Memory Layout on AArch64 Linux¶
Author: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com>
This document describes the virtual memory layout used by the AArch64 Linux kernel. The architecture allows up to 4 levels of translation tables with a 4KB page size and up to 3 levels with a 64KB page size.
AArch64 Linux uses either 3 levels or 4 levels of translation tables with the 4KB page configuration, allowing 39-bit (512GB) or 48-bit (256TB) virtual addresses, respectively, for both user and kernel. With 64KB pages, only 2 levels of translation tables, allowing 42-bit (4TB) virtual address, are used but the memory layout is the same.
ARMv8.2 adds optional support for Large Virtual Address space. This is only available when running with a 64KB page size and expands the number of descriptors in the first level of translation.
User addresses have bits 63:48 set to 0 while the kernel addresses have the same bits set to 1. TTBRx selection is given by bit 63 of the virtual address. The swapper_pg_dir contains only kernel (global) mappings while the user pgd contains only user (non-global) mappings. The swapper_pg_dir address is written to TTBR1 and never written to TTBR0.
AArch64 Linux memory layout with 4KB pages + 4 levels (48-bit):
Start End Size Use
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
0000000000000000 0000ffffffffffff 256TB user
ffff000000000000 ffff7fffffffffff 128TB kernel logical memory map
[ffff600000000000 ffff7fffffffffff] 32TB [kasan shadow region]
ffff800000000000 ffff800007ffffff 128MB modules
ffff800008000000 fffffbffefffffff 124TB vmalloc
fffffbfff0000000 fffffbfffdffffff 224MB fixed mappings (top down)
fffffbfffe000000 fffffbfffe7fffff 8MB [guard region]
fffffbfffe800000 fffffbffff7fffff 16MB PCI I/O space
fffffbffff800000 fffffbffffffffff 8MB [guard region]
fffffc0000000000 fffffdffffffffff 2TB vmemmap
fffffe0000000000 ffffffffffffffff 2TB [guard region]
AArch64 Linux memory layout with 64KB pages + 3 levels (52-bit with HW support):
Start End Size Use
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
0000000000000000 000fffffffffffff 4PB user
fff0000000000000 ffff7fffffffffff ~4PB kernel logical memory map
[fffd800000000000 ffff7fffffffffff] 512TB [kasan shadow region]
ffff800000000000 ffff800007ffffff 128MB modules
ffff800008000000 fffffbffefffffff 124TB vmalloc
fffffbfff0000000 fffffbfffdffffff 224MB fixed mappings (top down)
fffffbfffe000000 fffffbfffe7fffff 8MB [guard region]
fffffbfffe800000 fffffbffff7fffff 16MB PCI I/O space
fffffbffff800000 fffffbffffffffff 8MB [guard region]
fffffc0000000000 ffffffdfffffffff ~4TB vmemmap
ffffffe000000000 ffffffffffffffff 128GB [guard region]
Translation table lookup with 4KB pages:
+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
|63 56|55 48|47 40|39 32|31 24|23 16|15 8|7 0|
+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
| | | | | |
| | | | | v
| | | | | [11:0] in-page offset
| | | | +-> [20:12] L3 index
| | | +-----------> [29:21] L2 index
| | +---------------------> [38:30] L1 index
| +-------------------------------> [47:39] L0 index
+-------------------------------------------------> [63] TTBR0/1
Translation table lookup with 64KB pages:
+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
|63 56|55 48|47 40|39 32|31 24|23 16|15 8|7 0|
+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
| | | | |
| | | | v
| | | | [15:0] in-page offset
| | | +----------> [28:16] L3 index
| | +--------------------------> [41:29] L2 index
| +-------------------------------> [47:42] L1 index (48-bit)
| [51:42] L1 index (52-bit)
+-------------------------------------------------> [63] TTBR0/1
When using KVM without the Virtualization Host Extensions, the hypervisor maps kernel pages in EL2 at a fixed (and potentially random) offset from the linear mapping. See the kern_hyp_va macro and kvm_update_va_mask function for more details. MMIO devices such as GICv2 gets mapped next to the HYP idmap page, as do vectors when ARM64_SPECTRE_V3A is enabled for particular CPUs.
When using KVM with the Virtualization Host Extensions, no additional mappings are created, since the host kernel runs directly in EL2.
52-bit VA support in the kernel¶
If the ARMv8.2-LVA optional feature is present, and we are running with a 64KB page size; then it is possible to use 52-bits of address space for both userspace and kernel addresses. However, any kernel binary that supports 52-bit must also be able to fall back to 48-bit at early boot time if the hardware feature is not present.
This fallback mechanism necessitates the kernel .text to be in the higher addresses such that they are invariant to 48/52-bit VAs. Due to the kasan shadow being a fraction of the entire kernel VA space, the end of the kasan shadow must also be in the higher half of the kernel VA space for both 48/52-bit. (Switching from 48-bit to 52-bit, the end of the kasan shadow is invariant and dependent on ~0UL, whilst the start address will “grow” towards the lower addresses).
In order to optimise phys_to_virt and virt_to_phys, the PAGE_OFFSET is kept constant at 0xFFF0000000000000 (corresponding to 52-bit), this obviates the need for an extra variable read. The physvirt offset and vmemmap offsets are computed at early boot to enable this logic.
As a single binary will need to support both 48-bit and 52-bit VA spaces, the VMEMMAP must be sized large enough for 52-bit VAs and also must be sized large enough to accommodate a fixed PAGE_OFFSET.
Most code in the kernel should not need to consider the VA_BITS, for code that does need to know the VA size the variables are defined as follows:
VA_BITS constant the maximum VA space size
VA_BITS_MIN constant the minimum VA space size
vabits_actual variable the actual VA space size
Maximum and minimum sizes can be useful to ensure that buffers are sized large enough or that addresses are positioned close enough for the “worst” case.
52-bit userspace VAs¶
To maintain compatibility with software that relies on the ARMv8.0 VA space maximum size of 48-bits, the kernel will, by default, return virtual addresses to userspace from a 48-bit range.
Software can “opt-in” to receiving VAs from a 52-bit space by specifying an mmap hint parameter that is larger than 48-bit.
For example:
maybe_high_address = mmap(~0UL, size, prot, flags,...);
It is also possible to build a debug kernel that returns addresses from a 52-bit space by enabling the following kernel config options:
CONFIG_EXPERT=y && CONFIG_ARM64_FORCE_52BIT=y
Note that this option is only intended for debugging applications and should not be used in production.