Memory Protection Keys for Userspace (PKU aka PKEYs) is a CPU feature which will be found on future Intel CPUs. Memory Protection Keys provides a mechanism for enforcing page-based protections, but without requiring modification of the page tables when an application changes protection domains. It works by dedicating 4 previously ignored bits in each page table entry to a "protection key", giving 16 possible keys. There is also a new user-accessible register (PKRU) with two separate bits (Access Disable and Write Disable) for each key. Being a CPU register, PKRU is inherently thread-local, potentially giving each thread a different set of protections from every other thread. There are two new instructions (RDPKRU/WRPKRU) for reading and writing to the new register. The feature is only available in 64-bit mode, even though there is theoretically space in the PAE PTEs. These permissions are enforced on data access only and have no effect on instruction fetches. =========================== Config Option =========================== This config option adds approximately 1.5kb of text. and 50 bytes of data to the executable. A workload which does large O_DIRECT reads of holes in XFS files was run to exercise get_user_pages_fast(). No performance delta was observed with the config option enabled or disabled.