[PATCH v10 2/8] highmem: introduce clear_user_highpages()

Ankur Arora posted 8 patches 3 days, 23 hours ago
[PATCH v10 2/8] highmem: introduce clear_user_highpages()
Posted by Ankur Arora 3 days, 23 hours ago
Define clear_user_highpages() which clears pages sequentially using
clear_user_highpage().

Also add a comment describing clear_user_highpage().

Signed-off-by: Ankur Arora <ankur.a.arora@oracle.com>
---
 include/linux/highmem.h | 28 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
 1 file changed, 27 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/include/linux/highmem.h b/include/linux/highmem.h
index 9a38512b8000..9187bfaa709d 100644
--- a/include/linux/highmem.h
+++ b/include/linux/highmem.h
@@ -217,7 +217,14 @@ static inline void clear_user_page(void *addr, unsigned long vaddr, struct page
 }
 #endif
 
-/* when CONFIG_HIGHMEM is not set these will be plain clear/copy_page */
+/**
+ * clear_user_highpage() - clear a page to be mapped to user space
+ * @page: start page
+ * @vaddr: start address of the user mapping
+ *
+ * With !CONFIG_HIGHMEM this (and the copy_user_highpage() below) will
+ * be plain clear_user_page() (and copy_user_page()).
+ */
 static inline void clear_user_highpage(struct page *page, unsigned long vaddr)
 {
 	void *addr = kmap_local_page(page);
@@ -226,6 +233,25 @@ static inline void clear_user_highpage(struct page *page, unsigned long vaddr)
 }
 #endif /* clear_user_highpage */
 
+/**
+ * clear_user_highpages() - clear a page range to be mapped to user space
+ * @page: start page
+ * @vaddr: start address of the user mapping
+ * @npages: number of pages
+ *
+ * Assumes that all the pages in the region (@page, +@npages) are valid
+ * so this does no exception handling.
+ */
+static inline void clear_user_highpages(struct page *page, unsigned long vaddr,
+					unsigned int npages)
+{
+	do {
+		clear_user_highpage(page, vaddr);
+		vaddr += PAGE_SIZE;
+		page++;
+	} while (--npages);
+}
+
 #ifndef vma_alloc_zeroed_movable_folio
 /**
  * vma_alloc_zeroed_movable_folio - Allocate a zeroed page for a VMA.
-- 
2.31.1