On Fri 19-02-21 11:40:30, Oscar Salvador wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 19, 2021 at 10:56:42AM +0100, Michal Hocko wrote:
> > OK, this should work but I am really wondering whether it wouldn't be
> > just simpler to replace the old page by a new one in the free list
> > directly. Or is there any reason we have to go through the generic
> > helpers path? I mean something like this
> > 
> >     new_page = alloc_fresh_huge_page();
> >     if (!new_page)
> >             goto fail;
> >     spin_lock(hugetlb_lock);
> >     if (!PageHuge(old_page)) {
> >             /* freed from under us, nothing to do */ 
> >             __update_and_free_page(new_page);
> >             goto unlock;
> >     }
> >     list_del(&old_page->lru);
> >     __update_and_free_page(old_page);
> >     __enqueue_huge_page(new_page);
> > unlock:
> >     spin_unlock(hugetlb_lock);
> > 
> > This will require to split update_and_free_page and enqueue_huge_page to
> > counters independent parts but that shouldn't be a big deal. But it will
> > also protect from any races. Not an act of beauty but seems less hackish
> > to me.
> 
> On a closer look, do we really need to decouple update_and_free_page and
> enqueue_huge_page? These two functions do not handle the lock, but rather
> the functions that call them (as would be in our case).
> Only update_and_free_page drops the lock during the freeing of a gigantic page
> and then it takes it again, as the caller is who took the lock.
> 
> am I missing anything obvious here?

It is not the lock that I care about but more about counters. The
intention was that there is a single place to handle both enqueing and
dequeing. As not all places require counters to be updated. E.g. the
migration which just replaces one page by another.
-- 
Michal Hocko
SUSE Labs

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