARK_DEFAULT (0x200)
184 #define PV_ALLOC_CHUNK_INITIAL (0x200)
185 #define PV_KERN_ALLOC_CHUNK_INITIAL (0x200)
186 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
187
188 /**
189 * The pv_free array acts as a ring buffer where each entry points to a linked
190 * list of PVEs that have a length set by this define.
191 */
192 #define PV_BATCH_SIZE (PAGE_SIZE / sizeof(pv_entry_t))
193
194 /* The batch allocation code assumes that a batch can fit within a single page. */
195 #if defined(__arm__) || (defined(__arm64__) && __ARM_16K_PG__)
196 /**
197 * PAGE_SIZE is a variable on arm64 systems with 4K VM pages, so no static
198 * assert on those systems.
199 */
200 static_assert((PV_BATCH_SIZE * sizeof(pv_entry_t)) <= PAGE_SIZE);
201 #endif /* defined(__arm__) || (defined(__arm64__) && __ARM_16K_PG__) */
202
203 /**
204 * The number of PVEs to attempt to keep in the kernel-dedicated free list. If
205 * the number of entries is below this value, then allocate more.
206 */
207 static uint32_t pv_kern_low_water_mark MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = PV_KERN_LOW_WATER_MARK_DEFAULT;
208
209 /**
210 * The initial number of PVEs to allocate during bootstrap (can be overriden in
211 * the device tree, see pmap_compute_pv_targets() for more info).
212 */
213 uint32_t pv_alloc_initial_target MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = PV_ALLOC_CHUNK_INITIAL * MAX_CPUS;
214 uint32_t pv_kern_alloc_initial_target MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = PV_KERN_ALLOC_CHUNK_INITIAL;
215
216 /**
217 * Global variables strictly used for debugging purposes. These variables keep
218 * track of the number of pages being used for PVE objects, and the total number
219 * of PVEs that have been added to the global or kernel-dedicated free lists
220 * respectively.
221 */
222 static uint32_t pv_page_count MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = 0;
223 static unsigned pmap_reserve_replenish_stat MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = 0;
224 static unsigned pmap_kern_reserve_alloc_stat MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = 0;
225
226 /**
227 * Number of linked lists of PVEs ("batches") in the global PV free ring buffer.
228 * This must be a power of two for the pv_free_array_n_elems() logic to work.
229 */
230 #define PV_FREE_ARRAY_SIZE (256U)
231
232 /**
233 * A ring buffer where each entry in the buffer is a linked list of PV entries
234 * (called "batches"). Allocations out of this array will always operate on
235 * a PV_BATCH_SIZE amount of entries at a time.
236 */
237 static pv_free_list_t pv_free_ring[PV_FREE_ARRAY_SIZE] MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = {0};
238
239 /* Read and write indices for the pv_free ring buffer. */
240 static uint16_t pv_free_read_idx MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = 0;
241 static uint16_t pv_free_write_idx MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = 0;
242
243 /**
244 * Make sure the PV free array is small enough so that all elements can be
245 * properly indexed by pv_free_[read/write]_idx.
246 */
247 static_assert(PV_FREE_ARRAY_SIZE <= (1 << (sizeof(pv_free_read_idx) * 8)));
248
249 /**
250 * Return the number of free batches available for allocation out of the PV free
251 * ring buffer. Each batch is a linked list of PVEs with length PV_BATCH_SIZE.
252 *
253 * @note This function requires that PV_FREE_ARRAY_SIZE is a power of two.
254 */
255 static inline uint16_t
pv_free_array_n_elems(void)256 pv_free_array_n_elems(void)
257 {
258 return (pv_free_write_idx - pv_free_read_idx) & (PV_FREE_ARRAY_SIZE - 1);
259 }
260
261 /* Free list of PV entries dedicated for usage by the kernel. */
262 static pv_free_list_t pv_kern_free MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = {0};
263
264 /* Locks for the global and kernel-dedicated PV free lists. */
265 static MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA SIMPLE_LOCK_DECLARE(pv_free_array_lock, 0);
266 static MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA SIMPLE_LOCK_DECLARE(pv_kern_free_list_lock, 0);
267
268 /* Represents a null page table descriptor (PTD). */
269 #define PTD_ENTRY_NULL ((pt_desc_t *) 0)
270
271 /* Running free list of PTD nodes. */
272 static pt_desc_t *ptd_free_list MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = PTD_ENTRY_NULL;
273
274 /* The number of free PTD nodes available in the free list. */
275 static unsigned int ptd_free_count MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = 0;
276
277 /**
278 * The number of PTD objects located in each page being used by the PTD
279 * allocator. The PTD objects share each page with their associated ptd_info_t
280 * objects (with cache-line alignment padding between them). The maximum number
281 * of PTDs that can be placed into a single page is calculated once at boot.
282 */
283 static SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(unsigned) ptd_per_page = 0;
284
285 /**
286 * The offset in bytes from the beginning of a page of PTD objects where you
287 * start seeing the associated ptd_info_t objects. This is calculated once
288 * during boot to maximize the number of PTD and ptd_info_t objects that can
289 * reside within a page without sharing a cache-line.
290 */
291 static SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(unsigned) ptd_info_offset = 0;
292
293 /* Lock to protect accesses to the PTD free list. */
294 static decl_simple_lock_data(, ptd_free_list_lock MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA);
295
296 /**
297 * Dummy _internal() prototypes so Clang doesn't complain about missing
298 * prototypes on a non-static function. These functions can't be marked as
299 * static because they need to be called from pmap_ppl_interface.c where the
300 * PMAP_SUPPORT_PROTOYPES() macro will auto-generate the prototype implicitly.
301 */
302 kern_return_t mapping_free_prime_internal(void);
303
304 #if XNU_MONITOR
305
306 /**
307 * These types and variables only exist on PPL-enabled systems because those are
308 * the only systems that need to allocate and manage ledger/pmap objects
309 * themselves. On non-PPL systems, those objects are allocated using a standard
310 * zone allocator.
311 */
312
313 /**
314 * Specify that the maximum number of ledgers and pmap objects are to be
315 * correlated to the maximum number of tasks allowed on the system (at most,
316 * we'll have one pmap object per task). For ledger objects, give a small amount
317 * of extra padding to account for allocation differences between pmap objects
318 * and ledgers (i.e. ~10% of total number of iOS tasks = 200).
319 *
320 * These defines are only valid once `pmap_max_asids` is initialized in
321 * pmap_bootstrap() (the value can change depending on the device tree).
322 */
323 #define LEDGER_PTR_ARRAY_SIZE (pmap_max_asids + 200)
324 #define PMAP_PTR_ARRAY_SIZE (pmap_max_asids)
325
326 /**
327 * Each ledger object consists of a variable number of ledger entries that is
328 * determined by the template it's based on. The template used for pmap ledger
329 * objects is the task_ledgers template.
330 *
331 * This define attempts to calculate how large each pmap ledger needs to be
332 * based on how many ledger entries exist in the task_ledgers template. This is
333 * found by counting how many integers exist in the task_ledgers structure (each
334 * integer represents the index for a ledger_entry) and multiplying by the size
335 * of a single ledger entry. That value is then added to the other fields in a
336 * ledger structure to get the total size of a single pmap ledger.
337 *
338 * Some of the task ledger's entries use a smaller struct format. TASK_LEDGER_NUM_SMALL_INDICES
339 * is used to determine how much memory we need for those entries.
340 *
341 * This assumed size will get validated when the task_ledgers template is
342 * created and the system will panic if this calculation wasn't correct.
343 *
344 */
345 #define PMAP_LEDGER_DATA_BYTES \
346 (((sizeof(task_ledgers) / sizeof(int) - TASK_LEDGER_NUM_SMALL_INDICES) * sizeof(struct ledger_entry) \
347 + TASK_LEDGER_NUM_SMALL_INDICES * sizeof(struct ledger_entry_small)) \
348 + sizeof(struct ledger))
349
350 /**
351 * Opaque data structure that contains the exact number of bytes required to
352 * hold a single ledger object based off of the task_ledgers template.
353 */
354 typedef struct pmap_ledger_data {
355 uint8_t pld_data[PMAP_LEDGER_DATA_BYTES];
356 } pmap_ledger_data_t;
357
358 /**
359 * This struct contains the memory needed to hold a single ledger object used by
360 * the pmap as well as an index into the pmap_ledger_ptr_array used for
361 * validating ledger objects passed into the PPL.
362 */
363 typedef struct pmap_ledger {
364 /**
365 * Either contain the memory needed for a ledger object based on the
366 * task_ledgers template (if already allocated) or a pointer to the next
367 * ledger object in the free list if the object hasn't been allocated yet.
368 *
369 * This union has to be the first member of this struct so that the memory
370 * used by this struct can be correctly cast to a ledger_t and used
371 * as a normal ledger object by the standard ledger API.
372 */
373 union {
374 struct pmap_ledger_data pld_data;
375 struct pmap_ledger *next;
376 };
377
378 /**
379 * This extra piece of information (not normally associated with generic
380 * ledger_t objects) is used to validate that a ledger passed into the PPL
381 * is indeed a ledger that was allocated by the PPL, and not just random
382 * memory being passed off as a ledger object. See pmap_ledger_validate()
383 * for more information on validating ledger objects.
384 */
385 unsigned long array_index;
386 } pmap_ledger_t;
387
388 /**
389 * This variable is used to ensure that the size of the ledger objects being
390 * allocated by the PPL match up with the actual size of the ledger objects
391 * before objects start being allocated.
392 */
393 static SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(bool) pmap_ledger_size_verified = false;
394
395 /* Ledger free list lock. */
396 static MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA SIMPLE_LOCK_DECLARE(pmap_ledger_lock, 0);
397
398 /*
399 * The pmap_ledger_t contents are allowed to be written outside the PPL,
400 * so refcounts must be in a separate PPL-controlled array.
401 */
402 static SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(os_refcnt_t *) pmap_ledger_refcnt = NULL;
403
404 /**
405 * The number of entries in the pmap ledger pointer and ledger refcnt arrays.
406 * This determines the maximum number of pmap ledger objects that can be
407 * allocated.
408 *
409 * This value might be slightly higher than LEDGER_PTR_ARRAY_SIZE because the
410 * memory used for the array is rounded up to the nearest page boundary.
411 */
412 static SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(unsigned long) pmap_ledger_ptr_array_count = 0;
413
414 /**
415 * This array is used to validate that ledger objects passed into the PPL were
416 * allocated by the PPL and aren't just random memory being passed off as a
417 * ledger object. It does this by associating each ledger object allocated by
418 * the PPL with an index into this array. The value at that index will be a
419 * pointer to the ledger object itself.
420 *
421 * Even though the ledger object is kernel-writable, this array is only
422 * modifiable by the PPL. If a ledger object is passed into the PPL that has an
423 * index into this array that doesn't match up, then the validation will fail.
424 */
425 static SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(pmap_ledger_t * *) pmap_ledger_ptr_array = NULL;
426
427 /**
428 * The next free index into pmap_ledger_ptr_array to be given to the next
429 * allocated ledger object.
430 */
431 static uint64_t pmap_ledger_ptr_array_free_index MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = 0;
432
433 /* Free list of pmap ledger objects. */
434 static pmap_ledger_t *pmap_ledger_free_list MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = NULL;
435
436 /**
437 * This struct contains the memory needed to hold a single pmap object as well
438 * as an index into the pmap_ptr_array used for validating pmap objects passed
439 * into the PPL.
440 */
441 typedef struct pmap_list_entry {
442 /**
443 * Either contain the memory needed for a single pmap object or a pointer to
444 * the next pmap object in the free list if the object hasn't been allocated
445 * yet.
446 *
447 * This union has to be the first member of this struct so that the memory
448 * used by this struct can be correctly cast as either a pmap_list_entry_t
449 * or a pmap_t (depending on whether the array_index is needed).
450 */
451 union {
452 struct pmap pmap;
453 struct pmap_list_entry *next;
454 };
455
456 /**
457 * This extra piece of information (not normally associated with generic
458 * pmap objects) is used to validate that a pmap object passed into the PPL
459 * is indeed a pmap object that was allocated by the PPL, and not just random
460 * memory being passed off as a pmap object. See validate_pmap()
461 * for more information on validating pmap objects.
462 */
463 unsigned long array_index;
464 } pmap_list_entry_t;
465
466 /* Lock for the pmap free list. */
467 static MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA SIMPLE_LOCK_DECLARE(pmap_free_list_lock, 0);
468
469 /**
470 * The number of entries in the pmap pointer array. This determines the maximum
471 * number of pmap objects that can be allocated.
472 *
473 * This value might be slightly higher than PMAP_PTR_ARRAY_SIZE because the
474 * memory used for the array is rounded up to the nearest page boundary.
475 */
476 static SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(unsigned long) pmap_ptr_array_count = 0;
477
478 /**
479 * This array is used to validate that pmap objects passed into the PPL were
480 * allocated by the PPL and aren't just random memory being passed off as a pmap
481 * object. It does this by associating each pmap object allocated by the PPL
482 * with an index into this array. The value at that index will be a pointer to
483 * the pmap object itself.
484 *
485 * If a pmap object is passed into the PPL that has an index into this array
486 * that doesn't match up, then the validation will fail.
487 */
488 static SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(pmap_list_entry_t * *) pmap_ptr_array = NULL;
489
490 /**
491 * The next free index into pmap_ptr_array to be given to the next
492 * allocated pmap object.
493 */
494 static unsigned long pmap_ptr_array_free_index MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = 0;
495
496 /* Free list of pmap objects. */
497 static pmap_list_entry_t *pmap_free_list MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA = NULL;
498
499 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
500
501 /**
502 * Sorted representation of the pmap-io-ranges nodes in the device tree. These
503 * nodes describe all of the PPL-owned I/O ranges.
504 */
505 SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(pmap_io_range_t*) io_attr_table = (pmap_io_range_t*)0;
506
507 /* The number of ranges described by io_attr_table. */
508 SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(unsigned int) num_io_rgns = 0;
509
510 #if XNU_MONITOR
511
512 /**
513 * Per-cpu pmap data. On PPL-enabled systems, this memory is only modifiable by
514 * the PPL itself and because of that, needs to be managed separately from the
515 * generic per-cpu data. The per-cpu pmap data exists on non-PPL systems as
516 * well, it's just located within the general machine-specific per-cpu data.
517 */
518 struct pmap_cpu_data_array_entry pmap_cpu_data_array[MAX_CPUS] MARK_AS_PMAP_DATA;
519
520 /**
521 * The physical address spaces being used for the PPL stacks and PPL register
522 * save area are stored in global variables so that their permissions can be
523 * updated in pmap_static_allocations_done(). These regions are initialized by
524 * pmap_cpu_data_array_init().
525 */
526 SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(pmap_paddr_t) pmap_stacks_start_pa = 0;
527 SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(pmap_paddr_t) pmap_stacks_end_pa = 0;
528 SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(pmap_paddr_t) ppl_cpu_save_area_start = 0;
529 SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE(pmap_paddr_t) ppl_cpu_save_area_end = 0;
530
531 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
532
533 /* Prototypes used by pmap_data_bootstrap(). */
534 vm_size_t pmap_compute_io_rgns(void);
535 void pmap_load_io_rgns(void);
536 void pmap_cpu_data_array_init(void);
537
538 /**
539 * This function is called once during pmap_bootstrap() to allocate and
540 * initialize many of the core data structures that are implemented in this
541 * file.
542 *
543 * Memory for these data structures is carved out of `avail_start` which is a
544 * global setup by arm_vm_init() that points to a physically contiguous region
545 * used for bootstrap allocations.
546 *
547 * @note There is no guaranteed alignment of `avail_start` when this function
548 * returns. If avail_start needs to be aligned to a specific value then it
549 * must be done so by the caller before they use it for more allocations.
550 */
551 void
pmap_data_bootstrap(void)552 pmap_data_bootstrap(void)
553 {
554 /**
555 * Set ptd_per_page to the maximum number of (pt_desc_t + ptd_info_t) we can
556 * fit in a single page. We need to allow for some padding between the two,
557 * so that no ptd_info_t shares a cache line with a pt_desc_t.
558 */
559 const unsigned ptd_info_size = sizeof(ptd_info_t) * PT_INDEX_MAX;
560 const unsigned l2_cline_bytes = 1 << MAX_L2_CLINE;
561 ptd_per_page = (PAGE_SIZE - (l2_cline_bytes - 1)) / (sizeof(pt_desc_t) + ptd_info_size);
562 unsigned increment = 0;
563 bool try_next = true;
564
565 /**
566 * The current ptd_per_page calculation was done assuming the worst-case
567 * scenario in terms of padding between the two object arrays that reside in
568 * the same page. The following loop attempts to optimize this further by
569 * finding the smallest possible amount of padding while still ensuring that
570 * the two object arrays don't share a cache line.
571 */
572 while (try_next) {
573 increment++;
574 const unsigned pt_desc_total_size =
575 PMAP_ALIGN((ptd_per_page + increment) * sizeof(pt_desc_t), l2_cline_bytes);
576 const unsigned ptd_info_total_size = (ptd_per_page + increment) * ptd_info_size;
577 try_next = (pt_desc_total_size + ptd_info_total_size) <= PAGE_SIZE;
578 }
579 ptd_per_page += increment - 1;
580 assert(ptd_per_page > 0);
581
582 /**
583 * ptd_info objects reside after the ptd descriptor objects, with some
584 * padding in between if necessary to ensure that they don't co-exist in the
585 * same cache line.
586 */
587 const unsigned pt_desc_bytes = ptd_per_page * sizeof(pt_desc_t);
588 ptd_info_offset = PMAP_ALIGN(pt_desc_bytes, l2_cline_bytes);
589
590 /* The maximum amount of padding should be (l2_cline_bytes - 1). */
591 assert((ptd_info_offset - pt_desc_bytes) < l2_cline_bytes);
592
593 /**
594 * Allocate enough initial PTDs to map twice the available physical memory.
595 *
596 * To do this, start by calculating the number of leaf page tables that are
597 * needed to cover all of kernel-managed physical memory.
598 */
599 const uint32_t num_leaf_page_tables =
600 (uint32_t)(mem_size / ((PAGE_SIZE / sizeof(pt_entry_t)) * ARM_PGBYTES));
601
602 /**
603 * There should be one PTD per page table (times 2 since we want twice the
604 * number of required PTDs), plus round the number of PTDs up to the next
605 * `ptd_per_page` value so there's no wasted space.
606 */
607 const uint32_t ptd_root_table_n_ptds =
608 (ptd_per_page * ((num_leaf_page_tables * 2) / ptd_per_page)) + ptd_per_page;
609
610 /* Lastly, calculate the number of VM pages and bytes these PTDs take up. */
611 const uint32_t num_ptd_pages = ptd_root_table_n_ptds / ptd_per_page;
612 vm_size_t ptd_root_table_size = num_ptd_pages * PAGE_SIZE;
613
614 /* Number of VM pages that span all of kernel-managed memory. */
615 const unsigned int npages = (unsigned int)atop(mem_size);
616
617 /* The pv_head_table and pp_attr_table both have one entry per VM page. */
618 const vm_size_t pp_attr_table_size = npages * sizeof(pp_attr_t);
619 const vm_size_t pv_head_size = round_page(npages * sizeof(pv_entry_t *));
620
621 /* Scan the device tree and override heuristics in the PV entry management code. */
622 pmap_compute_pv_targets();
623
624 /* Scan the device tree and figure out how many PPL-owned I/O regions there are. */
625 const vm_size_t io_attr_table_size = pmap_compute_io_rgns();
626
627 /**
628 * Don't make any assumptions about the alignment of avail_start before
629 * execution of this function. Always re-align it to ensure the first
630 * allocated data structure is aligned correctly.
631 */
632 avail_start = PMAP_ALIGN(avail_start, __alignof(pp_attr_t));
633
634 /**
635 * Keep track of where the data structures start so we can clear this memory
636 * later.
637 */
638 const pmap_paddr_t pmap_struct_start = avail_start;
639
640 pp_attr_table = (pp_attr_t *)phystokv(avail_start);
641 avail_start = PMAP_ALIGN(avail_start + pp_attr_table_size, __alignof(pmap_io_range_t));
642
643 io_attr_table = (pmap_io_range_t *)phystokv(avail_start);
644 avail_start = PMAP_ALIGN(avail_start + io_attr_table_size, __alignof(pv_entry_t *));
645
646 pv_head_table = (pv_entry_t **)phystokv(avail_start);
647
648 /**
649 * ptd_root_table must start on a page boundary because all of the math for
650 * associating pt_desc_t objects with ptd_info objects assumes the first
651 * pt_desc_t in a page starts at the beginning of the page it resides in.
652 */
653 avail_start = round_page(avail_start + pv_head_size);
654
655 pt_desc_t *ptd_root_table = (pt_desc_t *)phystokv(avail_start);
656 avail_start = round_page(avail_start + ptd_root_table_size);
657
658 memset((char *)phystokv(pmap_struct_start), 0, avail_start - pmap_struct_start);
659
660 /* This function assumes that ptd_root_table has been zeroed out already. */
661 ptd_bootstrap(ptd_root_table, num_ptd_pages);
662
663 /* Load data about the PPL-owned I/O regions into io_attr_table and sort it. */
664 pmap_load_io_rgns();
665
666 #if XNU_MONITOR
667 /**
668 * Each of these PPL-only data structures are rounded to the nearest page
669 * beyond their predefined size so as to provide a small extra buffer of
670 * objects and to make it easy to perform page-sized operations on them if
671 * the need ever arises.
672 */
673 const vm_map_address_t pmap_ptr_array_begin = phystokv(avail_start);
674 pmap_ptr_array = (pmap_list_entry_t**)pmap_ptr_array_begin;
675 avail_start += round_page(PMAP_PTR_ARRAY_SIZE * sizeof(*pmap_ptr_array));
676 const vm_map_address_t pmap_ptr_array_end = phystokv(avail_start);
677
678 pmap_ptr_array_count = ((pmap_ptr_array_end - pmap_ptr_array_begin) / sizeof(*pmap_ptr_array));
679
680 const vm_map_address_t pmap_ledger_ptr_array_begin = phystokv(avail_start);
681 pmap_ledger_ptr_array = (pmap_ledger_t**)pmap_ledger_ptr_array_begin;
682 avail_start += round_page(LEDGER_PTR_ARRAY_SIZE * sizeof(*pmap_ledger_ptr_array));
683 const vm_map_address_t pmap_ledger_ptr_array_end = phystokv(avail_start);
684 pmap_ledger_ptr_array_count = ((pmap_ledger_ptr_array_end - pmap_ledger_ptr_array_begin) / sizeof(*pmap_ledger_ptr_array));
685
686 pmap_ledger_refcnt = (os_refcnt_t*)phystokv(avail_start);
687 avail_start += round_page(pmap_ledger_ptr_array_count * sizeof(*pmap_ledger_refcnt));
688 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
689
690 /**
691 * Setup the pmap per-cpu data structures (includes the PPL stacks, and PPL
692 * register save area). The pmap per-cpu data is managed separately from the
693 * general machine-specific per-cpu data on PPL systems so it can be made
694 * only writable by the PPL.
695 */
696 pmap_cpu_data_array_init();
697 }
698
699 /**
700 * Helper function for pmap_page_reclaim (hereby shortened to "ppr") which scans
701 * the list of userspace page table pages for one(s) that can be reclaimed. To
702 * be eligible, a page table must not have any wired PTEs, must contain at least
703 * one valid PTE, can't be nested, and the pmap that owns that page table must
704 * not already be locked.
705 *
706 * @note This should only be called from pmap_page_reclaim().
707 *
708 * @note If an eligible page table was found, then the pmap which contains that
709 * page table will be locked exclusively.
710 *
711 * @note On systems where multiple page tables exist within one page, all page
712 * tables within a page have to be eligible for that page to be considered
713 * reclaimable.
714 *
715 * @param ptdpp Output parameter which will contain a pointer to the page table
716 * descriptor for the page table(s) that can be reclaimed (if any
717 * were found). If no page table was found, this will be set to
718 * NULL.
719 *
720 * @return True if an eligible table was found, false otherwise. In the case
721 * that a page table was found, ptdpp will be a pointer to the page
722 * table descriptor for the table(s) that can be reclaimed. Otherwise
723 * it'll be set to NULL.
724 */
725 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static bool
ppr_find_eligible_pt_page(pt_desc_t ** ptdpp)726 ppr_find_eligible_pt_page(pt_desc_t **ptdpp)
727 {
728 assert(ptdpp != NULL);
729
730 pmap_simple_lock(&pt_pages_lock);
731 pt_desc_t *ptdp = (pt_desc_t *)queue_first(&pt_page_list);
732
733 while (!queue_end(&pt_page_list, (queue_entry_t)ptdp)) {
734 /* Skip this pmap if it's nested or already locked. */
735 if ((ptdp->pmap->type != PMAP_TYPE_USER) ||
736 (!pmap_try_lock(ptdp->pmap, PMAP_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE))) {
737 ptdp = (pt_desc_t *)queue_next((queue_t)ptdp);
738 continue;
739 }
740
741 assert(ptdp->pmap != kernel_pmap);
742
743 unsigned refcnt_acc = 0;
744 unsigned wiredcnt_acc = 0;
745 const pt_attr_t * const pt_attr = pmap_get_pt_attr(ptdp->pmap);
746
747 /**
748 * On systems where the VM page size differs from the hardware
749 * page size, then multiple page tables can exist within one VM page.
750 */
751 for (unsigned i = 0; i < (PAGE_SIZE / pt_attr_page_size(pt_attr)); i++) {
752 /* Do not attempt to free a page that contains an L2 table. */
753 if (ptdp->ptd_info[i].refcnt == PT_DESC_REFCOUNT) {
754 refcnt_acc = 0;
755 break;
756 }
757
758 refcnt_acc += ptdp->ptd_info[i].refcnt;
759 wiredcnt_acc += ptdp->ptd_info[i].wiredcnt;
760 }
761
762 /**
763 * If we've found a page with no wired entries, but valid PTEs then
764 * choose it for reclamation.
765 */
766 if ((wiredcnt_acc == 0) && (refcnt_acc != 0)) {
767 *ptdpp = ptdp;
768 pmap_simple_unlock(&pt_pages_lock);
769
770 /**
771 * Leave ptdp->pmap locked here. We're about to reclaim a page table
772 * from it, so we don't want anyone else messing with it while we do
773 * that.
774 */
775 return true;
776 }
777
778 /**
779 * This page table/PTD wasn't eligible, unlock its pmap and move to the
780 * next one in the queue.
781 */
782 pmap_unlock(ptdp->pmap, PMAP_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE);
783 ptdp = (pt_desc_t *)queue_next((queue_t)ptdp);
784 }
785
786 pmap_simple_unlock(&pt_pages_lock);
787 *ptdpp = NULL;
788
789 return false;
790 }
791
792 /**
793 * Helper function for pmap_page_reclaim (hereby shortened to "ppr") which frees
794 * every page table within a page so that that page can get reclaimed.
795 *
796 * @note This should only be called from pmap_page_reclaim() and is only meant
797 * to delete page tables deemed eligible for reclaiming by
798 * ppr_find_eligible_pt_page().
799 *
800 * @param ptdp The page table descriptor whose page table(s) will get freed.
801 */
802 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static void
ppr_remove_pt_page(pt_desc_t * ptdp)803 ppr_remove_pt_page(pt_desc_t *ptdp)
804 {
805 assert(ptdp != NULL);
806
807 bool need_strong_sync = false;
808 tt_entry_t *ttep = TT_ENTRY_NULL;
809 pt_entry_t *ptep = PT_ENTRY_NULL;
810 pt_entry_t *begin_pte = PT_ENTRY_NULL;
811 pt_entry_t *end_pte = PT_ENTRY_NULL;
812 pmap_t pmap = ptdp->pmap;
813
814 /**
815 * The pmap exclusive lock should have gotten locked when the eligible page
816 * table was found in ppr_find_eligible_pt_page().
817 */
818 pmap_assert_locked(pmap, PMAP_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE);
819
820 const pt_attr_t * const pt_attr = pmap_get_pt_attr(pmap);
821 const uint64_t hw_page_size = pt_attr_page_size(pt_attr);
822
823 /**
824 * On some systems, one page table descriptor can represent multiple page
825 * tables. In that case, remove every table within the wanted page so we
826 * can reclaim it.
827 */
828 for (unsigned i = 0; i < (PAGE_SIZE / hw_page_size); i++) {
829 const vm_map_address_t va = ptdp->va[i];
830
831 /**
832 * If the VA is bogus, this may represent an unallocated region or one
833 * which is in transition (already being freed or expanded). Don't try
834 * to remove mappings here.
835 */
836 if (va == (vm_offset_t)-1) {
837 continue;
838 }
839
840 /* Get the twig table entry that points to the table to reclaim. */
841 ttep = pmap_tte(pmap, va);
842
843 /* If the twig entry is either invalid or a block mapping, skip it. */
844 if ((ttep == TT_ENTRY_NULL) ||
845 ((*ttep & ARM_TTE_TYPE_MASK) != ARM_TTE_TYPE_TABLE)) {
846 continue;
847 }
848
849 ptep = (pt_entry_t *)ttetokv(*ttep);
850 begin_pte = &ptep[pte_index(pt_attr, va)];
851 end_pte = begin_pte + (hw_page_size / sizeof(pt_entry_t));
852
853 /**
854 * Remove all mappings in the page table being reclaimed.
855 *
856 * Use PMAP_OPTIONS_REMOVE to clear any "compressed" markers and
857 * update the "compressed" counter in the ledger. This means that
858 * we lose accounting for any compressed pages in this range but the
859 * alternative is to not be able to account for their future
860 * decompression, which could cause the counter to drift more and
861 * more.
862 */
863 pmap_remove_range_options(
864 pmap, va, begin_pte, end_pte, NULL, &need_strong_sync, PMAP_OPTIONS_REMOVE);
865
866 /**
867 * Free the page table now that all of its mappings have been removed.
868 * Once all page tables within a page have been deallocated, then the
869 * page that contains the table(s) will be freed and made available for
870 * reuse.
871 */
872 const vm_offset_t va_end = va + (size_t)pt_attr_leaf_table_size(pt_attr);
873 pmap_tte_deallocate(pmap, va, va_end, need_strong_sync, ttep, pt_attr_twig_level(pt_attr));
874 pmap_lock(pmap, PMAP_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE); /* pmap_tte_deallocate() dropped the lock */
875 }
876
877 /**
878 * We're done modifying page tables, so undo the lock that was grabbed when
879 * we found the table(s) to reclaim in ppr_find_eligible_pt_page().
880 */
881 pmap_unlock(pmap, PMAP_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE);
882 }
883
884 /**
885 * Attempt to return a page by freeing an active page-table page. To be eligible
886 * for reclaiming, a page-table page must be assigned to a non-kernel pmap, it
887 * must not have any wired PTEs and must contain at least one valid PTE.
888 *
889 * @note This function is potentially invoked when PMAP_PAGE_RECLAIM_NOWAIT is
890 * passed as an option to pmap_pages_alloc_zeroed().
891 *
892 * @note Invocations of this function are only meant to occur in critical paths
893 * that absolutely can't take the latency hit of waiting for the VM or
894 * jumping out of the PPL to allocate more pages. Reclaiming a page table
895 * page can cause a performance hit when one of the removed mappings is
896 * next accessed (forcing the VM to fault and re-insert the mapping).
897 *
898 * @return The physical address of the page that was allocated, or zero if no
899 * suitable page was found on the page-table list.
900 */
901 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static pmap_paddr_t
pmap_page_reclaim(void)902 pmap_page_reclaim(void)
903 {
904 pmap_simple_lock(&pmap_page_reclaim_lock);
905 pmap_pages_request_count++;
906 pmap_pages_request_acum++;
907
908 /* This loop will never break out, the function will just return. */
909 while (1) {
910 /**
911 * Attempt to allocate a page from the page free list reserved for this
912 * function. This free list is managed in tandem with pmap_pages_free()
913 * which will add a page to this list for each call to
914 * pmap_page_reclaim(). Most likely that page will come from a reclaimed
915 * userspace page table, but if there aren't any page tables to reclaim,
916 * then whatever the next freed page is will show up on this list for
917 * the next invocation of pmap_page_reclaim() to use.
918 */
919 if (pmap_page_reclaim_list != PAGE_FREE_ENTRY_NULL) {
920 page_free_entry_t *page_entry = pmap_page_reclaim_list;
921 pmap_page_reclaim_list = pmap_page_reclaim_list->next;
922 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_page_reclaim_lock);
923
924 return ml_static_vtop((vm_offset_t)page_entry);
925 }
926
927 /* Drop the lock to allow pmap_pages_free() to add pages to the list. */
928 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_page_reclaim_lock);
929
930 /* Attempt to find an elegible page table page to reclaim. */
931 pt_desc_t *ptdp = NULL;
932 bool found_page = ppr_find_eligible_pt_page(&ptdp);
933
934 if (!found_page) {
935 /**
936 * No eligible page table was found. pmap_pages_free() will still
937 * add the next freed page to the reclaim free list, so the next
938 * invocation of this function should have better luck.
939 */
940 return (pmap_paddr_t)0;
941 }
942
943 /**
944 * If we found a page table to reclaim, then ptdp should point to the
945 * descriptor for that table. Go ahead and remove it.
946 */
947 ppr_remove_pt_page(ptdp);
948
949 /**
950 * Now that a page has hopefully been freed (and added to the reclaim
951 * page list), the next iteration of the loop will re-check the reclaim
952 * free list.
953 */
954 pmap_simple_lock(&pmap_page_reclaim_lock);
955 }
956 }
957
958 #if XNU_MONITOR
959 /**
960 * Helper function for returning a PPL page back to the PPL page free list.
961 *
962 * @param pa Physical address of the page to add to the PPL page free list.
963 * This address must be aligned to the VM page size.
964 */
965 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static void
pmap_give_free_ppl_page(pmap_paddr_t pa)966 pmap_give_free_ppl_page(pmap_paddr_t pa)
967 {
968 if ((pa & PAGE_MASK) != 0) {
969 panic("%s: Unaligned address passed in, pa=0x%llx",
970 __func__, pa);
971 }
972
973 page_free_entry_t *page_entry = (page_free_entry_t *)phystokv(pa);
974 pmap_simple_lock(&pmap_ppl_free_page_lock);
975
976 /* Prepend the passed in page to the PPL page free list. */
977 page_entry->next = pmap_ppl_free_page_list;
978 pmap_ppl_free_page_list = page_entry;
979 pmap_ppl_free_page_count++;
980
981 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_ppl_free_page_lock);
982 }
983
984 /**
985 * Helper function for getting a PPL page from the PPL page free list.
986 *
987 * @return The physical address of the page taken from the PPL page free list,
988 * or zero if there are no pages left in the free list.
989 */
990 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static pmap_paddr_t
pmap_get_free_ppl_page(void)991 pmap_get_free_ppl_page(void)
992 {
993 pmap_paddr_t pa = 0;
994
995 pmap_simple_lock(&pmap_ppl_free_page_lock);
996
997 if (pmap_ppl_free_page_list != PAGE_FREE_ENTRY_NULL) {
998 /**
999 * Pop a page off the front of the list. The second item in the list
1000 * will become the new head.
1001 */
1002 page_free_entry_t *page_entry = pmap_ppl_free_page_list;
1003 pmap_ppl_free_page_list = pmap_ppl_free_page_list->next;
1004 pa = kvtophys_nofail((vm_offset_t)page_entry);
1005 pmap_ppl_free_page_count--;
1006 } else {
1007 pa = 0L;
1008 }
1009
1010 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_ppl_free_page_lock);
1011 assert((pa & PAGE_MASK) == 0);
1012
1013 return pa;
1014 }
1015
1016 /**
1017 * Claim a page on behalf of the PPL by marking it as PPL-owned and only
1018 * allowing the PPL to write to it. Also can potentially add the page to the
1019 * PPL page free list (see initially_free parameter).
1020 *
1021 * @note The page cannot have any mappings outside of the physical aperture.
1022 *
1023 * @param pa The physical address of the page to mark as PPL-owned.
1024 * @param initially_free Should the page be added to the PPL page free list.
1025 * This is typically "true" if a brand new page was just
1026 * allocated for the PPL's usage, and "false" if this is a
1027 * page already being used by other agents (e.g., IOMMUs).
1028 */
1029 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
pmap_mark_page_as_ppl_page_internal(pmap_paddr_t pa,bool initially_free)1030 pmap_mark_page_as_ppl_page_internal(pmap_paddr_t pa, bool initially_free)
1031 {
1032 pp_attr_t attr = 0;
1033
1034 if (!pa_valid(pa)) {
1035 panic("%s: Non-kernel-managed (maybe I/O) address passed in, pa=0x%llx",
1036 __func__, pa);
1037 }
1038
1039 const unsigned int pai = pa_index(pa);
1040 pvh_lock(pai);
1041
1042 /* A page that the PPL already owns can't be given to the PPL. */
1043 if (ppattr_pa_test_monitor(pa)) {
1044 panic("%s: page already belongs to PPL, pa=0x%llx", __func__, pa);
1045 }
1046
1047 /* The page cannot be mapped outside of the physical aperture. */
1048 if (!pmap_verify_free((ppnum_t)atop(pa))) {
1049 panic("%s: page still has mappings, pa=0x%llx", __func__, pa);
1050 }
1051
1052 do {
1053 attr = pp_attr_table[pai];
1054 if (attr & PP_ATTR_NO_MONITOR) {
1055 panic("%s: page excluded from PPL, pa=0x%llx", __func__, pa);
1056 }
1057 } while (!OSCompareAndSwap16(attr, attr | PP_ATTR_MONITOR, &pp_attr_table[pai]));
1058
1059 /* Ensure only the PPL has write access to the physical aperture mapping. */
1060 pmap_set_xprr_perm(pai, XPRR_KERN_RW_PERM, XPRR_PPL_RW_PERM);
1061
1062 pvh_unlock(pai);
1063
1064 if (initially_free) {
1065 pmap_give_free_ppl_page(pa);
1066 }
1067 }
1068
1069 /**
1070 * Helper function for converting a PPL page back into a kernel-writable page.
1071 * This removes the PPL-ownership for that page and updates the physical
1072 * aperture mapping of that page so it's kernel-writable again.
1073 *
1074 * @param pa The physical address of the PPL page to be made kernel-writable.
1075 */
1076 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
pmap_mark_page_as_kernel_page(pmap_paddr_t pa)1077 pmap_mark_page_as_kernel_page(pmap_paddr_t pa)
1078 {
1079 const unsigned int pai = pa_index(pa);
1080 pvh_lock(pai);
1081
1082 if (!ppattr_pa_test_monitor(pa)) {
1083 panic("%s: page is not a PPL page, pa=%p", __func__, (void *)pa);
1084 }
1085
1086 ppattr_pa_clear_monitor(pa);
1087
1088 /* Ensure the kernel has write access to the physical aperture mapping. */
1089 pmap_set_xprr_perm(pai, XPRR_PPL_RW_PERM, XPRR_KERN_RW_PERM);
1090
1091 pvh_unlock(pai);
1092 }
1093
1094 /**
1095 * PPL Helper function for giving a single page on the PPL page free list back
1096 * to the kernel.
1097 *
1098 * @note This function implements the logic that HAS to run within the PPL for
1099 * the pmap_release_ppl_pages_to_kernel() call. This helper function
1100 * shouldn't be called directly.
1101 *
1102 * @note A minimum amount of pages (set by PMAP_MIN_FREE_PPL_PAGES) will always
1103 * be kept on the PPL page free list to ensure that core operations can
1104 * occur without having to refill the free list.
1105 *
1106 * @return The physical address of the page that's been returned to the kernel,
1107 * or zero if no page was returned.
1108 */
1109 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT pmap_paddr_t
pmap_release_ppl_pages_to_kernel_internal(void)1110 pmap_release_ppl_pages_to_kernel_internal(void)
1111 {
1112 pmap_paddr_t pa = 0;
1113
1114 if (pmap_ppl_free_page_count <= PMAP_MIN_FREE_PPL_PAGES) {
1115 return 0;
1116 }
1117
1118 pa = pmap_get_free_ppl_page();
1119
1120 if (!pa) {
1121 return 0;
1122 }
1123
1124 pmap_mark_page_as_kernel_page(pa);
1125
1126 return pa;
1127 }
1128 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
1129
1130 /**
1131 * Add a queue of VM pages to the pmap's VM object. This informs the VM that
1132 * these pages are being used by the pmap and shouldn't be reused.
1133 *
1134 * This also means that the pmap_object can be used as a convenient way to loop
1135 * through every page currently being used by the pmap. For instance, this queue
1136 * of pages is exposed to the debugger through the Low Globals, where it's used
1137 * to ensure that all pmap data is saved in an active core dump.
1138 *
1139 * @param mem The head of the queue of VM pages to add to the pmap's VM object.
1140 */
1141 void
pmap_enqueue_pages(vm_page_t mem)1142 pmap_enqueue_pages(vm_page_t mem)
1143 {
1144 vm_page_t m_prev;
1145 vm_object_lock(pmap_object);
1146 while (mem != VM_PAGE_NULL) {
1147 const vm_object_offset_t offset =
1148 (vm_object_offset_t) ((ptoa(VM_PAGE_GET_PHYS_PAGE(mem))) - gPhysBase);
1149
1150 vm_page_insert_wired(mem, pmap_object, offset, VM_KERN_MEMORY_PTE);
1151 m_prev = mem;
1152 mem = NEXT_PAGE(m_prev);
1153 *(NEXT_PAGE_PTR(m_prev)) = VM_PAGE_NULL;
1154 }
1155 vm_object_unlock(pmap_object);
1156 }
1157
1158 /**
1159 * Allocate a page for usage within the pmap and zero it out. If running on a
1160 * PPL-enabled system, this will allocate pages from the PPL page free list.
1161 * Otherwise pages are grabbed directly from the VM.
1162 *
1163 * @note On PPL-enabled systems, this function can ONLY be called from within
1164 * the PPL. If a page needs to be allocated from outside of the PPL on
1165 * these systems, then use pmap_alloc_page_for_kern().
1166 *
1167 * @param pa Output parameter to store the physical address of the allocated
1168 * page if one was able to be allocated (NULL otherwise).
1169 * @param size The amount of memory to allocate. This has to be PAGE_SIZE on
1170 * PPL-enabled systems. On other systems it can be either PAGE_SIZE
1171 * or 2*PAGE_SIZE, in which case the two pages are allocated
1172 * physically contiguous.
1173 * @param options The following options can be specified:
1174 * - PMAP_PAGES_ALLOCATE_NOWAIT: If the VM or PPL page free list don't have
1175 * any free pages available then don't wait for one, just return
1176 * immediately without allocating a page. PPL-enabled systems must ALWAYS
1177 * pass this flag since allocating memory from within the PPL can't spin
1178 * or block due to preemption being disabled (would be a perf hit).
1179 *
1180 * - PMAP_PAGE_RECLAIM_NOWAIT: If memory failed to get allocated the normal
1181 * way (either by the PPL page free list on PPL-enabled systems, or
1182 * through the VM on other systems), then fall back to attempting to
1183 * reclaim a userspace page table. This should only be specified in paths
1184 * that absolutely can't take the latency hit of waiting for the VM or
1185 * jumping out of the PPL to allocate more pages.
1186 *
1187 * @return KERN_SUCCESS if a page was successfully allocated, or
1188 * KERN_RESOURCE_SHORTAGE if a page failed to get allocated.
1189 */
1190 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT kern_return_t
pmap_pages_alloc_zeroed(pmap_paddr_t * pa,unsigned size,unsigned options)1191 pmap_pages_alloc_zeroed(pmap_paddr_t *pa, unsigned size, unsigned options)
1192 {
1193 assert(pa != NULL);
1194
1195 #if XNU_MONITOR
1196 ASSERT_NOT_HIBERNATING();
1197
1198 /* The PPL page free list always operates on PAGE_SIZE chunks of memory. */
1199 if (size != PAGE_SIZE) {
1200 panic("%s: size != PAGE_SIZE, pa=%p, size=%u, options=%u",
1201 __func__, pa, size, options);
1202 }
1203
1204 /* Allocating memory in the PPL can't wait since preemption is disabled. */
1205 assert(options & PMAP_PAGES_ALLOCATE_NOWAIT);
1206
1207 *pa = pmap_get_free_ppl_page();
1208
1209 if ((*pa == 0) && (options & PMAP_PAGE_RECLAIM_NOWAIT)) {
1210 *pa = pmap_page_reclaim();
1211 }
1212
1213 if (*pa == 0) {
1214 return KERN_RESOURCE_SHORTAGE;
1215 } else {
1216 bzero((void*)phystokv(*pa), size);
1217 return KERN_SUCCESS;
1218 }
1219 #else /* XNU_MONITOR */
1220 vm_page_t mem = VM_PAGE_NULL;
1221 thread_t self = current_thread();
1222
1223 /**
1224 * We qualify for allocating reserved memory so set TH_OPT_VMPRIV to inform
1225 * the VM of this.
1226 *
1227 * This field should only be modified by the local thread itself, so no lock
1228 * needs to be taken.
1229 */
1230 uint16_t thread_options = self->options;
1231 self->options |= TH_OPT_VMPRIV;
1232
1233 if (__probable(size == PAGE_SIZE)) {
1234 /**
1235 * If we're only allocating a single page, just grab one off the VM's
1236 * global page free list.
1237 */
1238 while ((mem = vm_page_grab()) == VM_PAGE_NULL) {
1239 if (options & PMAP_PAGES_ALLOCATE_NOWAIT) {
1240 break;
1241 }
1242
1243 VM_PAGE_WAIT();
1244 }
1245
1246 if (mem != VM_PAGE_NULL) {
1247 vm_page_lock_queues();
1248 vm_page_wire(mem, VM_KERN_MEMORY_PTE, TRUE);
1249 vm_page_unlock_queues();
1250 }
1251 } else if (size == (2 * PAGE_SIZE)) {
1252 /**
1253 * Allocate two physically contiguous pages. Any random two pages
1254 * obtained from the VM's global page free list aren't guaranteed to be
1255 * contiguous so we need to use the cpm_allocate() API.
1256 */
1257 while (cpm_allocate(size, &mem, 0, 1, TRUE, 0) != KERN_SUCCESS) {
1258 if (options & PMAP_PAGES_ALLOCATE_NOWAIT) {
1259 break;
1260 }
1261
1262 VM_PAGE_WAIT();
1263 }
1264 } else {
1265 panic("%s: invalid size %u", __func__, size);
1266 }
1267
1268 self->options = thread_options;
1269
1270 /**
1271 * If the normal method of allocating pages failed, then potentially fall
1272 * back to attempting to reclaim a userspace page table.
1273 */
1274 if ((mem == VM_PAGE_NULL) && (options & PMAP_PAGE_RECLAIM_NOWAIT)) {
1275 assert(size == PAGE_SIZE);
1276 *pa = pmap_page_reclaim();
1277 if (*pa != 0) {
1278 bzero((void*)phystokv(*pa), size);
1279 return KERN_SUCCESS;
1280 }
1281 }
1282
1283 if (mem == VM_PAGE_NULL) {
1284 return KERN_RESOURCE_SHORTAGE;
1285 }
1286
1287 *pa = (pmap_paddr_t)ptoa(VM_PAGE_GET_PHYS_PAGE(mem));
1288
1289 /* Add the allocated VM page(s) to the pmap's VM object. */
1290 pmap_enqueue_pages(mem);
1291
1292 /* Pages are considered "in use" by the pmap until returned to the VM. */
1293 OSAddAtomic(size >> PAGE_SHIFT, &inuse_pmap_pages_count);
1294 OSAddAtomic64(size >> PAGE_SHIFT, &alloc_pmap_pages_count);
1295
1296 bzero((void*)phystokv(*pa), size);
1297 return KERN_SUCCESS;
1298 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
1299 }
1300
1301 #if XNU_MONITOR
1302 /**
1303 * Allocate a page from the VM. If no pages are available, this function can
1304 * potentially spin until a page is available (see the `options` parameter).
1305 *
1306 * @note This function CANNOT be called from the PPL since it calls into the VM.
1307 * If the PPL needs memory, then it'll need to exit the PPL before
1308 * allocating more (usually by returning KERN_RESOURCE_SHORTAGE, and then
1309 * calling pmap_alloc_page_for_ppl() from outside of the PPL).
1310 *
1311 * @param options The following options can be specified:
1312 * - PMAP_PAGES_ALLOCATE_NOWAIT: If the VM doesn't have any free pages
1313 * available then don't wait for one, just return immediately without
1314 * allocating a page.
1315 *
1316 * @return The physical address of the page, if one was allocated. Zero,
1317 * otherwise.
1318 */
1319 pmap_paddr_t
pmap_alloc_page_for_kern(unsigned int options)1320 pmap_alloc_page_for_kern(unsigned int options)
1321 {
1322 pmap_paddr_t pa = 0;
1323 vm_page_t mem = VM_PAGE_NULL;
1324
1325 while ((mem = vm_page_grab()) == VM_PAGE_NULL) {
1326 if (options & PMAP_PAGES_ALLOCATE_NOWAIT) {
1327 return 0;
1328 }
1329 VM_PAGE_WAIT();
1330 }
1331
1332 /* Automatically wire any pages used by the pmap. */
1333 vm_page_lock_queues();
1334 vm_page_wire(mem, VM_KERN_MEMORY_PTE, TRUE);
1335 vm_page_unlock_queues();
1336
1337 pa = (pmap_paddr_t)ptoa(VM_PAGE_GET_PHYS_PAGE(mem));
1338
1339 if (__improbable(pa == 0)) {
1340 panic("%s: physical address is 0", __func__);
1341 }
1342
1343 /**
1344 * Add the acquired VM page to the pmap's VM object to notify the VM that
1345 * this page is being used.
1346 */
1347 pmap_enqueue_pages(mem);
1348
1349 /* Pages are considered "in use" by the pmap until returned to the VM. */
1350 OSAddAtomic(1, &inuse_pmap_pages_count);
1351 OSAddAtomic64(1, &alloc_pmap_pages_count);
1352
1353 return pa;
1354 }
1355
1356 /**
1357 * Allocate a page from the VM, mark it as being PPL-owned, and add it to the
1358 * PPL page free list.
1359 *
1360 * @note This function CANNOT be called from the PPL since it calls into the VM.
1361 * If the PPL needs memory, then it'll need to exit the PPL before calling
1362 * this function (usually by returning KERN_RESOURCE_SHORTAGE).
1363 *
1364 * @param options The following options can be specified:
1365 * - PMAP_PAGES_ALLOCATE_NOWAIT: If the VM doesn't have any free pages
1366 * available then don't wait for one, just return immediately without
1367 * allocating a page.
1368 */
1369 void
pmap_alloc_page_for_ppl(unsigned int options)1370 pmap_alloc_page_for_ppl(unsigned int options)
1371 {
1372 thread_t self = current_thread();
1373
1374 /**
1375 * We qualify for allocating reserved memory so set TH_OPT_VMPRIV to inform
1376 * the VM of this.
1377 *
1378 * This field should only be modified by the local thread itself, so no lock
1379 * needs to be taken.
1380 */
1381 uint16_t thread_options = self->options;
1382 self->options |= TH_OPT_VMPRIV;
1383 pmap_paddr_t pa = pmap_alloc_page_for_kern(options);
1384 self->options = thread_options;
1385
1386 if (pa != 0) {
1387 pmap_mark_page_as_ppl_page(pa);
1388 }
1389 }
1390 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
1391
1392 /**
1393 * Free memory previously allocated through pmap_pages_alloc_zeroed() or
1394 * pmap_alloc_page_for_kern().
1395 *
1396 * On PPL-enabled systems, this just adds the page back to the PPL page free
1397 * list. On other systems, this returns the page(s) back to the VM.
1398 *
1399 * @param pa Physical address of the page(s) to free.
1400 * @param size The size in bytes of the memory region being freed (must be
1401 * PAGE_SIZE on PPL-enabled systems).
1402 */
1403 void
pmap_pages_free(pmap_paddr_t pa,__assert_only unsigned size)1404 pmap_pages_free(pmap_paddr_t pa, __assert_only unsigned size)
1405 {
1406 /**
1407 * If the pmap is starved for memory to the point that pmap_page_reclaim()
1408 * starts getting invoked to allocate memory, then let's take the page being
1409 * freed and add it directly to pmap_page_reclaim()'s dedicated free list.
1410 * In that case, the page being freed is most likely a userspace page table
1411 * that was reclaimed.
1412 */
1413 if (__improbable(pmap_pages_request_count != 0)) {
1414 pmap_simple_lock(&pmap_page_reclaim_lock);
1415
1416 if (pmap_pages_request_count != 0) {
1417 pmap_pages_request_count--;
1418
1419 /* Prepend the freed page to the pmap_page_reclaim() free list. */
1420 page_free_entry_t *page_entry = (page_free_entry_t *)phystokv(pa);
1421 page_entry->next = pmap_page_reclaim_list;
1422 pmap_page_reclaim_list = page_entry;
1423 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_page_reclaim_lock);
1424
1425 return;
1426 }
1427 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_page_reclaim_lock);
1428 }
1429
1430 #if XNU_MONITOR
1431 /* The PPL page free list always operates on PAGE_SIZE chunks of memory. */
1432 assert(size == PAGE_SIZE);
1433
1434 /* On PPL-enabled systems, just add the page back to the PPL page free list. */
1435 pmap_give_free_ppl_page(pa);
1436 #else /* XNU_MONITOR */
1437 vm_page_t mem = VM_PAGE_NULL;
1438 const pmap_paddr_t pa_max = pa + size;
1439
1440 /* Pages are considered "in use" until given back to the VM. */
1441 OSAddAtomic(-(size >> PAGE_SHIFT), &inuse_pmap_pages_count);
1442
1443 for (; pa < pa_max; pa += PAGE_SIZE) {
1444 vm_object_lock(pmap_object);
1445
1446 /**
1447 * Remove the page from the pmap's VM object and return it back to the
1448 * VM's global free list of pages.
1449 */
1450 mem = vm_page_lookup(pmap_object, (pa - gPhysBase));
1451 assert(mem != VM_PAGE_NULL);
1452 assert(VM_PAGE_WIRED(mem));
1453 vm_page_lock_queues();
1454 vm_page_free(mem);
1455 vm_page_unlock_queues();
1456 vm_object_unlock(pmap_object);
1457 }
1458 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
1459 }
1460
1461 /**
1462 * Called by the VM to reclaim pages that we can reclaim quickly and cheaply.
1463 * This will take pages in the pmap's VM object and add them back to the VM's
1464 * global list of free pages.
1465 *
1466 * @return The number of pages returned to the VM.
1467 */
1468 uint64_t
pmap_release_pages_fast(void)1469 pmap_release_pages_fast(void)
1470 {
1471 #if XNU_MONITOR
1472 return pmap_release_ppl_pages_to_kernel();
1473 #else /* XNU_MONITOR */
1474 return 0;
1475 #endif
1476 }
1477
1478 /**
1479 * Allocates a batch (list) of pv_entry_t's from the global PV free array.
1480 *
1481 * @return A pointer to the head of the newly-allocated batch, or PV_ENTRY_NULL
1482 * if empty.
1483 */
1484 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static pv_entry_t *
pv_free_array_get_batch(void)1485 pv_free_array_get_batch(void)
1486 {
1487 pv_entry_t *new_batch = PV_ENTRY_NULL;
1488
1489 pmap_simple_lock(&pv_free_array_lock);
1490 if (pv_free_array_n_elems() > 0) {
1491 /**
1492 * The global PV array acts as a ring buffer where each entry points to
1493 * a linked list of PVEs of length PV_BATCH_SIZE. Get the next free
1494 * batch.
1495 */
1496 const size_t index = pv_free_read_idx++ & (PV_FREE_ARRAY_SIZE - 1);
1497 pv_free_list_t *free_list = &pv_free_ring[index];
1498
1499 assert((free_list->count == PV_BATCH_SIZE) && (free_list->list != PV_ENTRY_NULL));
1500 new_batch = free_list->list;
1501 }
1502 pmap_simple_unlock(&pv_free_array_lock);
1503
1504 return new_batch;
1505 }
1506
1507 /**
1508 * Frees a batch (list) of pv_entry_t's into the global PV free array.
1509 *
1510 * @param batch_head Pointer to the first entry in the batch to be returned to
1511 * the array. This must be a linked list of pv_entry_t's of
1512 * length PV_BATCH_SIZE.
1513 *
1514 * @return KERN_SUCCESS, or KERN_FAILURE if the global array is full.
1515 */
1516 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static kern_return_t
pv_free_array_give_batch(pv_entry_t * batch_head)1517 pv_free_array_give_batch(pv_entry_t *batch_head)
1518 {
1519 assert(batch_head != NULL);
1520
1521 pmap_simple_lock(&pv_free_array_lock);
1522 if (pv_free_array_n_elems() == (PV_FREE_ARRAY_SIZE - 1)) {
1523 pmap_simple_unlock(&pv_free_array_lock);
1524 return KERN_FAILURE;
1525 }
1526
1527 const size_t index = pv_free_write_idx++ & (PV_FREE_ARRAY_SIZE - 1);
1528 pv_free_list_t *free_list = &pv_free_ring[index];
1529 free_list->list = batch_head;
1530 free_list->count = PV_BATCH_SIZE;
1531 pmap_simple_unlock(&pv_free_array_lock);
1532
1533 return KERN_SUCCESS;
1534 }
1535
1536 /**
1537 * Helper function for allocating a single PVE from an arbitrary free list.
1538 *
1539 * @param free_list The free list to allocate a node from.
1540 * @param pvepp Output parameter that will get updated with a pointer to the
1541 * allocated node if the free list isn't empty, or a pointer to
1542 * NULL if the list is empty.
1543 */
1544 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static void
pv_free_list_alloc(pv_free_list_t * free_list,pv_entry_t ** pvepp)1545 pv_free_list_alloc(pv_free_list_t *free_list, pv_entry_t **pvepp)
1546 {
1547 assert(pvepp != NULL);
1548 assert(((free_list->list != NULL) && (free_list->count > 0)) ||
1549 ((free_list->list == NULL) && (free_list->count == 0)));
1550
1551 if ((*pvepp = free_list->list) != NULL) {
1552 pv_entry_t *pvep = *pvepp;
1553 free_list->list = pvep->pve_next;
1554 pvep->pve_next = PV_ENTRY_NULL;
1555 free_list->count--;
1556 }
1557 }
1558
1559 /**
1560 * Allocates a PVE from the kernel-dedicated list.
1561 *
1562 * @note This is only called when the global free list is empty, so don't bother
1563 * trying to allocate more nodes from that list.
1564 *
1565 * @param pvepp Output parameter that will get updated with a pointer to the
1566 * allocated node if the free list isn't empty, or a pointer to
1567 * NULL if the list is empty. This pointer can't already be
1568 * pointing to a valid entry before allocation.
1569 */
1570 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static void
pv_list_kern_alloc(pv_entry_t ** pvepp)1571 pv_list_kern_alloc(pv_entry_t **pvepp)
1572 {
1573 assert((pvepp != NULL) && (*pvepp == PV_ENTRY_NULL));
1574 pmap_simple_lock(&pv_kern_free_list_lock);
1575 if (pv_kern_free.count > 0) {
1576 pmap_kern_reserve_alloc_stat++;
1577 }
1578 pv_free_list_alloc(&pv_kern_free, pvepp);
1579 pmap_simple_unlock(&pv_kern_free_list_lock);
1580 }
1581
1582 /**
1583 * Returns a list of PVEs to the kernel-dedicated free list.
1584 *
1585 * @param pve_head Head of the list to be returned.
1586 * @param pve_tail Tail of the list to be returned.
1587 * @param pv_cnt Number of elements in the list to be returned.
1588 */
1589 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static void
pv_list_kern_free(pv_entry_t * pve_head,pv_entry_t * pve_tail,int pv_cnt)1590 pv_list_kern_free(pv_entry_t *pve_head, pv_entry_t *pve_tail, int pv_cnt)
1591 {
1592 assert((pve_head != PV_ENTRY_NULL) && (pve_tail != PV_ENTRY_NULL));
1593
1594 pmap_simple_lock(&pv_kern_free_list_lock);
1595 pve_tail->pve_next = pv_kern_free.list;
1596 pv_kern_free.list = pve_head;
1597 pv_kern_free.count += pv_cnt;
1598 pmap_simple_unlock(&pv_kern_free_list_lock);
1599 }
1600
1601 /**
1602 * Attempts to allocate from the per-cpu free list of PVEs, and if that fails,
1603 * then replenish the per-cpu free list with a batch of PVEs from the global
1604 * PVE free list.
1605 *
1606 * @param pvepp Output parameter that will get updated with a pointer to the
1607 * allocated node if the free lists aren't empty, or a pointer to
1608 * NULL if both the per-cpu and global lists are empty. This
1609 * pointer can't already be pointing to a valid entry before
1610 * allocation.
1611 */
1612 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static void
pv_list_alloc(pv_entry_t ** pvepp)1613 pv_list_alloc(pv_entry_t **pvepp)
1614 {
1615 assert((pvepp != NULL) && (*pvepp == PV_ENTRY_NULL));
1616
1617 #if !XNU_MONITOR
1618 /**
1619 * Preemption is always disabled in the PPL so it only needs to get disabled
1620 * on non-PPL systems. This needs to be disabled while working with per-cpu
1621 * data to prevent getting rescheduled onto a different CPU.
1622 */
1623 mp_disable_preemption();
1624 #endif /* !XNU_MONITOR */
1625
1626 pmap_cpu_data_t *pmap_cpu_data = pmap_get_cpu_data();
1627 pv_free_list_alloc(&pmap_cpu_data->pv_free, pvepp);
1628
1629 if (*pvepp != PV_ENTRY_NULL) {
1630 goto pv_list_alloc_done;
1631 }
1632
1633 #if !XNU_MONITOR
1634 if (pv_kern_free.count < pv_kern_low_water_mark) {
1635 /**
1636 * If the kernel reserved pool is low, let non-kernel mappings wait for
1637 * a page from the VM.
1638 */
1639 goto pv_list_alloc_done;
1640 }
1641 #endif /* !XNU_MONITOR */
1642
1643 /**
1644 * Attempt to replenish the local list off the global one, and return the
1645 * first element. If the global list is empty, then the allocation failed.
1646 */
1647 pv_entry_t *new_batch = pv_free_array_get_batch();
1648
1649 if (new_batch != PV_ENTRY_NULL) {
1650 pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.count = PV_BATCH_SIZE - 1;
1651 pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.list = new_batch->pve_next;
1652 assert(pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.list != NULL);
1653
1654 new_batch->pve_next = PV_ENTRY_NULL;
1655 *pvepp = new_batch;
1656 }
1657
1658 pv_list_alloc_done:
1659 #if !XNU_MONITOR
1660 mp_enable_preemption();
1661 #endif /* !XNU_MONITOR */
1662
1663 return;
1664 }
1665
1666 /**
1667 * Adds a list of PVEs to the per-CPU PVE free list. May spill out some entries
1668 * to the global or the kernel PVE free lists if the per-CPU list contains too
1669 * many PVEs.
1670 *
1671 * @param pve_head Head of the list to be returned.
1672 * @param pve_tail Tail of the list to be returned.
1673 * @param pv_cnt Number of elements in the list to be returned.
1674 */
1675 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
pv_list_free(pv_entry_t * pve_head,pv_entry_t * pve_tail,int pv_cnt)1676 pv_list_free(pv_entry_t *pve_head, pv_entry_t *pve_tail, int pv_cnt)
1677 {
1678 assert((pve_head != PV_ENTRY_NULL) && (pve_tail != PV_ENTRY_NULL));
1679
1680 #if !XNU_MONITOR
1681 /**
1682 * Preemption is always disabled in the PPL so it only needs to get disabled
1683 * on non-PPL systems. This needs to be disabled while working with per-cpu
1684 * data to prevent getting rescheduled onto a different CPU.
1685 */
1686 mp_disable_preemption();
1687 #endif /* !XNU_MONITOR */
1688
1689 pmap_cpu_data_t *pmap_cpu_data = pmap_get_cpu_data();
1690
1691 /**
1692 * How many more PVEs need to be added to the last allocated batch to get it
1693 * back up to a PV_BATCH_SIZE number of objects.
1694 */
1695 const uint32_t available = PV_BATCH_SIZE - (pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.count % PV_BATCH_SIZE);
1696
1697 /**
1698 * The common case is that the number of PVEs to be freed fit in the current
1699 * PV_BATCH_SIZE boundary. If that is the case, quickly prepend the whole
1700 * list and return.
1701 */
1702 if (__probable((pv_cnt <= available) &&
1703 ((pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.count % PV_BATCH_SIZE != 0) || (pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.count == 0)))) {
1704 pve_tail->pve_next = pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.list;
1705 pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.list = pve_head;
1706 pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.count += pv_cnt;
1707 goto pv_list_free_done;
1708 }
1709
1710 /**
1711 * In the degenerate case, we need to process PVEs one by one, to make sure
1712 * we spill out to the global list, or update the spill marker as
1713 * appropriate.
1714 */
1715 while (pv_cnt) {
1716 /**
1717 * Take the node off the top of the passed in list and prepend it to the
1718 * per-cpu list.
1719 */
1720 pv_entry_t *pv_next = pve_head->pve_next;
1721 pve_head->pve_next = pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.list;
1722 pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.list = pve_head;
1723 pve_head = pv_next;
1724 pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.count++;
1725 pv_cnt--;
1726
1727 if (__improbable(pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.count == (PV_BATCH_SIZE + 1))) {
1728 /**
1729 * A full batch of entries have been freed to the per-cpu list.
1730 * Update the spill marker which is used to remember the end of a
1731 * batch (remember, we prepend nodes) to eventually return back to
1732 * the global list (we try to only keep one PV_BATCH_SIZE worth of
1733 * nodes in any single per-cpu list).
1734 */
1735 pmap_cpu_data->pv_free_spill_marker = pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.list;
1736 } else if (__improbable(pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.count == (PV_BATCH_SIZE * 2) + 1)) {
1737 /* Spill out excess PVEs to the global PVE array */
1738 pv_entry_t *spill_head = pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.list->pve_next;
1739 pv_entry_t *spill_tail = pmap_cpu_data->pv_free_spill_marker;
1740 pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.list->pve_next = pmap_cpu_data->pv_free_spill_marker->pve_next;
1741 spill_tail->pve_next = PV_ENTRY_NULL;
1742 pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.count -= PV_BATCH_SIZE;
1743 pmap_cpu_data->pv_free_spill_marker = pmap_cpu_data->pv_free.list;
1744
1745 if (__improbable(pv_free_array_give_batch(spill_head) != KERN_SUCCESS)) {
1746 /**
1747 * This is extremely unlikely to happen, as it would imply that
1748 * we have (PV_FREE_ARRAY_SIZE * PV_BATCH_SIZE) PVEs sitting in
1749 * the global array. Just in case, push the excess down to the
1750 * kernel PVE free list.
1751 */
1752 pv_list_kern_free(spill_head, spill_tail, PV_BATCH_SIZE);
1753 }
1754 }
1755 }
1756
1757 pv_list_free_done:
1758 #if !XNU_MONITOR
1759 mp_enable_preemption();
1760 #endif /* !XNU_MONITOR */
1761
1762 return;
1763 }
1764
1765 /**
1766 * Adds a single page to the PVE allocation subsystem.
1767 *
1768 * @note This function operates under the assumption that a PV_BATCH_SIZE amount
1769 * of PVEs can fit within a single page. One page is always allocated for
1770 * one batch, so if there's empty space in the page after the batch of
1771 * PVEs, it'll go unused (so it's best to keep the batch size at an amount
1772 * that utilizes a whole page).
1773 *
1774 * @param alloc_flags Allocation flags passed to pmap_pages_alloc_zeroed(). See
1775 * the definition of that function for a detailed description
1776 * of the available flags.
1777 *
1778 * @return KERN_SUCCESS, or the value returned by pmap_pages_alloc_zeroed() upon
1779 * failure.
1780 */
1781 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static kern_return_t
pve_feed_page(unsigned alloc_flags)1782 pve_feed_page(unsigned alloc_flags)
1783 {
1784 kern_return_t kr = KERN_FAILURE;
1785
1786 pv_entry_t *pve_head = PV_ENTRY_NULL;
1787 pv_entry_t *pve_tail = PV_ENTRY_NULL;
1788 pmap_paddr_t pa = 0;
1789
1790 kr = pmap_pages_alloc_zeroed(&pa, PAGE_SIZE, alloc_flags);
1791
1792 if (kr != KERN_SUCCESS) {
1793 return kr;
1794 }
1795
1796 /* Update statistics globals. See the variables' definitions for more info. */
1797 pv_page_count++;
1798 pmap_reserve_replenish_stat += PV_BATCH_SIZE;
1799
1800 /* Prepare a new list by linking all of the entries in advance. */
1801 pve_head = (pv_entry_t *)phystokv(pa);
1802 pve_tail = &pve_head[PV_BATCH_SIZE - 1];
1803
1804 for (int i = 0; i < PV_BATCH_SIZE; i++) {
1805 pve_head[i].pve_next = &pve_head[i + 1];
1806 }
1807 pve_head[PV_BATCH_SIZE - 1].pve_next = PV_ENTRY_NULL;
1808
1809 /**
1810 * Add the new list to the kernel PVE free list if we are running low on
1811 * kernel-dedicated entries or the global free array is full.
1812 */
1813 if ((pv_kern_free.count < pv_kern_low_water_mark) ||
1814 (pv_free_array_give_batch(pve_head) != KERN_SUCCESS)) {
1815 pv_list_kern_free(pve_head, pve_tail, PV_BATCH_SIZE);
1816 }
1817
1818 return KERN_SUCCESS;
1819 }
1820
1821 /**
1822 * Allocate a PV node from one of many different free lists (per-cpu, global, or
1823 * kernel-specific).
1824 *
1825 * @note This function is very tightly coupled with pmap_enter_pv(). If
1826 * modifying this code, please ensure that pmap_enter_pv() doesn't break.
1827 *
1828 * @note The pmap lock must already be held if the new mapping is a CPU mapping.
1829 *
1830 * @note The PVH lock for the physical page that is getting a new mapping
1831 * registered must already be held.
1832 *
1833 * @param pmap The pmap that owns the new mapping, or NULL if this is tracking
1834 * an IOMMU translation.
1835 * @param pai The physical address index of the page that's getting a new
1836 * mapping.
1837 * @param lock_mode Which state the pmap lock is being held in if the mapping is
1838 * owned by a pmap, otherwise this is a don't care.
1839 * @param pvepp Output parameter that will get updated with a pointer to the
1840 * allocated node if none of the free lists are empty, or a pointer
1841 * to NULL otherwise. This pointer can't already be pointing to a
1842 * valid entry before allocation.
1843 *
1844 * @return These are the possible return values:
1845 * PV_ALLOC_SUCCESS: A PVE object was successfully allocated.
1846 * PV_ALLOC_FAILURE: No objects were available for allocation, and
1847 * allocating a new page failed. On PPL-enabled systems,
1848 * a fresh page needs to be added to the PPL page list
1849 * before retrying this operaton.
1850 * PV_ALLOC_RETRY: No objects were available on the free lists, so a new
1851 * page of PVE objects needed to be allocated. To do that,
1852 * the pmap and PVH locks were dropped. The caller may have
1853 * depended on these locks for consistency, so return and
1854 * let the caller retry the PVE allocation with the locks
1855 * held. Note that the locks have already been re-acquired
1856 * before this function exits.
1857 */
1858 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT pv_alloc_return_t
pv_alloc(pmap_t pmap,unsigned int pai,pmap_lock_mode_t lock_mode,pv_entry_t ** pvepp)1859 pv_alloc(
1860 pmap_t pmap,
1861 unsigned int pai,
1862 pmap_lock_mode_t lock_mode,
1863 pv_entry_t **pvepp)
1864 {
1865 assert((pvepp != NULL) && (*pvepp == PV_ENTRY_NULL));
1866
1867 if (pmap != NULL) {
1868 pmap_assert_locked(pmap, lock_mode);
1869 }
1870 pvh_assert_locked(pai);
1871
1872 pv_list_alloc(pvepp);
1873 if (PV_ENTRY_NULL != *pvepp) {
1874 return PV_ALLOC_SUCCESS;
1875 }
1876
1877 #if XNU_MONITOR
1878 /* PPL can't block so this flag is always required. */
1879 unsigned alloc_flags = PMAP_PAGES_ALLOCATE_NOWAIT;
1880 #else /* XNU_MONITOR */
1881 unsigned alloc_flags = 0;
1882 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
1883
1884 /**
1885 * We got here because both the per-CPU and the global lists are empty. If
1886 * this allocation is for the kernel pmap or an IOMMU kernel driver, we try
1887 * to get an entry from the kernel list next.
1888 */
1889 if ((pmap == NULL) || (kernel_pmap == pmap)) {
1890 pv_list_kern_alloc(pvepp);
1891 if (PV_ENTRY_NULL != *pvepp) {
1892 return PV_ALLOC_SUCCESS;
1893 }
1894 /**
1895 * If the pmap is NULL, this is an allocation outside the normal pmap path,
1896 * most likely an IOMMU allocation. We therefore don't know what other locks
1897 * this path may hold or timing constraints it may have, so we should avoid
1898 * a potentially expensive call to pmap_page_reclaim() on this path.
1899 */
1900 if (pmap == NULL) {
1901 alloc_flags = PMAP_PAGES_ALLOCATE_NOWAIT;
1902 } else {
1903 alloc_flags = PMAP_PAGES_ALLOCATE_NOWAIT | PMAP_PAGE_RECLAIM_NOWAIT;
1904 }
1905 }
1906
1907 /**
1908 * We ran out of PV entries all across the board, or this allocation is not
1909 * for the kernel. Let's make sure that the kernel list is not too full
1910 * (very unlikely), in which case we can rebalance here.
1911 */
1912 if (__improbable(pv_kern_free.count > (PV_BATCH_SIZE * 2))) {
1913 pmap_simple_lock(&pv_kern_free_list_lock);
1914 /* Re-check, now that the lock is held. */
1915 if (pv_kern_free.count > (PV_BATCH_SIZE * 2)) {
1916 pv_entry_t *pve_head = pv_kern_free.list;
1917 pv_entry_t *pve_tail = pve_head;
1918
1919 for (int i = 0; i < (PV_BATCH_SIZE - 1); i++) {
1920 pve_tail = pve_tail->pve_next;
1921 }
1922
1923 pv_kern_free.list = pve_tail->pve_next;
1924 pv_kern_free.count -= PV_BATCH_SIZE;
1925 pve_tail->pve_next = PV_ENTRY_NULL;
1926 pmap_simple_unlock(&pv_kern_free_list_lock);
1927
1928 /* Return back every node except the first one to the free lists. */
1929 pv_list_free(pve_head->pve_next, pve_tail, PV_BATCH_SIZE - 1);
1930 pve_head->pve_next = PV_ENTRY_NULL;
1931 *pvepp = pve_head;
1932 return PV_ALLOC_SUCCESS;
1933 }
1934 pmap_simple_unlock(&pv_kern_free_list_lock);
1935 }
1936
1937 /**
1938 * If all else fails, try to get a new pmap page so that the allocation
1939 * succeeds once the caller retries it.
1940 */
1941 kern_return_t kr = KERN_FAILURE;
1942 pv_alloc_return_t pv_status = PV_ALLOC_FAIL;
1943
1944 /* Drop the lock during page allocation since that can take a while. */
1945 pvh_unlock(pai);
1946 if (pmap != NULL) {
1947 pmap_unlock(pmap, lock_mode);
1948 }
1949
1950 if ((kr = pve_feed_page(alloc_flags)) == KERN_SUCCESS) {
1951 /**
1952 * Since the lock was dropped, even though we successfully allocated a
1953 * new page to be used for PVE nodes, the code that relies on this
1954 * function might have depended on the lock being held for consistency,
1955 * so return out early and let them retry the allocation with the lock
1956 * re-held.
1957 */
1958 pv_status = PV_ALLOC_RETRY;
1959 } else {
1960 pv_status = PV_ALLOC_FAIL;
1961 }
1962
1963 if (pmap != NULL) {
1964 pmap_lock(pmap, lock_mode);
1965 }
1966 pvh_lock(pai);
1967
1968 /* Ensure that no node was created if we're not returning successfully. */
1969 assert(*pvepp == PV_ENTRY_NULL);
1970
1971 return pv_status;
1972 }
1973
1974 /**
1975 * Utility function for freeing a single PVE object back to the free lists.
1976 *
1977 * @param pvep Pointer to the PVE object to free.
1978 */
1979 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
pv_free(pv_entry_t * pvep)1980 pv_free(pv_entry_t *pvep)
1981 {
1982 assert(pvep != PV_ENTRY_NULL);
1983
1984 pv_list_free(pvep, pvep, 1);
1985 }
1986
1987 /**
1988 * This function provides a mechanism for the device tree to override the
1989 * default PV allocation amounts and the watermark level which determines how
1990 * many PVE objects are kept in the kernel-dedicated free list.
1991 */
1992 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
pmap_compute_pv_targets(void)1993 pmap_compute_pv_targets(void)
1994 {
1995 DTEntry entry = NULL;
1996 void const *prop = NULL;
1997 int err = 0;
1998 unsigned int prop_size = 0;
1999
2000 err = SecureDTLookupEntry(NULL, "/defaults", &entry);
2001 assert(err == kSuccess);
2002
2003 if (kSuccess == SecureDTGetProperty(entry, "pmap-pv-count", &prop, &prop_size)) {
2004 if (prop_size != sizeof(pv_alloc_initial_target)) {
2005 panic("pmap-pv-count property is not a 32-bit integer");
2006 }
2007 pv_alloc_initial_target = *((uint32_t const *)prop);
2008 }
2009
2010 if (kSuccess == SecureDTGetProperty(entry, "pmap-kern-pv-count", &prop, &prop_size)) {
2011 if (prop_size != sizeof(pv_kern_alloc_initial_target)) {
2012 panic("pmap-kern-pv-count property is not a 32-bit integer");
2013 }
2014 pv_kern_alloc_initial_target = *((uint32_t const *)prop);
2015 }
2016
2017 if (kSuccess == SecureDTGetProperty(entry, "pmap-kern-pv-min", &prop, &prop_size)) {
2018 if (prop_size != sizeof(pv_kern_low_water_mark)) {
2019 panic("pmap-kern-pv-min property is not a 32-bit integer");
2020 }
2021 pv_kern_low_water_mark = *((uint32_t const *)prop);
2022 }
2023 }
2024
2025 /**
2026 * This would normally be used to adjust the amount of PVE objects available in
2027 * the system, but we do that dynamically at runtime anyway so this is unneeded.
2028 */
2029 void
mapping_adjust(void)2030 mapping_adjust(void)
2031 {
2032 /* Not implemented for arm/arm64. */
2033 }
2034
2035 /**
2036 * Creates a target number of free pv_entry_t objects for the kernel free list
2037 * and the general free list.
2038 *
2039 * @note This function is called once during early boot, in kernel_bootstrap().
2040 *
2041 * @return KERN_SUCCESS if the objects were successfully allocated, or the
2042 * return value from pve_feed_page() on failure (could be caused by not
2043 * being able to allocate a page).
2044 */
2045 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT kern_return_t
mapping_free_prime_internal(void)2046 mapping_free_prime_internal(void)
2047 {
2048 kern_return_t kr = KERN_FAILURE;
2049
2050 #if XNU_MONITOR
2051 /* PPL can't block so this flag is always required. */
2052 unsigned alloc_flags = PMAP_PAGES_ALLOCATE_NOWAIT;
2053 #else /* XNU_MONITOR */
2054 unsigned alloc_flags = 0;
2055 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
2056
2057 /*
2058 * We do not need to hold the pv_free_array lock to calculate the number of
2059 * elements in it because no other core is running at this point.
2060 */
2061 while (((pv_free_array_n_elems() * PV_BATCH_SIZE) < pv_alloc_initial_target) ||
2062 (pv_kern_free.count < pv_kern_alloc_initial_target)) {
2063 if ((kr = pve_feed_page(alloc_flags)) != KERN_SUCCESS) {
2064 return kr;
2065 }
2066 }
2067
2068 return KERN_SUCCESS;
2069 }
2070
2071 /**
2072 * Helper function for pmap_enter_pv (hereby shortened to "pepv") which converts
2073 * a PVH entry from PVH_TYPE_PTEP to PVH_TYPE_PVEP which will transform the
2074 * entry into a linked list of mappings.
2075 *
2076 * @note This should only be called from pmap_enter_pv().
2077 *
2078 * @note The PVH lock for the passed in page must already be held and the type
2079 * must be PVH_TYPE_PTEP (wouldn't make sense to call this otherwise).
2080 *
2081 * @param pmap Either the pmap that owns the mapping being registered in
2082 * pmap_enter_pv(), or NULL if this is an IOMMU mapping.
2083 * @param pai The physical address index of the page that's getting a second
2084 * mapping and needs to be converted from PVH_TYPE_PTEP to
2085 * PVH_TYPE_PVEP.
2086 * @param lock_mode Which state the pmap lock is being held in if the mapping is
2087 * owned by a pmap, otherwise this is a don't care.
2088 *
2089 * @return PV_ALLOC_SUCCESS if the entry at `pai` was successfully converted
2090 * into PVH_TYPE_PVEP, or the return value of pv_alloc() otherwise. See
2091 * pv_alloc()'s function header for a detailed explanation of the
2092 * possible return values.
2093 */
2094 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT static pv_alloc_return_t
pepv_convert_ptep_to_pvep(pmap_t pmap,unsigned int pai,pmap_lock_mode_t lock_mode)2095 pepv_convert_ptep_to_pvep(
2096 pmap_t pmap,
2097 unsigned int pai,
2098 pmap_lock_mode_t lock_mode)
2099 {
2100 pvh_assert_locked(pai);
2101
2102 pv_entry_t **pvh = pai_to_pvh(pai);
2103 assert(pvh_test_type(pvh, PVH_TYPE_PTEP));
2104
2105 pv_entry_t *pvep = PV_ENTRY_NULL;
2106 pv_alloc_return_t ret = pv_alloc(pmap, pai, lock_mode, &pvep);
2107 if (ret != PV_ALLOC_SUCCESS) {
2108 return ret;
2109 }
2110
2111 /* If we've gotten this far then a node should've been allocated. */
2112 assert(pvep != PV_ENTRY_NULL);
2113
2114 /* The new PVE should have the same PTE pointer as the previous PVH entry. */
2115 pve_init(pvep);
2116 pve_set_ptep(pvep, 0, pvh_ptep(pvh));
2117
2118 assert(!pve_get_internal(pvep, 0));
2119 assert(!pve_get_altacct(pvep, 0));
2120 if (ppattr_is_internal(pai)) {
2121 /**
2122 * Transfer "internal" status from pp_attr to this pve. See the comment
2123 * above PP_ATTR_INTERNAL for more information on this.
2124 */
2125 ppattr_clear_internal(pai);
2126 pve_set_internal(pvep, 0);
2127 }
2128 if (ppattr_is_altacct(pai)) {
2129 /**
2130 * Transfer "altacct" status from pp_attr to this pve. See the comment
2131 * above PP_ATTR_ALTACCT for more information on this.
2132 */
2133 ppattr_clear_altacct(pai);
2134 pve_set_altacct(pvep, 0);
2135 }
2136
2137 pvh_update_head(pvh, pvep, PVH_TYPE_PVEP);
2138
2139 return PV_ALLOC_SUCCESS;
2140 }
2141
2142 /**
2143 * Register a new mapping into the pv_head_table. This is the main data
2144 * structure used for performing a reverse physical to virtual translation and
2145 * finding all mappings to a physical page. Whenever a new page table mapping is
2146 * created (regardless of whether it's for a CPU or an IOMMU), it should be
2147 * registered with a call to this function.
2148 *
2149 * @note The pmap lock must already be held if the new mapping is a CPU mapping.
2150 *
2151 * @note The PVH lock for the physical page that is getting a new mapping
2152 * registered must already be held.
2153 *
2154 * @note This function cannot be called during the hibernation process because
2155 * it modifies critical pmap data structures that need to be dumped into
2156 * the hibernation image in a consistent state.
2157 *
2158 * @param pmap The pmap that owns the new mapping, or NULL if this is tracking
2159 * an IOMMU translation.
2160 * @param ptep The new mapping to register.
2161 * @param pai The physical address index of the physical page being mapped by
2162 * `ptep`.
2163 * @param options Flags that can potentially be set on a per-page basis:
2164 * PMAP_OPTIONS_INTERNAL: If this is the first CPU mapping, then
2165 * mark the page as being "internal". See the definition of
2166 * PP_ATTR_INTERNAL for more info.
2167 * PMAP_OPTIONS_REUSABLE: If this is the first CPU mapping, and
2168 * this page is also marked internal, then mark the page as
2169 * being "reusable". See the definition of PP_ATTR_REUSABLE
2170 * for more info.
2171 * @param lock_mode Which state the pmap lock is being held in if the mapping is
2172 * owned by a pmap, otherwise this is a don't care.
2173 * @param new_pvepp An output parameter that is updated with a pointer to the
2174 * PVE object where the PTEP was allocated into. In the event
2175 * of failure, or if the pointer passed in is NULL,
2176 * it's not modified.
2177 * @param new_pve_ptep_idx An output parameter that is updated with the index
2178 * into the PVE object where the PTEP was allocated into.
2179 * In the event of failure, or if new_pvepp in is NULL,
2180 * it's not modified.
2181 *
2182 * @return PV_ALLOC_SUCCESS if the entry at `pai` was successfully updated with
2183 * the new mapping, or the return value of pv_alloc() otherwise. See
2184 * pv_alloc()'s function header for a detailed explanation of the
2185 * possible return values.
2186 */
2187 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT pv_alloc_return_t
pmap_enter_pv(pmap_t pmap,pt_entry_t * ptep,int pai,unsigned int options,pmap_lock_mode_t lock_mode,pv_entry_t ** new_pvepp,int * new_pve_ptep_idx)2188 pmap_enter_pv(
2189 pmap_t pmap,
2190 pt_entry_t *ptep,
2191 int pai,
2192 unsigned int options,
2193 pmap_lock_mode_t lock_mode,
2194 pv_entry_t **new_pvepp,
2195 int *new_pve_ptep_idx)
2196 {
2197 assert(ptep != PT_ENTRY_NULL);
2198
2199 pv_entry_t **pvh = pai_to_pvh(pai);
2200 bool first_cpu_mapping = false;
2201
2202 ASSERT_NOT_HIBERNATING();
2203 pvh_assert_locked(pai);
2204
2205 if (pmap != NULL) {
2206 pmap_assert_locked(pmap, lock_mode);
2207 }
2208
2209 vm_offset_t pvh_flags = pvh_get_flags(pvh);
2210
2211 #if XNU_MONITOR
2212 if (__improbable(pvh_flags & PVH_FLAG_LOCKDOWN_MASK)) {
2213 panic("%d is locked down (%#lx), cannot enter", pai, pvh_flags);
2214 }
2215 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
2216
2217 #ifdef PVH_FLAG_CPU
2218 /**
2219 * An IOMMU mapping may already be present for a page that hasn't yet had a
2220 * CPU mapping established, so we use PVH_FLAG_CPU to determine if this is
2221 * the first CPU mapping. We base internal/reusable accounting on the
2222 * options specified for the first CPU mapping. PVH_FLAG_CPU, and thus this
2223 * accounting, will then persist as long as there are *any* mappings of the
2224 * page. The accounting for a page should not need to change until the page
2225 * is recycled by the VM layer, and we assert that there are no mappings
2226 * when a page is recycled. An IOMMU mapping of a freed/recycled page is
2227 * considered a security violation & potential DMA corruption path.
2228 */
2229 first_cpu_mapping = ((pmap != NULL) && !(pvh_flags & PVH_FLAG_CPU));
2230 if (first_cpu_mapping) {
2231 pvh_flags |= PVH_FLAG_CPU;
2232 }
2233 #else /* PVH_FLAG_CPU */
2234 first_cpu_mapping = pvh_test_type(pvh, PVH_TYPE_NULL);
2235 #endif /* PVH_FLAG_CPU */
2236
2237 /**
2238 * Internal/reusable flags are based on the first CPU mapping made to a
2239 * page. These will persist until all mappings to the page are removed.
2240 */
2241 if (first_cpu_mapping) {
2242 if ((options & PMAP_OPTIONS_INTERNAL) &&
2243 (options & PMAP_OPTIONS_REUSABLE)) {
2244 ppattr_set_reusable(pai);
2245 } else {
2246 ppattr_clear_reusable(pai);
2247 }
2248 }
2249
2250 /* Visit the definitions for the PVH_TYPEs to learn more about each one. */
2251 if (pvh_test_type(pvh, PVH_TYPE_NULL)) {
2252 /* If this is the first mapping, upgrade the type to store a single PTEP. */
2253 pvh_update_head(pvh, ptep, PVH_TYPE_PTEP);
2254 } else {
2255 pv_alloc_return_t ret = PV_ALLOC_FAIL;
2256
2257 if (pvh_test_type(pvh, PVH_TYPE_PTEP)) {
2258 /**
2259 * There was already a single mapping to the page. Convert the PVH
2260 * entry from PVH_TYPE_PTEP to PVH_TYPE_PVEP so that multiple
2261 * mappings can be tracked. If PVEs cannot hold more than a single
2262 * mapping, a second PVE will be added farther down.
2263 *
2264 * Also, ensure that the PVH flags (which can possibly contain
2265 * PVH_FLAG_CPU) are set before potentially returning or dropping
2266 * the locks. We use that flag to lock in the internal/reusable
2267 * attributes and we don't want another mapping to jump in while the
2268 * locks are dropped, think it's the first CPU mapping, and decide
2269 * to clobber those attributes.
2270 */
2271 pvh_set_flags(pvh, pvh_flags);
2272 if ((ret = pepv_convert_ptep_to_pvep(pmap, pai, lock_mode)) != PV_ALLOC_SUCCESS) {
2273 return ret;
2274 }
2275
2276 /**
2277 * At this point, the PVH flags have been clobbered due to updating
2278 * PTEP->PVEP, but that's ok because the locks are being held and
2279 * the flags will get set again below before pv_alloc() is called
2280 * and the locks are potentially dropped again.
2281 */
2282 } else if (!pvh_test_type(pvh, PVH_TYPE_PVEP)) {
2283 panic("%s: unexpected PV head %p, ptep=%p pmap=%p pvh=%p",
2284 __func__, *pvh, ptep, pmap, pvh);
2285 }
2286
2287 /**
2288 * Check if we have room for one more mapping in this PVE
2289 */
2290 pv_entry_t *pvep = pvh_pve_list(pvh);
2291 assert(pvep != PV_ENTRY_NULL);
2292
2293 int pve_ptep_idx = pve_find_ptep_index(pvep, PT_ENTRY_NULL);
2294
2295 if (pve_ptep_idx == -1) {
2296 /**
2297 * Set up the pv_entry for this new mapping and then add it to the list
2298 * for this physical page.
2299 */
2300 pve_ptep_idx = 0;
2301 pvh_set_flags(pvh, pvh_flags);
2302 pvep = PV_ENTRY_NULL;
2303 if ((ret = pv_alloc(pmap, pai, lock_mode, &pvep)) != PV_ALLOC_SUCCESS) {
2304 return ret;
2305 }
2306
2307 /* If we've gotten this far then a node should've been allocated. */
2308 assert(pvep != PV_ENTRY_NULL);
2309 pve_init(pvep);
2310 pve_add(pvh, pvep);
2311 }
2312
2313 pve_set_ptep(pvep, pve_ptep_idx, ptep);
2314
2315 /*
2316 * The PTEP was successfully entered into the PVE object.
2317 * If the caller requests it, set new_pvepp and new_pve_ptep_idx
2318 * appropriately.
2319 */
2320 if (new_pvepp != NULL) {
2321 *new_pvepp = pvep;
2322 *new_pve_ptep_idx = pve_ptep_idx;
2323 }
2324 }
2325
2326 pvh_set_flags(pvh, pvh_flags);
2327
2328 return PV_ALLOC_SUCCESS;
2329 }
2330
2331 /**
2332 * Remove a mapping that was registered with the pv_head_table. This needs to be
2333 * done for every mapping that was previously registered using pmap_enter_pv()
2334 * when the mapping is removed.
2335 *
2336 * @note The PVH lock for the physical page that is getting a new mapping
2337 * registered must already be held.
2338 *
2339 * @note This function cannot be called during the hibernation process because
2340 * it modifies critical pmap data structures that need to be dumped into
2341 * the hibernation image in a consistent state.
2342 *
2343 * @param pmap The pmap that owns the new mapping, or NULL if this is tracking
2344 * an IOMMU translation.
2345 * @param ptep The mapping that's getting removed.
2346 * @param pai The physical address index of the physical page being mapped by
2347 * `ptep`.
2348 * @param flush_tlb_async On some systems, removing the last mapping to a page
2349 * that used to be mapped executable will require
2350 * updating the physical aperture mapping of the page.
2351 * This parameter specifies whether the TLB invalidate
2352 * should be synchronized or not if that update occurs.
2353 * @param is_internal_p The internal bit of the PTE that was removed.
2354 * @param is_altacct_p The altacct bit of the PTE that was removed.
2355 */
2356 void
pmap_remove_pv(pmap_t pmap,pt_entry_t * ptep,int pai,bool flush_tlb_async __unused,bool * is_internal_p,bool * is_altacct_p)2357 pmap_remove_pv(
2358 pmap_t pmap,
2359 pt_entry_t *ptep,
2360 int pai,
2361 bool flush_tlb_async __unused,
2362 bool *is_internal_p,
2363 bool *is_altacct_p)
2364 {
2365 ASSERT_NOT_HIBERNATING();
2366 pvh_assert_locked(pai);
2367
2368 bool is_internal = false;
2369 bool is_altacct = false;
2370 pv_entry_t **pvh = pai_to_pvh(pai);
2371 const vm_offset_t pvh_flags = pvh_get_flags(pvh);
2372
2373 #if XNU_MONITOR
2374 if (__improbable(pvh_flags & PVH_FLAG_LOCKDOWN_MASK)) {
2375 panic("%s: PVH entry at pai %d is locked down (%#lx), cannot remove",
2376 __func__, pai, pvh_flags);
2377 }
2378 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
2379
2380 if (pvh_test_type(pvh, PVH_TYPE_PTEP)) {
2381 if (__improbable((ptep != pvh_ptep(pvh)))) {
2382 /**
2383 * The only mapping that exists for this page isn't the one we're
2384 * unmapping, weird.
2385 */
2386 panic("%s: ptep=%p does not match pvh=%p (%p), pai=0x%x",
2387 __func__, ptep, pvh, pvh_ptep(pvh), pai);
2388 }
2389
2390 pvh_update_head(pvh, PV_ENTRY_NULL, PVH_TYPE_NULL);
2391 is_internal = ppattr_is_internal(pai);
2392 is_altacct = ppattr_is_altacct(pai);
2393 } else if (pvh_test_type(pvh, PVH_TYPE_PVEP)) {
2394 pv_entry_t **pvepp = pvh;
2395 pv_entry_t *pvep = pvh_pve_list(pvh);
2396 assert(pvep != PV_ENTRY_NULL);
2397 int pve_pte_idx = 0;
2398 /* Find the PVE that represents the mapping we're removing. */
2399 while ((pvep != PV_ENTRY_NULL) && ((pve_pte_idx = pve_find_ptep_index(pvep, ptep)) == -1)) {
2400 pvepp = pve_next_ptr(pvep);
2401 pvep = pve_next(pvep);
2402 }
2403
2404 if (__improbable((pvep == PV_ENTRY_NULL))) {
2405 panic("%s: ptep=%p (pai=0x%x) not in pvh=%p", __func__, ptep, pai, pvh);
2406 }
2407
2408 is_internal = pve_get_internal(pvep, pve_pte_idx);
2409 is_altacct = pve_get_altacct(pvep, pve_pte_idx);
2410 pve_set_ptep(pvep, pve_pte_idx, PT_ENTRY_NULL);
2411
2412 #if MACH_ASSERT
2413 /**
2414 * Ensure that the mapping didn't accidentally have multiple PVEs
2415 * associated with it (there should only be one PVE per mapping). This
2416 * checking only occurs on configurations that can accept the perf hit
2417 * that walking the PVE chain on every unmap entails.
2418 *
2419 * This is skipped for IOMMU mappings because some IOMMUs don't use
2420 * normal page tables (e.g., NVMe) to map pages, so the `ptep` field in
2421 * the associated PVE won't actually point to a real page table (see the
2422 * definition of PVH_FLAG_IOMMU_TABLE for more info). Because of that,
2423 * it's perfectly possible for duplicate IOMMU PVEs to exist.
2424 */
2425 if ((pmap != NULL) && (kern_feature_override(KF_PMAPV_OVRD) == FALSE)) {
2426 pv_entry_t *check_pvep = pvep;
2427
2428 do {
2429 if (pve_find_ptep_index(check_pvep, ptep) != -1) {
2430 panic_plain("%s: duplicate pve entry ptep=%p pmap=%p, pvh=%p, "
2431 "pvep=%p, pai=0x%x", __func__, ptep, pmap, pvh, pvep, pai);
2432 }
2433 } while ((check_pvep = pve_next(check_pvep)) != PV_ENTRY_NULL);
2434 }
2435 #endif /* MACH_ASSERT */
2436
2437 const bool pve_is_first = (pvepp == pvh);
2438 const bool pve_is_last = (pve_next(pvep) == PV_ENTRY_NULL);
2439 const int other_pte_idx = !pve_pte_idx;
2440
2441 if (pve_is_empty(pvep)) {
2442 /*
2443 * This PVE doesn't contain any mappings. We can get rid of it.
2444 */
2445 pve_remove(pvh, pvepp, pvep);
2446 pv_free(pvep);
2447 } else if (!pve_is_first) {
2448 /*
2449 * This PVE contains a single mapping. See if we can coalesce it with the one
2450 * at the top of the list.
2451 */
2452 pv_entry_t *head_pvep = pvh_pve_list(pvh);
2453 int head_pve_pte_empty_idx;
2454 if ((head_pve_pte_empty_idx = pve_find_ptep_index(head_pvep, PT_ENTRY_NULL)) != -1) {
2455 pve_set_ptep(head_pvep, head_pve_pte_empty_idx, pve_get_ptep(pvep, other_pte_idx));
2456 if (pve_get_internal(pvep, other_pte_idx)) {
2457 pve_set_internal(head_pvep, head_pve_pte_empty_idx);
2458 }
2459 if (pve_get_altacct(pvep, other_pte_idx)) {
2460 pve_set_altacct(head_pvep, head_pve_pte_empty_idx);
2461 }
2462 pve_remove(pvh, pvepp, pvep);
2463 pv_free(pvep);
2464 } else {
2465 /*
2466 * We could not coalesce it. Move it to the start of the list, so that it
2467 * can be coalesced against in the future.
2468 */
2469 *pvepp = pve_next(pvep);
2470 pve_add(pvh, pvep);
2471 }
2472 } else if (pve_is_first && pve_is_last) {
2473 /*
2474 * This PVE contains a single mapping, and it's the last mapping for this PAI.
2475 * Collapse this list back into the head, turning it into a PVH_TYPE_PTEP entry.
2476 */
2477 pve_remove(pvh, pvepp, pvep);
2478 pvh_update_head(pvh, pve_get_ptep(pvep, other_pte_idx), PVH_TYPE_PTEP);
2479 if (pve_get_internal(pvep, other_pte_idx)) {
2480 ppattr_set_internal(pai);
2481 }
2482 if (pve_get_altacct(pvep, other_pte_idx)) {
2483 ppattr_set_altacct(pai);
2484 }
2485 pv_free(pvep);
2486 }
2487
2488 /**
2489 * Removing a PVE entry can clobber the PVH flags if the head itself is
2490 * updated (when removing the first PVE in the list) so let's re-set the
2491 * flags back to what they should be.
2492 */
2493 if (!pvh_test_type(pvh, PVH_TYPE_NULL)) {
2494 pvh_set_flags(pvh, pvh_flags);
2495 }
2496 } else {
2497 panic("%s: unexpected PV head %p, ptep=%p pmap=%p pvh=%p pai=0x%x",
2498 __func__, *pvh, ptep, pmap, pvh, pai);
2499 }
2500
2501 #ifdef PVH_FLAG_EXEC
2502 /**
2503 * If we're on a system that has extra protections around executable pages,
2504 * then removing the last mapping to an executable page means we need to
2505 * give write-access back to the physical aperture mapping of this page
2506 * (write access is removed when a page is executable for security reasons).
2507 */
2508 if ((pvh_flags & PVH_FLAG_EXEC) && pvh_test_type(pvh, PVH_TYPE_NULL)) {
2509 pmap_set_ptov_ap(pai, AP_RWNA, flush_tlb_async);
2510 }
2511 #endif /* PVH_FLAG_EXEC */
2512
2513 *is_internal_p = is_internal;
2514 *is_altacct_p = is_altacct;
2515 }
2516
2517 /**
2518 * Bootstrap the initial Page Table Descriptor (PTD) node free list.
2519 *
2520 * @note It's not safe to allocate PTD nodes until after this function is
2521 * invoked.
2522 *
2523 * @note The maximum number of PTD objects that can reside within one page
2524 * (`ptd_per_page`) must have already been calculated before calling this
2525 * function.
2526 *
2527 * @param ptdp Pointer to the virtually-contiguous memory used for the initial
2528 * free list.
2529 * @param num_pages The number of virtually-contiguous pages pointed to by
2530 * `ptdp` that will be used to prime the PTD allocator.
2531 */
2532 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
ptd_bootstrap(pt_desc_t * ptdp,unsigned int num_pages)2533 ptd_bootstrap(pt_desc_t *ptdp, unsigned int num_pages)
2534 {
2535 assert(ptd_per_page > 0);
2536 assert((ptdp != NULL) && (((uintptr_t)ptdp & PAGE_MASK) == 0) && (num_pages > 0));
2537
2538 queue_init(&pt_page_list);
2539
2540 /**
2541 * Region represented by ptdp should be cleared by pmap_bootstrap().
2542 *
2543 * Only part of each page is being used for PTD objects (the rest is used
2544 * for each PTD's associated ptd_info_t object) so link together the last
2545 * PTD element of each page to the first element of the previous page.
2546 */
2547 for (int i = 0; i < num_pages; i++) {
2548 *((void**)(&ptdp[ptd_per_page - 1])) = (void*)ptd_free_list;
2549 ptd_free_list = ptdp;
2550 ptdp = (void *)(((uint8_t *)ptdp) + PAGE_SIZE);
2551 }
2552
2553 ptd_free_count = num_pages * ptd_per_page;
2554 simple_lock_init(&ptd_free_list_lock, 0);
2555 }
2556
2557 /**
2558 * Allocate a page table descriptor (PTD) object from the PTD free list, but
2559 * don't add it to the list of reclaimable userspace page table pages just yet
2560 * and don't associate the PTD with a specific pmap (that's what "unlinked"
2561 * means here).
2562 *
2563 * @note Until a page table's descriptor object is added to the page table list,
2564 * that table won't be eligible for reclaiming by pmap_page_reclaim().
2565 *
2566 * @return The page table descriptor object if the allocation was successful, or
2567 * NULL otherwise (which indicates that a page failed to be allocated
2568 * for new nodes).
2569 */
2570 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT pt_desc_t*
ptd_alloc_unlinked(void)2571 ptd_alloc_unlinked(void)
2572 {
2573 pt_desc_t *ptdp = PTD_ENTRY_NULL;
2574
2575 pmap_simple_lock(&ptd_free_list_lock);
2576
2577 assert(ptd_per_page != 0);
2578
2579 /**
2580 * Ensure that we either have a free list with nodes available, or a
2581 * completely empty list to allocate and prepend new nodes to.
2582 */
2583 assert(((ptd_free_list != NULL) && (ptd_free_count > 0)) ||
2584 ((ptd_free_list == NULL) && (ptd_free_count == 0)));
2585
2586 if (__improbable(ptd_free_count == 0)) {
2587 pmap_paddr_t pa = 0;
2588
2589 /* Drop the lock while allocating pages since that can take a while. */
2590 pmap_simple_unlock(&ptd_free_list_lock);
2591
2592 if (pmap_pages_alloc_zeroed(&pa, PAGE_SIZE, PMAP_PAGES_ALLOCATE_NOWAIT) != KERN_SUCCESS) {
2593 return NULL;
2594 }
2595 ptdp = (pt_desc_t *)phystokv(pa);
2596
2597 pmap_simple_lock(&ptd_free_list_lock);
2598
2599 /**
2600 * Since the lock was dropped while allocating, it's possible another
2601 * CPU already allocated a page. To be safe, prepend the current free
2602 * list (which may or may not be empty now) to the page of nodes just
2603 * allocated and update the head to point to these new nodes.
2604 */
2605 *((void**)(&ptdp[ptd_per_page - 1])) = (void*)ptd_free_list;
2606 ptd_free_list = ptdp;
2607 ptd_free_count += ptd_per_page;
2608 }
2609
2610 /* There should be available nodes at this point. */
2611 if (__improbable((ptd_free_count == 0) || (ptd_free_list == PTD_ENTRY_NULL))) {
2612 panic_plain("%s: out of PTD entries and for some reason didn't "
2613 "allocate more %d %p", __func__, ptd_free_count, ptd_free_list);
2614 }
2615
2616 /* Grab the top node off of the free list to return later. */
2617 ptdp = ptd_free_list;
2618
2619 /**
2620 * Advance the free list to the next node.
2621 *
2622 * Each free pt_desc_t-sized object in this free list uses the first few
2623 * bytes of the object to point to the next object in the list. When an
2624 * object is deallocated (in ptd_deallocate()) the object is prepended onto
2625 * the free list by setting its first few bytes to point to the current free
2626 * list head. Then the head is updated to point to that object.
2627 *
2628 * When a new page is allocated for PTD nodes, it's left zeroed out. Once we
2629 * use up all of the previously deallocated nodes, the list will point
2630 * somewhere into the last allocated, empty page. We know we're pointing at
2631 * this page because the first few bytes of the object will be NULL. In
2632 * that case just set the head to this empty object.
2633 *
2634 * This empty page can be thought of as a "reserve" of empty nodes for the
2635 * case where more nodes are being allocated than there are nodes being
2636 * deallocated.
2637 */
2638 pt_desc_t *const next_node = (pt_desc_t *)(*(void **)ptd_free_list);
2639
2640 /**
2641 * If the next node in the list is NULL but there are supposed to still be
2642 * nodes left, then we've hit the previously allocated empty page of nodes.
2643 * Go ahead and advance the free list to the next free node in that page.
2644 */
2645 if ((next_node == PTD_ENTRY_NULL) && (ptd_free_count > 1)) {
2646 ptd_free_list = ptd_free_list + 1;
2647 } else {
2648 ptd_free_list = next_node;
2649 }
2650
2651 ptd_free_count--;
2652
2653 pmap_simple_unlock(&ptd_free_list_lock);
2654
2655 ptdp->pt_page.next = NULL;
2656 ptdp->pt_page.prev = NULL;
2657 ptdp->pmap = NULL;
2658
2659 /**
2660 * Calculate and stash the address of the ptd_info_t associated with this
2661 * PTD. This can be done easily because both structures co-exist in the same
2662 * page, with ptd_info_t's starting at a given offset from the start of the
2663 * page.
2664 *
2665 * Each PTD is associated with a ptd_info_t of the same index. For example,
2666 * the 15th PTD will use the 15th ptd_info_t in the same page.
2667 */
2668 const unsigned ptd_index = ((uintptr_t)ptdp & PAGE_MASK) / sizeof(pt_desc_t);
2669 assert(ptd_index < ptd_per_page);
2670
2671 const uintptr_t start_of_page = (uintptr_t)ptdp & ~PAGE_MASK;
2672 ptd_info_t *first_ptd_info = (ptd_info_t *)(start_of_page + ptd_info_offset);
2673 ptdp->ptd_info = &first_ptd_info[ptd_index * PT_INDEX_MAX];
2674
2675 /**
2676 * On systems where the VM page size doesn't match the hardware page size,
2677 * one PTD might have to manage multiple page tables.
2678 */
2679 for (unsigned int i = 0; i < PT_INDEX_MAX; i++) {
2680 ptdp->va[i] = (vm_offset_t)-1;
2681 ptdp->ptd_info[i].refcnt = 0;
2682 ptdp->ptd_info[i].wiredcnt = 0;
2683 }
2684
2685 return ptdp;
2686 }
2687
2688 /**
2689 * Allocate a single page table descriptor (PTD) object, and if it's meant to
2690 * keep track of a userspace page table, then add that descriptor object to the
2691 * list of PTDs that can be reclaimed in pmap_page_reclaim().
2692 *
2693 * @param pmap The pmap object that will be owning the page table(s) that this
2694 * descriptor object represents.
2695 *
2696 * @return The allocated PTD object, or NULL if one failed to get allocated
2697 * (which indicates that memory wasn't able to get allocated).
2698 */
2699 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT pt_desc_t*
ptd_alloc(pmap_t pmap)2700 ptd_alloc(pmap_t pmap)
2701 {
2702 pt_desc_t *ptdp = ptd_alloc_unlinked();
2703
2704 if (ptdp == NULL) {
2705 return NULL;
2706 }
2707
2708 ptdp->pmap = pmap;
2709 if (pmap != kernel_pmap) {
2710 /**
2711 * We should never try to reclaim kernel pagetable pages in
2712 * pmap_page_reclaim(), so don't enter them into the list.
2713 */
2714 pmap_simple_lock(&pt_pages_lock);
2715 queue_enter(&pt_page_list, ptdp, pt_desc_t *, pt_page);
2716 pmap_simple_unlock(&pt_pages_lock);
2717 }
2718
2719 pmap_tt_ledger_credit(pmap, sizeof(*ptdp));
2720 return ptdp;
2721 }
2722
2723 /**
2724 * Deallocate a single page table descriptor (PTD) object.
2725 *
2726 * @note Ledger statistics are tracked on a per-pmap basis, so for those pages
2727 * which are not associated with any specific pmap (e.g., IOMMU pages),
2728 * the caller must ensure that the pmap/iommu field in the PTD object is
2729 * NULL before calling this function.
2730 *
2731 * @param ptdp Pointer to the PTD object to deallocate.
2732 */
2733 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
ptd_deallocate(pt_desc_t * ptdp)2734 ptd_deallocate(pt_desc_t *ptdp)
2735 {
2736 pmap_t pmap = ptdp->pmap;
2737
2738 /**
2739 * If this PTD was put onto the reclaimable page table list, then remove it
2740 * from that list before deallocating.
2741 */
2742 if (ptdp->pt_page.next != NULL) {
2743 pmap_simple_lock(&pt_pages_lock);
2744 queue_remove(&pt_page_list, ptdp, pt_desc_t *, pt_page);
2745 pmap_simple_unlock(&pt_pages_lock);
2746 }
2747
2748 /* Prepend the deallocated node to the free list. */
2749 pmap_simple_lock(&ptd_free_list_lock);
2750 (*(void **)ptdp) = (void *)ptd_free_list;
2751 ptd_free_list = (pt_desc_t *)ptdp;
2752 ptd_free_count++;
2753 pmap_simple_unlock(&ptd_free_list_lock);
2754
2755 /**
2756 * If this PTD was being used to represent an IOMMU page then there won't be
2757 * an associated pmap, and therefore no ledger statistics to update.
2758 */
2759 if (pmap != NULL) {
2760 pmap_tt_ledger_debit(pmap, sizeof(*ptdp));
2761 }
2762 }
2763
2764 /**
2765 * In address spaces where the VM page size is larger than the underlying
2766 * hardware page size, one page table descriptor (PTD) object can represent
2767 * multiple page tables. Some fields (like the reference counts) still need to
2768 * be tracked on a per-page-table basis. Because of this, those values are
2769 * stored in a separate array of ptd_info_t objects within the PTD where there's
2770 * one ptd_info_t for every page table a single PTD can manage.
2771 *
2772 * This function initializes the correct ptd_info_t field within a PTD based on
2773 * the page table it's representing.
2774 *
2775 * @param ptdp Pointer to the PTD object which contains the ptd_info_t field to
2776 * update. Must match up with the `pmap` and `ptep` parameters.
2777 * @param pmap The pmap that owns the page table managed by the passed in PTD.
2778 * @param va Any virtual address that resides within the virtual address space
2779 * being mapped by the page table pointed to by `ptep`.
2780 * @param level The level in the page table hierarchy that the table resides.
2781 * @param ptep A pointer into a page table that the passed in PTD manages. This
2782 * page table must be owned by `pmap` and be the PTE that maps `va`.
2783 */
2784 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
ptd_info_init(pt_desc_t * ptdp,pmap_t pmap,vm_map_address_t va,unsigned int level,pt_entry_t * ptep)2785 ptd_info_init(
2786 pt_desc_t *ptdp,
2787 pmap_t pmap,
2788 vm_map_address_t va,
2789 unsigned int level,
2790 pt_entry_t *ptep)
2791 {
2792 const pt_attr_t * const pt_attr = pmap_get_pt_attr(pmap);
2793
2794 if (ptdp->pmap != pmap) {
2795 panic("%s: pmap mismatch, ptdp=%p, pmap=%p, va=%p, level=%u, ptep=%p",
2796 __func__, ptdp, pmap, (void*)va, level, ptep);
2797 }
2798
2799 /**
2800 * Root tables are managed separately, and can be accessed through the
2801 * pmap structure itself (there's only one root table per address space).
2802 */
2803 assert(level > pt_attr_root_level(pt_attr));
2804
2805 /**
2806 * Each PTD can represent multiple page tables. Get the correct index to use
2807 * with the per-page-table properties.
2808 */
2809 const unsigned pt_index = ptd_get_index(ptdp, ptep);
2810
2811 /**
2812 * The "va" field represents the first virtual address that this page table
2813 * is translating for. Naturally, this is dependent on the level the page
2814 * table resides at since more VA space is mapped the closer the page
2815 * table's level is to the root.
2816 */
2817 ptdp->va[pt_index] = (vm_offset_t) va & ~pt_attr_ln_pt_offmask(pt_attr, level - 1);
2818
2819 /**
2820 * Reference counts are only tracked on CPU leaf tables because those are
2821 * the only tables that can be opportunistically deallocated.
2822 */
2823 if (level < pt_attr_leaf_level(pt_attr)) {
2824 ptdp->ptd_info[pt_index].refcnt = PT_DESC_REFCOUNT;
2825 }
2826 }
2827
2828 #if XNU_MONITOR
2829
2830 /**
2831 * Validate that a pointer passed into the PPL is indeed an actual ledger object
2832 * that was allocated from within the PPL.
2833 *
2834 * If this is truly a real PPL-allocated ledger object then the object will have
2835 * an index into the ledger pointer array located right after it. That index
2836 * into the ledger pointer array should contain the exact same pointer that
2837 * we're validating. This works because the ledger array is PPL-owned data, so
2838 * even if the index was fabricated to try and point to a different ledger
2839 * object, the pointer inside the array won't match up with the passed in
2840 * pointer and validation will fail.
2841 *
2842 * @note This validation does not need to occur on non-PPL systems because on
2843 * those systems the ledger objects are allocated using a zone allocator.
2844 *
2845 * @param ledger Pointer to the supposed ledger object that we need to validate.
2846 *
2847 * @return The index into the ledger pointer array used to validate the passed
2848 * in ledger pointer. If the pointer failed to validate, then the system
2849 * will panic.
2850 */
2851 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT uint64_t
pmap_ledger_validate(const volatile void * ledger)2852 pmap_ledger_validate(const volatile void *ledger)
2853 {
2854 assert(ledger != NULL);
2855
2856 uint64_t array_index = ((const volatile pmap_ledger_t*)ledger)->array_index;
2857
2858 if (__improbable(array_index >= pmap_ledger_ptr_array_count)) {
2859 panic("%s: ledger %p array index invalid, index was %#llx", __func__,
2860 ledger, array_index);
2861 }
2862
2863 if (__improbable(pmap_ledger_ptr_array[array_index] != ledger)) {
2864 panic("%s: ledger pointer mismatch, %p != %p", __func__, ledger,
2865 pmap_ledger_ptr_array[array_index]);
2866 }
2867
2868 return array_index;
2869 }
2870
2871 /**
2872 * The size of the ledgers being allocated by the PPL need to be large enough
2873 * to handle ledgers produced by the task_ledgers ledger template. That template
2874 * is dynamically created at runtime so this function is used to verify that the
2875 * real size of a ledger based on the task_ledgers template matches up with the
2876 * amount of space the PPL calculated is required for a single ledger.
2877 *
2878 * @note See the definition of PMAP_LEDGER_DATA_BYTES for more information.
2879 *
2880 * @note This function needs to be called before any ledgers can be allocated.
2881 *
2882 * @param size The actual size that each pmap ledger should be. This is
2883 * calculated based on the task_ledgers template which should match
2884 * up with PMAP_LEDGER_DATA_BYTES.
2885 */
2886 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
pmap_ledger_verify_size_internal(size_t size)2887 pmap_ledger_verify_size_internal(size_t size)
2888 {
2889 pmap_simple_lock(&pmap_ledger_lock);
2890
2891 if (pmap_ledger_size_verified) {
2892 panic("%s: ledger size already verified, size=%lu", __func__, size);
2893 }
2894
2895 if ((size == 0) || (size > sizeof(pmap_ledger_data_t)) ||
2896 ((sizeof(pmap_ledger_data_t) - size) % sizeof(struct ledger_entry))) {
2897 panic("%s: size mismatch, expected %lu, size=%lu", __func__,
2898 PMAP_LEDGER_DATA_BYTES, size);
2899 }
2900
2901 pmap_ledger_size_verified = true;
2902
2903 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_ledger_lock);
2904 }
2905
2906 /**
2907 * Allocate a ledger object from the pmap ledger free list and associate it with
2908 * the ledger pointer array so it can be validated when passed into the PPL.
2909 *
2910 * @return Pointer to the successfully allocated ledger object, or NULL if we're
2911 * out of PPL pages.
2912 */
2913 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT ledger_t
pmap_ledger_alloc_internal(void)2914 pmap_ledger_alloc_internal(void)
2915 {
2916 /**
2917 * Ensure that we've double checked the size of the ledger objects we're
2918 * allocating before we allocate anything.
2919 */
2920 if (!pmap_ledger_size_verified) {
2921 panic_plain("%s: Attempted to allocate a pmap ledger before verifying "
2922 "the ledger size", __func__);
2923 }
2924
2925 pmap_simple_lock(&pmap_ledger_lock);
2926 if (pmap_ledger_free_list == NULL) {
2927 /* The free list is empty, so allocate a page's worth of objects. */
2928 const pmap_paddr_t paddr = pmap_get_free_ppl_page();
2929
2930 if (paddr == 0) {
2931 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_ledger_lock);
2932 return NULL;
2933 }
2934
2935 const vm_map_address_t vstart = phystokv(paddr);
2936 const uint32_t ledgers_per_page = PAGE_SIZE / sizeof(pmap_ledger_t);
2937 const vm_map_address_t vend = vstart + (ledgers_per_page * sizeof(pmap_ledger_t));
2938 assert(vend > vstart);
2939
2940 /**
2941 * Loop through every pmap ledger object within the recently allocated
2942 * page and add it to both the ledger free list and the ledger pointer
2943 * array (which will be used to validate these objects in the future).
2944 */
2945 for (vm_map_address_t vaddr = vstart; vaddr < vend; vaddr += sizeof(pmap_ledger_t)) {
2946 /* Get the next free entry in the ledger pointer array. */
2947 const uint64_t index = pmap_ledger_ptr_array_free_index++;
2948
2949 if (index >= pmap_ledger_ptr_array_count) {
2950 panic("%s: pmap_ledger_ptr_array is full, index=%llu",
2951 __func__, index);
2952 }
2953
2954 pmap_ledger_t *free_ledger = (pmap_ledger_t*)vaddr;
2955
2956 /**
2957 * This association between the just allocated ledger and the
2958 * pointer array is what allows this object to be validated in the
2959 * future that it's indeed a ledger allocated by this code.
2960 */
2961 pmap_ledger_ptr_array[index] = free_ledger;
2962 free_ledger->array_index = index;
2963
2964 /* Prepend this new ledger object to the free list. */
2965 free_ledger->next = pmap_ledger_free_list;
2966 pmap_ledger_free_list = free_ledger;
2967 }
2968
2969 /**
2970 * In an effort to reduce the amount of ledger code that needs to be
2971 * called from within the PPL, the ledger objects themselves are made
2972 * kernel writable. This way, all of the initialization and checking of
2973 * the ledgers can occur outside of the PPL.
2974 *
2975 * The only modification to these ledger objects that should occur from
2976 * within the PPL is when debiting/crediting the ledgers. And those
2977 * operations should only occur on validated ledger objects that are
2978 * validated using the ledger pointer array (which is wholly contained
2979 * in PPL-owned memory).
2980 */
2981 pa_set_range_xprr_perm(paddr, paddr + PAGE_SIZE, XPRR_PPL_RW_PERM, XPRR_KERN_RW_PERM);
2982 }
2983
2984 ledger_t new_ledger = (ledger_t)pmap_ledger_free_list;
2985 pmap_ledger_free_list = pmap_ledger_free_list->next;
2986
2987 /**
2988 * Double check that the array index of the recently allocated object wasn't
2989 * tampered with while the object was sitting on the free list.
2990 */
2991 const uint64_t array_index = pmap_ledger_validate(new_ledger);
2992 os_ref_init(&pmap_ledger_refcnt[array_index], NULL);
2993
2994 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_ledger_lock);
2995
2996 return new_ledger;
2997 }
2998
2999 /**
3000 * Free a ledger that was previously allocated by the PPL.
3001 *
3002 * @param ledger The ledger to put back onto the pmap ledger free list.
3003 */
3004 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
pmap_ledger_free_internal(ledger_t ledger)3005 pmap_ledger_free_internal(ledger_t ledger)
3006 {
3007 /**
3008 * A pmap_ledger_t wholly contains a ledger_t as its first member, but also
3009 * includes an index into the ledger pointer array used for validation
3010 * purposes.
3011 */
3012 pmap_ledger_t *free_ledger = (pmap_ledger_t*)ledger;
3013
3014 pmap_simple_lock(&pmap_ledger_lock);
3015
3016 /* Ensure that what we're putting onto the free list is a real ledger. */
3017 const uint64_t array_index = pmap_ledger_validate(ledger);
3018
3019 /* Ensure no pmap objects are still using this ledger. */
3020 if (os_ref_release(&pmap_ledger_refcnt[array_index]) != 0) {
3021 panic("%s: ledger still referenced, ledger=%p", __func__, ledger);
3022 }
3023
3024 /* Prepend the ledger to the free list. */
3025 free_ledger->next = pmap_ledger_free_list;
3026 pmap_ledger_free_list = free_ledger;
3027
3028 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_ledger_lock);
3029 }
3030
3031 /**
3032 * Bump the reference count on a ledger object to denote that is currently in
3033 * use by a pmap object.
3034 *
3035 * @param ledger The ledger whose refcnt to increment.
3036 */
3037 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
pmap_ledger_retain(ledger_t ledger)3038 pmap_ledger_retain(ledger_t ledger)
3039 {
3040 pmap_simple_lock(&pmap_ledger_lock);
3041 const uint64_t array_index = pmap_ledger_validate(ledger);
3042 os_ref_retain(&pmap_ledger_refcnt[array_index]);
3043 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_ledger_lock);
3044 }
3045
3046 /**
3047 * Decrement the reference count on a ledger object to denote that a pmap object
3048 * that used to use it now isn't.
3049 *
3050 * @param ledger The ledger whose refcnt to decrement.
3051 */
3052 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
pmap_ledger_release(ledger_t ledger)3053 pmap_ledger_release(ledger_t ledger)
3054 {
3055 pmap_simple_lock(&pmap_ledger_lock);
3056 const uint64_t array_index = pmap_ledger_validate(ledger);
3057 os_ref_release_live(&pmap_ledger_refcnt[array_index]);
3058 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_ledger_lock);
3059 }
3060
3061 /**
3062 * This function is used to check a ledger that was recently updated (usually
3063 * from within the PPL) and potentially take actions based on the new ledger
3064 * balances (e.g., set an AST).
3065 *
3066 * @note On non-PPL systems this checking occurs automatically every time a
3067 * ledger is credited/debited. Due to that, this function only needs to
3068 * get called on PPL-enabled systems.
3069 *
3070 * @note This function can ONLY be called from *outside* of the PPL due to its
3071 * usage of current_thread(). The TPIDR register is kernel-modifiable, and
3072 * hence can't be trusted. This also means we don't need to pull all of
3073 * the logic used to check ledger balances into the PPL.
3074 *
3075 * @param pmap The pmap whose ledger should be checked.
3076 */
3077 void
pmap_ledger_check_balance(pmap_t pmap)3078 pmap_ledger_check_balance(pmap_t pmap)
3079 {
3080 /* This function should only be called from outside of the PPL. */
3081 assert((pmap != NULL) && !pmap_in_ppl());
3082
3083 ledger_t ledger = pmap->ledger;
3084
3085 if (ledger == NULL) {
3086 return;
3087 }
3088
3089 thread_t cur_thread = current_thread();
3090 ledger_check_new_balance(cur_thread, ledger, task_ledgers.alternate_accounting);
3091 ledger_check_new_balance(cur_thread, ledger, task_ledgers.alternate_accounting_compressed);
3092 ledger_check_new_balance(cur_thread, ledger, task_ledgers.internal);
3093 ledger_check_new_balance(cur_thread, ledger, task_ledgers.internal_compressed);
3094 ledger_check_new_balance(cur_thread, ledger, task_ledgers.page_table);
3095 ledger_check_new_balance(cur_thread, ledger, task_ledgers.phys_footprint);
3096 ledger_check_new_balance(cur_thread, ledger, task_ledgers.phys_mem);
3097 ledger_check_new_balance(cur_thread, ledger, task_ledgers.tkm_private);
3098 ledger_check_new_balance(cur_thread, ledger, task_ledgers.wired_mem);
3099 }
3100
3101 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
3102
3103 /**
3104 * Credit a specific ledger entry within the passed in pmap's ledger object.
3105 *
3106 * @note On PPL-enabled systems this operation will not automatically check the
3107 * ledger balances after updating. A call to pmap_ledger_check_balance()
3108 * will need to occur outside of the PPL to handle this.
3109 *
3110 * @param pmap The pmap whose ledger should be updated.
3111 * @param entry The specifc ledger entry to update. This needs to be one of the
3112 * task_ledger entries.
3113 * @param amount The amount to credit from the ledger.
3114 *
3115 * @return The return value from the credit operation.
3116 */
3117 kern_return_t
pmap_ledger_credit(pmap_t pmap,int entry,ledger_amount_t amount)3118 pmap_ledger_credit(pmap_t pmap, int entry, ledger_amount_t amount)
3119 {
3120 assert(pmap != NULL);
3121
3122 #if XNU_MONITOR
3123 /**
3124 * On PPL-enabled systems the "nocheck" variant MUST be called to ensure
3125 * that the ledger balance doesn't automatically get checked after being
3126 * updated.
3127 *
3128 * That checking process is unsafe to perform within the PPL due to its
3129 * reliance on current_thread().
3130 */
3131 return ledger_credit_nocheck(pmap->ledger, entry, amount);
3132 #else /* XNU_MONITOR */
3133 return ledger_credit(pmap->ledger, entry, amount);
3134 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
3135 }
3136
3137 /**
3138 * Debit a specific ledger entry within the passed in pmap's ledger object.
3139 *
3140 * @note On PPL-enabled systems this operation will not automatically check the
3141 * ledger balances after updating. A call to pmap_ledger_check_balance()
3142 * will need to occur outside of the PPL to handle this.
3143 *
3144 * @param pmap The pmap whose ledger should be updated.
3145 * @param entry The specifc ledger entry to update. This needs to be one of the
3146 * task_ledger entries.
3147 * @param amount The amount to debit from the ledger.
3148 *
3149 * @return The return value from the debit operation.
3150 */
3151 kern_return_t
pmap_ledger_debit(pmap_t pmap,int entry,ledger_amount_t amount)3152 pmap_ledger_debit(pmap_t pmap, int entry, ledger_amount_t amount)
3153 {
3154 assert(pmap != NULL);
3155
3156 #if XNU_MONITOR
3157 /**
3158 * On PPL-enabled systems the "nocheck" variant MUST be called to ensure
3159 * that the ledger balance doesn't automatically get checked after being
3160 * updated.
3161 *
3162 * That checking process is unsafe to perform within the PPL due to its
3163 * reliance on current_thread().
3164 */
3165 return ledger_debit_nocheck(pmap->ledger, entry, amount);
3166 #else /* XNU_MONITOR */
3167 return ledger_debit(pmap->ledger, entry, amount);
3168 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
3169 }
3170
3171 #if XNU_MONITOR
3172
3173 /**
3174 * Allocate a pmap object from the pmap object free list and associate it with
3175 * the pmap pointer array so it can be validated when passed into the PPL.
3176 *
3177 * @param pmap Output parameter that holds the newly allocated pmap object if
3178 * the operation was successful, or NULL otherwise. The return value
3179 * must be checked to know what this parameter should return.
3180 *
3181 * @return KERN_SUCCESS if the allocation was successful, KERN_RESOURCE_SHORTAGE
3182 * if out of free PPL pages, or KERN_NO_SPACE if more pmap objects were
3183 * trying to be allocated than the pmap pointer array could manage. On
3184 * KERN_SUCCESS, the `pmap` output parameter will point to the newly
3185 * allocated object.
3186 */
3187 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT kern_return_t
pmap_alloc_pmap(pmap_t * pmap)3188 pmap_alloc_pmap(pmap_t *pmap)
3189 {
3190 pmap_t new_pmap = PMAP_NULL;
3191 kern_return_t kr = KERN_SUCCESS;
3192
3193 pmap_simple_lock(&pmap_free_list_lock);
3194
3195 if (pmap_free_list == NULL) {
3196 /* If the pmap pointer array is full, then no more objects can be allocated. */
3197 if (__improbable(pmap_ptr_array_free_index == pmap_ptr_array_count)) {
3198 kr = KERN_NO_SPACE;
3199 goto pmap_alloc_cleanup;
3200 }
3201
3202 /* The free list is empty, so allocate a page's worth of objects. */
3203 const pmap_paddr_t paddr = pmap_get_free_ppl_page();
3204
3205 if (paddr == 0) {
3206 kr = KERN_RESOURCE_SHORTAGE;
3207 goto pmap_alloc_cleanup;
3208 }
3209
3210 const vm_map_address_t vstart = phystokv(paddr);
3211 const uint32_t pmaps_per_page = PAGE_SIZE / sizeof(pmap_list_entry_t);
3212 const vm_map_address_t vend = vstart + (pmaps_per_page * sizeof(pmap_list_entry_t));
3213 assert(vend > vstart);
3214
3215 /**
3216 * Loop through every pmap object within the recently allocated page and
3217 * add it to both the pmap free list and the pmap pointer array (which
3218 * will be used to validate these objects in the future).
3219 */
3220 for (vm_map_address_t vaddr = vstart; vaddr < vend; vaddr += sizeof(pmap_list_entry_t)) {
3221 /* Get the next free entry in the pmap pointer array. */
3222 const unsigned long index = pmap_ptr_array_free_index++;
3223
3224 if (__improbable(index >= pmap_ptr_array_count)) {
3225 panic("%s: pmap array index %lu >= limit %lu; corruption?",
3226 __func__, index, pmap_ptr_array_count);
3227 }
3228 pmap_list_entry_t *free_pmap = (pmap_list_entry_t*)vaddr;
3229 os_atomic_init(&free_pmap->pmap.ref_count, 0);
3230
3231 /**
3232 * This association between the just allocated pmap object and the
3233 * pointer array is what allows this object to be validated in the
3234 * future that it's indeed a pmap object allocated by this code.
3235 */
3236 pmap_ptr_array[index] = free_pmap;
3237 free_pmap->array_index = index;
3238
3239 /* Prepend this new pmap object to the free list. */
3240 free_pmap->next = pmap_free_list;
3241 pmap_free_list = free_pmap;
3242
3243 /* Check if we've reached the maximum number of pmap objects. */
3244 if (__improbable(pmap_ptr_array_free_index == pmap_ptr_array_count)) {
3245 break;
3246 }
3247 }
3248 }
3249
3250 new_pmap = &pmap_free_list->pmap;
3251 pmap_free_list = pmap_free_list->next;
3252
3253 pmap_alloc_cleanup:
3254 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_free_list_lock);
3255 *pmap = new_pmap;
3256 return kr;
3257 }
3258
3259 /**
3260 * Free a pmap object that was previously allocated by the PPL.
3261 *
3262 * @note This should only be called on pmap objects that have already been
3263 * validated to be real pmap objects.
3264 *
3265 * @param pmap The pmap object to put back onto the pmap free.
3266 */
3267 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
pmap_free_pmap(pmap_t pmap)3268 pmap_free_pmap(pmap_t pmap)
3269 {
3270 /**
3271 * A pmap_list_entry_t wholly contains a struct pmap as its first member,
3272 * but also includes an index into the pmap pointer array used for
3273 * validation purposes.
3274 */
3275 pmap_list_entry_t *free_pmap = (pmap_list_entry_t*)pmap;
3276 if (__improbable(free_pmap->array_index >= pmap_ptr_array_count)) {
3277 panic("%s: pmap %p has index %lu >= limit %lu", __func__, pmap,
3278 free_pmap->array_index, pmap_ptr_array_count);
3279 }
3280
3281 pmap_simple_lock(&pmap_free_list_lock);
3282
3283 /* Prepend the pmap object to the free list. */
3284 free_pmap->next = pmap_free_list;
3285 pmap_free_list = free_pmap;
3286
3287 pmap_simple_unlock(&pmap_free_list_lock);
3288 }
3289
3290 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
3291
3292 #if XNU_MONITOR
3293
3294 /**
3295 * Helper function to validate that the pointer passed into this method is truly
3296 * a userspace pmap object that was allocated through the pmap_alloc_pmap() API.
3297 * This function will panic if the validation fails.
3298 *
3299 * @param pmap The pointer to validate.
3300 * @param func The stringized function name of the caller that will be printed
3301 * in the case that the validation fails.
3302 */
3303 static void
validate_user_pmap(const volatile struct pmap * pmap,const char * func)3304 validate_user_pmap(const volatile struct pmap *pmap, const char *func)
3305 {
3306 /**
3307 * Ensure the array index isn't corrupted. This could happen if an attacker
3308 * is trying to pass off random memory as a pmap object.
3309 */
3310 const unsigned long array_index = ((const volatile pmap_list_entry_t*)pmap)->array_index;
3311 if (__improbable(array_index >= pmap_ptr_array_count)) {
3312 panic("%s: pmap array index %lu >= limit %lu", func, array_index, pmap_ptr_array_count);
3313 }
3314
3315 /**
3316 * If the array index is valid, then ensure that the passed in object
3317 * matches up with the object in the pmap pointer array for this index. Even
3318 * if an attacker passed in random memory with a valid index, there's no way
3319 * the pmap pointer array will ever point to anything but the objects
3320 * allocated by the pmap free list (it's PPL-owned memory).
3321 */
3322 if (__improbable(pmap_ptr_array[array_index] != (const volatile pmap_list_entry_t*)pmap)) {
3323 panic("%s: pmap %p does not match array element %p at index %lu", func, pmap,
3324 pmap_ptr_array[array_index], array_index);
3325 }
3326
3327 /**
3328 * Ensure that this isn't just an object sitting on the free list waiting to
3329 * be allocated. This also helps protect against a race between validating
3330 * and deleting a pmap object.
3331 */
3332 if (__improbable(os_atomic_load(&pmap->ref_count, seq_cst) <= 0)) {
3333 panic("%s: pmap %p is not in use", func, pmap);
3334 }
3335 }
3336
3337 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
3338
3339 /**
3340 * Validate that the pointer passed into this method is a valid pmap object and
3341 * is safe to read from and base PPL decisions off of. This function will panic
3342 * if the validation fails.
3343 *
3344 * @note On non-PPL systems this only checks that the pmap object isn't NULL.
3345 *
3346 * @note This validation should only be used on objects that won't be written to
3347 * for the duration of the PPL call. If the object is going to be modified
3348 * then you must use validate_pmap_mutable().
3349 *
3350 * @param pmap The pointer to validate.
3351 * @param func The stringized function name of the caller that will be printed
3352 * in the case that the validation fails.
3353 */
3354 void
validate_pmap_internal(const volatile struct pmap * pmap,const char * func)3355 validate_pmap_internal(const volatile struct pmap *pmap, const char *func)
3356 {
3357 #if !XNU_MONITOR
3358 #pragma unused(pmap, func)
3359 assert(pmap != NULL);
3360 #else /* !XNU_MONITOR */
3361 if (pmap != kernel_pmap) {
3362 validate_user_pmap(pmap, func);
3363 }
3364 #endif /* !XNU_MONITOR */
3365 }
3366
3367 /**
3368 * Validate that the pointer passed into this method is a valid pmap object and
3369 * is safe to both read and write to from within the PPL. This function will
3370 * panic if the validation fails.
3371 *
3372 * @note On non-PPL systems this only checks that the pmap object isn't NULL.
3373 *
3374 * @note If you're only going to be reading from the pmap object for the
3375 * duration of the PPL call, it'll be faster to use the immutable version
3376 * of this validation: validate_pmap().
3377 *
3378 * @param pmap The pointer to validate.
3379 * @param func The stringized function name of the caller that will be printed
3380 * in the case that the validation fails.
3381 */
3382 void
validate_pmap_mutable_internal(const volatile struct pmap * pmap,const char * func)3383 validate_pmap_mutable_internal(const volatile struct pmap *pmap, const char *func)
3384 {
3385 #if !XNU_MONITOR
3386 #pragma unused(pmap, func)
3387 assert(pmap != NULL);
3388 #else /* !XNU_MONITOR */
3389 if (pmap != kernel_pmap) {
3390 /**
3391 * Every time a pmap object is validated to be mutable, we mark it down
3392 * as an "inflight" pmap on this CPU. The inflight pmap for this CPU
3393 * will be set to NULL automatically when the PPL is exited. The
3394 * pmap_destroy() path will ensure that no "inflight" pmaps (on any CPU)
3395 * are ever destroyed so as to prevent racy use-after-free attacks.
3396 */
3397 pmap_cpu_data_t *cpu_data = pmap_get_cpu_data();
3398
3399 /**
3400 * As a sanity check (since the inflight pmap should be cleared when
3401 * exiting the PPL), ensure that the previous inflight pmap is NULL, or
3402 * is the same as the one being validated here (which allows for
3403 * validating the same object twice).
3404 */
3405 __assert_only const volatile struct pmap *prev_inflight_pmap =
3406 os_atomic_load(&cpu_data->inflight_pmap, relaxed);
3407 assert((prev_inflight_pmap == NULL) || (prev_inflight_pmap == pmap));
3408
3409 /**
3410 * The release barrier here is intended to pair with the seq_cst load of
3411 * ref_count in validate_user_pmap() to ensure that if a pmap is
3412 * concurrently destroyed, either this path will observe that it was
3413 * destroyed after marking it in-flight and panic, or pmap_destroy will
3414 * observe the pmap as in-flight after decrementing ref_count and panic.
3415 */
3416 os_atomic_store(&cpu_data->inflight_pmap, pmap, release);
3417
3418 validate_user_pmap(pmap, func);
3419 }
3420 #endif /* !XNU_MONITOR */
3421 }
3422
3423 /**
3424 * Validate that the passed in pmap pointer is a pmap object that was allocated
3425 * by the pmap and not just random memory. On PPL-enabled systems, the
3426 * allocation is done through the pmap_alloc_pmap() API. On all other systems
3427 * it's allocated through a zone allocator.
3428 *
3429 * This function will panic if the validation fails.
3430 *
3431 * @param pmap The object to validate.
3432 */
3433 void
pmap_require(pmap_t pmap)3434 pmap_require(pmap_t pmap)
3435 {
3436 #if XNU_MONITOR
3437 validate_pmap(pmap);
3438 #else /* XNU_MONITOR */
3439 if (pmap != kernel_pmap) {
3440 zone_id_require(ZONE_ID_PMAP, sizeof(struct pmap), pmap);
3441 }
3442 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
3443 }
3444
3445 /**
3446 * Parse the device tree and determine how many pmap-io-ranges there are and
3447 * how much memory is needed to store all of that data.
3448 *
3449 * @note See the definition of pmap_io_range_t for more information on what a
3450 * "pmap-io-range" actually represents.
3451 *
3452 * @return The number of bytes needed to store metadata for all PPL-owned I/O
3453 * regions.
3454 */
3455 vm_size_t
pmap_compute_io_rgns(void)3456 pmap_compute_io_rgns(void)
3457 {
3458 DTEntry entry = NULL;
3459 __assert_only int err = SecureDTLookupEntry(NULL, "/defaults", &entry);
3460 assert(err == kSuccess);
3461
3462 void const *prop = NULL;
3463 unsigned int prop_size = 0;
3464 if (kSuccess != SecureDTGetProperty(entry, "pmap-io-ranges", &prop, &prop_size)) {
3465 return 0;
3466 }
3467
3468 /**
3469 * The device tree node for pmap-io-ranges maps directly onto an array of
3470 * pmap_io_range_t structures.
3471 */
3472 pmap_io_range_t const *ranges = prop;
3473
3474 /* Determine the number of regions and validate the fields. */
3475 for (unsigned int i = 0; i < (prop_size / sizeof(*ranges)); ++i) {
3476 if (ranges[i].addr & PAGE_MASK) {
3477 panic("%s: %u addr 0x%llx is not page-aligned",
3478 __func__, i, ranges[i].addr);
3479 }
3480
3481 if (ranges[i].len & PAGE_MASK) {
3482 panic("%s: %u length 0x%llx is not page-aligned",
3483 __func__, i, ranges[i].len);
3484 }
3485
3486 uint64_t rgn_end = 0;
3487 if (os_add_overflow(ranges[i].addr, ranges[i].len, &rgn_end)) {
3488 panic("%s: %u addr 0x%llx length 0x%llx wraps around",
3489 __func__, i, ranges[i].addr, ranges[i].len);
3490 }
3491
3492 if (((ranges[i].addr <= gPhysBase) && (rgn_end > gPhysBase)) ||
3493 ((ranges[i].addr < avail_end) && (rgn_end >= avail_end)) ||
3494 ((ranges[i].addr > gPhysBase) && (rgn_end < avail_end))) {
3495 panic("%s: %u addr 0x%llx length 0x%llx overlaps physical memory",
3496 __func__, i, ranges[i].addr, ranges[i].len);
3497 }
3498
3499 ++num_io_rgns;
3500 }
3501
3502 return num_io_rgns * sizeof(*ranges);
3503 }
3504
3505 /**
3506 * Helper function used when sorting and searching PPL I/O ranges.
3507 *
3508 * @param a The first PPL I/O range to compare.
3509 * @param b The second PPL I/O range to compare.
3510 *
3511 * @return < 0 for a < b
3512 * 0 for a == b
3513 * > 0 for a > b
3514 */
3515 static int
cmp_io_rgns(const void * a,const void * b)3516 cmp_io_rgns(const void *a, const void *b)
3517 {
3518 const pmap_io_range_t *range_a = a;
3519 const pmap_io_range_t *range_b = b;
3520
3521 if ((range_b->addr + range_b->len) <= range_a->addr) {
3522 return 1;
3523 } else if ((range_a->addr + range_a->len) <= range_b->addr) {
3524 return -1;
3525 } else {
3526 return 0;
3527 }
3528 }
3529
3530 /**
3531 * Now that enough memory has been allocated to store all of the pmap-io-ranges
3532 * device tree nodes in memory, go ahead and do that copy and then sort the
3533 * resulting array by address for quicker lookup later.
3534 *
3535 * @note This function assumes that the amount of memory required to store the
3536 * entire pmap-io-ranges device tree node has already been calculated (via
3537 * pmap_compute_io_rgns()) and allocated in io_attr_table.
3538 *
3539 * @note This function will leave io_attr_table sorted by address to allow for
3540 * performing a binary search when doing future range lookups.
3541 */
3542 void
pmap_load_io_rgns(void)3543 pmap_load_io_rgns(void)
3544 {
3545 if (num_io_rgns == 0) {
3546 return;
3547 }
3548
3549 DTEntry entry = NULL;
3550 int err = SecureDTLookupEntry(NULL, "/defaults", &entry);
3551 assert(err == kSuccess);
3552
3553 void const *prop = NULL;
3554 unsigned int prop_size;
3555 err = SecureDTGetProperty(entry, "pmap-io-ranges", &prop, &prop_size);
3556 assert(err == kSuccess);
3557
3558 pmap_io_range_t const *ranges = prop;
3559 for (unsigned int i = 0; i < (prop_size / sizeof(*ranges)); ++i) {
3560 io_attr_table[i] = ranges[i];
3561 }
3562
3563 qsort(io_attr_table, num_io_rgns, sizeof(*ranges), cmp_io_rgns);
3564 }
3565
3566 /**
3567 * Find and return the PPL I/O range that contains the passed in physical
3568 * address.
3569 *
3570 * @note This function performs a binary search on the already sorted
3571 * io_attr_table, so it should be reasonably fast.
3572 *
3573 * @param paddr The physical address to query a specific I/O range for.
3574 *
3575 * @return A pointer to the pmap_io_range_t structure if one of the ranges
3576 * contains the passed in physical address. Otherwise, NULL.
3577 */
3578 pmap_io_range_t*
pmap_find_io_attr(pmap_paddr_t paddr)3579 pmap_find_io_attr(pmap_paddr_t paddr)
3580 {
3581 unsigned int begin = 0;
3582 unsigned int end = num_io_rgns - 1;
3583
3584 /**
3585 * If there are no I/O ranges, or the wanted address is below the lowest
3586 * range or above the highest range, then there's no point in searching
3587 * since it won't be here.
3588 */
3589 if ((num_io_rgns == 0) || (paddr < io_attr_table[begin].addr) ||
3590 (paddr >= (io_attr_table[end].addr + io_attr_table[end].len))) {
3591 return NULL;
3592 }
3593
3594 /**
3595 * A dummy I/O range to compare against when searching for a range that
3596 * includes `paddr`.
3597 */
3598 const pmap_io_range_t wanted_range = {
3599 .addr = paddr & ~PAGE_MASK,
3600 .len = PAGE_SIZE
3601 };
3602
3603 /* Perform a binary search to find the wanted I/O range. */
3604 for (;;) {
3605 const unsigned int middle = (begin + end) / 2;
3606 const int cmp = cmp_io_rgns(&wanted_range, &io_attr_table[middle]);
3607
3608 if (cmp == 0) {
3609 /* Success! Found the wanted I/O range. */
3610 return &io_attr_table[middle];
3611 } else if (begin == end) {
3612 /* We've checked every range and didn't find a match. */
3613 break;
3614 } else if (cmp > 0) {
3615 /* The wanted range is above the middle. */
3616 begin = middle + 1;
3617 } else {
3618 /* The wanted range is below the middle. */
3619 end = middle;
3620 }
3621 }
3622
3623 return NULL;
3624 }
3625
3626 /**
3627 * Initialize the pmap per-CPU data structure for a single CPU. This is called
3628 * once for each CPU in the system, on the CPU whose per-cpu data needs to be
3629 * initialized.
3630 *
3631 * In reality, many of the per-cpu data fields will have either already been
3632 * initialized or will rely on the fact that the per-cpu data is either zeroed
3633 * out during allocation (on non-PPL systems), or the data itself is a global
3634 * variable which will be zeroed by default (on PPL systems).
3635 *
3636 * @param cpu_number The number of the CPU whose pmap per-cpu data should be
3637 * initialized. This number should correspond to the CPU
3638 * executing this code.
3639 */
3640 MARK_AS_PMAP_TEXT void
pmap_cpu_data_init_internal(unsigned int cpu_number)3641 pmap_cpu_data_init_internal(unsigned int cpu_number)
3642 {
3643 pmap_cpu_data_t *pmap_cpu_data = pmap_get_cpu_data();
3644
3645 #if XNU_MONITOR
3646 /* Verify the per-cpu data is cacheline-aligned. */
3647 assert(((vm_offset_t)pmap_cpu_data & (MAX_L2_CLINE_BYTES - 1)) == 0);
3648
3649 /**
3650 * The CPU number should already have been initialized to
3651 * PMAP_INVALID_CPU_NUM when initializing the boot CPU data.
3652 */
3653 if (pmap_cpu_data->cpu_number != PMAP_INVALID_CPU_NUM) {
3654 panic("%s: pmap_cpu_data->cpu_number=%u, cpu_number=%u",
3655 __func__, pmap_cpu_data->cpu_number, cpu_number);
3656 }
3657 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
3658
3659 /**
3660 * At least when operating in the PPL, it's important to duplicate the CPU
3661 * number into a PPL-owned location. If we relied strictly on the CPU number
3662 * located in the general machine-specific per-cpu data, it could be
3663 * modified in a way to affect PPL operation.
3664 */
3665 pmap_cpu_data->cpu_number = cpu_number;
3666 #if __ARM_MIXED_PAGE_SIZE__
3667 pmap_cpu_data->commpage_page_shift = PAGE_SHIFT;
3668 #endif
3669 }
3670
3671 /**
3672 * Initialize the pmap per-cpu data for the bootstrap CPU (the other CPUs should
3673 * just call pmap_cpu_data_init() directly). This code does one of two things
3674 * depending on whether this is a PPL-enabled system.
3675 *
3676 * PPL-enabled: This function will setup the PPL-specific per-cpu data like the
3677 * PPL stacks and register save area. This performs the
3678 * functionality usually done by cpu_data_init() to setup the pmap
3679 * per-cpu data fields. In reality, most fields are not initialized
3680 * and are assumed to be zero thanks to this data being global.
3681 *
3682 * Non-PPL: Just calls pmap_cpu_data_init() to initialize the bootstrap CPU's
3683 * pmap per-cpu data (non-boot CPUs will call that function once they
3684 * come out of reset).
3685 *
3686 * @note This function will carve out physical pages for the PPL stacks and PPL
3687 * register save area from avail_start. It's assumed that avail_start is
3688 * on a page boundary before executing this function on PPL-enabled
3689 * systems.
3690 */
3691 void
pmap_cpu_data_array_init(void)3692 pmap_cpu_data_array_init(void)
3693 {
3694 #if XNU_MONITOR
3695 /**
3696 * Enough virtual address space to cover all PPL stacks for every CPU should
3697 * have already been allocated by arm_vm_init() before pmap_boostrap() is
3698 * called.
3699 */
3700 assert((pmap_stacks_start != NULL) && (pmap_stacks_end != NULL));
3701 assert(((uintptr_t)pmap_stacks_end - (uintptr_t)pmap_stacks_start) == PPL_STACK_REGION_SIZE);
3702
3703 /**
3704 * Ensure avail_start is aligned to a page boundary before allocating the
3705 * stacks and register save area.
3706 */
3707 assert(avail_start == round_page(avail_start));
3708
3709 /* Each PPL stack contains guard pages before and after. */
3710 vm_offset_t stack_va = (vm_offset_t)pmap_stacks_start + ARM_PGBYTES;
3711
3712 /**
3713 * Globally save off the beginning of the PPL stacks physical space so that
3714 * we can update its physical aperture mappings in later in the bootstrap
3715 * process.
3716 */
3717 pmap_stacks_start_pa = avail_start;
3718
3719 /* Map the PPL stacks for each CPU. */
3720 for (unsigned int cpu_num = 0; cpu_num < MAX_CPUS; cpu_num++) {
3721 /**
3722 * The PPL stack size is based off of the VM page size, which may differ
3723 * from the underlying hardware page size.
3724 *
3725 * Map all of the PPL stack into the kernel's address space.
3726 */
3727 for (vm_offset_t cur_va = stack_va; cur_va < (stack_va + PPL_STACK_SIZE); cur_va += ARM_PGBYTES) {
3728 assert(cur_va < (vm_offset_t)pmap_stacks_end);
3729
3730 pt_entry_t *ptep = pmap_pte(kernel_pmap, cur_va);
3731 assert(*ptep == ARM_PTE_EMPTY);
3732
3733 pt_entry_t template = pa_to_pte(avail_start) | ARM_PTE_AF | ARM_PTE_SH(SH_OUTER_MEMORY) |
3734 ARM_PTE_TYPE | ARM_PTE_ATTRINDX(CACHE_ATTRINDX_DEFAULT) | xprr_perm_to_pte(XPRR_PPL_RW_PERM);
3735
3736 #if __ARM_KERNEL_PROTECT__
3737 /**
3738 * On systems with software based spectre/meltdown mitigations,
3739 * kernel mappings are explicitly not made global because the kernel
3740 * is unmapped when executing in EL0 (this ensures that kernel TLB
3741 * entries won't accidentally be valid in EL0).
3742 */
3743 template |= ARM_PTE_NG;
3744 #endif /* __ARM_KERNEL_PROTECT__ */
3745
3746 write_pte(ptep, template);
3747 __builtin_arm_isb(ISB_SY);
3748
3749 avail_start += ARM_PGBYTES;
3750 }
3751
3752 #if KASAN
3753 kasan_map_shadow(stack_va, PPL_STACK_SIZE, false);
3754 #endif /* KASAN */
3755
3756 /**
3757 * Setup non-zero pmap per-cpu data fields. If the default value should
3758 * be zero, then you can assume the field is already set to that.
3759 */
3760 pmap_cpu_data_array[cpu_num].cpu_data.cpu_number = PMAP_INVALID_CPU_NUM;
3761 pmap_cpu_data_array[cpu_num].cpu_data.ppl_state = PPL_STATE_KERNEL;
3762 pmap_cpu_data_array[cpu_num].cpu_data.ppl_stack = (void*)(stack_va + PPL_STACK_SIZE);
3763
3764 /**
3765 * Get the first VA of the next CPU's PPL stack. Need to skip the guard
3766 * page after the stack.
3767 */
3768 stack_va += (PPL_STACK_SIZE + ARM_PGBYTES);
3769 }
3770
3771 pmap_stacks_end_pa = avail_start;
3772
3773 /**
3774 * The PPL register save area location is saved into global variables so
3775 * that they can be made writable if DTrace support is needed. This is
3776 * needed because DTrace will try to update the register state.
3777 */
3778 ppl_cpu_save_area_start = avail_start;
3779 ppl_cpu_save_area_end = ppl_cpu_save_area_start;
3780 pmap_paddr_t ppl_cpu_save_area_cur = ppl_cpu_save_area_start;
3781
3782 /* Carve out space for the PPL register save area for each CPU. */
3783 for (unsigned int cpu_num = 0; cpu_num < MAX_CPUS; cpu_num++) {
3784 /* Allocate enough space to cover at least one arm_context_t object. */
3785 while ((ppl_cpu_save_area_end - ppl_cpu_save_area_cur) < sizeof(arm_context_t)) {
3786 avail_start += PAGE_SIZE;
3787 ppl_cpu_save_area_end = avail_start;
3788 }
3789
3790 pmap_cpu_data_array[cpu_num].cpu_data.save_area = (arm_context_t *)phystokv(ppl_cpu_save_area_cur);
3791 ppl_cpu_save_area_cur += sizeof(arm_context_t);
3792 }
3793 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
3794
3795 pmap_cpu_data_init();
3796 }
3797
3798 /**
3799 * Retrieve the pmap per-cpu data for the current CPU. On PPL-enabled systems
3800 * this data is managed separately from the general machine-specific per-cpu
3801 * data to handle the requirement that it must only be PPL-writable.
3802 *
3803 * @return The per-cpu pmap data for the current CPU.
3804 */
3805 pmap_cpu_data_t *
pmap_get_cpu_data(void)3806 pmap_get_cpu_data(void)
3807 {
3808 pmap_cpu_data_t *pmap_cpu_data = NULL;
3809
3810 #if XNU_MONITOR
3811 extern pmap_cpu_data_t* ml_get_ppl_cpu_data(void);
3812 pmap_cpu_data = ml_get_ppl_cpu_data();
3813 #else /* XNU_MONITOR */
3814 /**
3815 * On non-PPL systems, the pmap per-cpu data is stored in the general
3816 * machine-specific per-cpu data.
3817 */
3818 pmap_cpu_data = &getCpuDatap()->cpu_pmap_cpu_data;
3819 #endif /* XNU_MONITOR */
3820
3821 return pmap_cpu_data;
3822 }
3823
3824 /**
3825 * Retrieve the pmap per-cpu data for the specified cpu index.
3826 *
3827 * @return The per-cpu pmap data for the CPU
3828 */
3829 pmap_cpu_data_t *
pmap_get_remote_cpu_data(unsigned int cpu)3830 pmap_get_remote_cpu_data(unsigned int cpu)
3831 {
3832 #if XNU_MONITOR
3833 assert(cpu < MAX_CPUS);
3834 return &pmap_cpu_data_array[cpu].cpu_data;
3835 #else
3836 cpu_data_t *cpu_data = cpu_datap((int)cpu);
3837 if (cpu_data == NULL) {
3838 return NULL;
3839 } else {
3840 return &cpu_data->cpu_pmap_cpu_data;
3841 }
3842 #endif
3843 }
3844