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-== Overview ==
-
-Original x86-64 was limited by 4-level paing to 256 TiB of virtual address
-space and 64 TiB of physical address space. We are already bumping into
-this limit: some vendors offers servers with 64 TiB of memory today.
-
-To overcome the limitation upcoming hardware will introduce support for
-5-level paging. It is a straight-forward extension of the current page
-table structure adding one more layer of translation.
-
-It bumps the limits to 128 PiB of virtual address space and 4 PiB of
-physical address space. This "ought to be enough for anybody" ©.
-
-QEMU 2.9 and later support 5-level paging.
-
-Virtual memory layout for 5-level paging is described in
-Documentation/x86/x86_64/mm.txt
-
-== Enabling 5-level paging ==
-
-CONFIG_X86_5LEVEL=y enables the feature.
-
-Kernel with CONFIG_X86_5LEVEL=y still able to boot on 4-level hardware.
-In this case additional page table level -- p4d -- will be folded at
-runtime.
-
-== User-space and large virtual address space ==
-
-On x86, 5-level paging enables 56-bit userspace virtual address space.
-Not all user space is ready to handle wide addresses. It's known that
-at least some JIT compilers use higher bits in pointers to encode their
-information. It collides with valid pointers with 5-level paging and
-leads to crashes.
-
-To mitigate this, we are not going to allocate virtual address space
-above 47-bit by default.
-
-But userspace can ask for allocation from full address space by
-specifying hint address (with or without MAP_FIXED) above 47-bits.
-
-If hint address set above 47-bit, but MAP_FIXED is not specified, we try
-to look for unmapped area by specified address. If it's already
-occupied, we look for unmapped area in *full* address space, rather than
-from 47-bit window.
-
-A high hint address would only affect the allocation in question, but not
-any future mmap()s.
-
-Specifying high hint address on older kernel or on machine without 5-level
-paging support is safe. The hint will be ignored and kernel will fall back
-to allocation from 47-bit address space.
-
-This approach helps to easily make application's memory allocator aware
-about large address space without manually tracking allocated virtual
-address space.
-
-One important case we need to handle here is interaction with MPX.
-MPX (without MAWA extension) cannot handle addresses above 47-bit, so we
-need to make sure that MPX cannot be enabled we already have VMA above
-the boundary and forbid creating such VMAs once MPX is enabled.
-