Linux Heterogeneous Memory Management: 7 Vital Kernel Secrets
Introduction: I still remember debugging out-of-memory errors on early compute clusters. It was pure misery. We were manually pinning memory, copying buffers back and forth, and praying the system wouldn't crash. Then, Linux Heterogeneous Memory Management (HMM) hit the mainline kernel, and the game completely changed. If you write drivers for modern GPUs, NPUs, or network accelerators, you cannot ignore this subsystem. Moving data is slow. Computing data is fast. HMM bridges that gap effortlessly. In this guide, I'm breaking down exactly how it works and why legacy DMA mapping is dead. The Fatal Flaw Before Linux Heterogeneous Memory Management Let's rewind a few years to the dark ages of kernel programming. If a PCIe device wanted to read process memory, you had to use get_user_pages() (GUP). GUP was a necessary evil. It pinned process memory pages directly into physical RAM. So, why does this matter? Because pinned pages cannot be swapped out, mi...