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Paul Mackerras authored
Currently, whenever any of the MMU notifier callbacks get called, we invalidate all the shadow PTEs. This is inefficient because it means that we typically then get a lot of DSIs and ISIs in the guest to fault the shadow PTEs back in. We do this even if the address range being notified doesn't correspond to guest memory. This commit adds code to scan the memslot array to find out what range(s) of guest physical addresses corresponds to the host virtual address range being affected. For each such range we flush only the shadow PTEs for the range, on all cpus. Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org> Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf <agraf@suse.de>
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