On Mon, Jun 08, 2026 at 04:28:48PM +0200, David Hildenbrand (Arm) wrote:
> On 6/8/26 16:08, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
> > On Mon, Jun 08, 2026 at 02:46:34PM +0200, David Hildenbrand (Arm) wrote:
> >> On 6/8/26 14:25, Lorenzo Stoakes wrote:
> >>>
> >>> Do not put comments about specific expected races like this in the commit
> >>> message but not in the code. Subtleties need to be called out.
> >>>
> >>> The commit message also doesn't at all explain why PG_zeroed doesn't
> >>> suffice here.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> I really don't understand why you have a 'zeroed' folio flag but need to
> >>> also have new API calls to detect that?
> >>>
> >>> They're also HORRIBLY named. Zeroed as in what? Zero page? Huge zero page?
> >>> Memory zeroed by kernel? Pages that userland happen to have zeroed? Or 
> >>> host
> >>> VM zeroed?
> >>>
> >>> Each are cases we address individually and relate to folios.
> >>>
> >>> You absolutely fail to clarify _which one_ you mean, and provide 
> >>> absolutely
> >>> no documentation and add an exported mm API with no description.
> >>>
> >>> This is just I think not something we want to add? Especially on something
> >>> so fundamental?
> >>
> >> I raised previously that providing a folio helper is odd, and that I 
> >> suggested
> >> that we defer this change.
> > 
> > Sadly it's a dependency actually - without it memcg failures would cause
> > repeated re-zeroing where previously it failed without zeroing.
> 
> Oh, you mean that we succeeded allocating (+zeroing) but failed to charge?
> 
> I don't immediately see that to be a real problem?

Yes exactly.
I don't really know if any real applications live close enough to memcg edge
that repeatedly wasting cycles zeroing pages then discarding that
information will be noticeable.

I should be able to write a test to show the difference, if that's the
question.

So just writing code in a way that we are not regressing them seemed cleaner to 
me.
But I'm not a maintainer so hey. Just so we are clear.

-- 
MST


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