11 comments

  • no92 2 days ago ago

    If I'm not mistaken, this is just fractal mapping, which is very common. See https://wiki.osdev.org/Fractal_Page_Mapping

    • userbinator 2 days ago ago

      It's amusing to see a concept that is explained simply in a few lines, become an entire bachelor's thesis.

  • voidmain 2 days ago ago

    I'm currently using recursive page tables for the OS I'm working on, but I'm probably going to change that. There are lots of different address spaces for different processes and (with IOMMU) devices, and it's nicer to be able to modify any of them rather than only the current one. I am leaning toward just assigning 2 MiB of memory to page tables at a time and keeping a mapping for these (I don't want to map all physical memory in the kernel for security reasons).

    • amluto a day ago ago

      Don’t use recursive page tables.

      - What if you want to port to an architecture that can’t do them?

      - How sure are you that all the bonus bits in the entries line up right?

      - What if you want to use huge pages of various sizes?

      - What if you want to write-protect some page tables?

      - What if you want to access a non-current page table? If you do that you need to write all the relevant logic anyway.

      - What if a page table isn’t allocated? You probably don’t want to find out by trying to access it and getting a page fault in kernel mode.

      - What if you don’t want user code to be able to trivially guess kernel addresses?

  • jdefr89 2 days ago ago

    Isn't this just fractal page mappings? Am I missing something?

  • cmpxchg8b 2 days ago ago

    I'm confused, is this meant to be presented as new work? Windows has done this for a very long time.

    • raggi 2 days ago ago

      I found it very opaquely worded the whole way through. I think the work being presented is simply an implementation of the technique in eduos, but short of going and reading the paper I don’t know.

    • protoman3000 2 days ago ago

      It’s a bachelor’s thesis.

    • als0 2 days ago ago

      "There is only a single reference5 dated to 2010 indicating that Microsoft might use a similar approach for its NT kernel."

      • cmpxchg8b 2 days ago ago

        Googling for it brings up a ton of results.

  • maximgeorge 2 days ago ago

    [dead]