The way sg_low_malloc() tries to allocate, failure messages are pretty much garanteed. It tries high order allocations (which are unreliable even when not stressed) and backs off until it succeeds. In other words, the messages are a red herring. -Mike - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
- Re: [ANOMALIES]: 2.4.2 - __alloc_pages: failed - Patch fai... Shawn Starr
- Re: [ANOMALIES]: 2.4.2 - __alloc_pages: failed - Patc... Mike Galbraith
- Re: [ANOMALIES]: 2.4.2 - __alloc_pages: failed - ... Shawn Starr
- Re: [ANOMALIES]: 2.4.2 - __alloc_pages: failed - ... Marcelo Tosatti
- Re: [ANOMALIES]: 2.4.2 - __alloc_pages: faile... Alan Cox
- Re: [ANOMALIES]: 2.4.2 - __alloc_pages: f... Marcelo Tosatti
- Re: [ANOMALIES]: 2.4.2 - __alloc_pag... Shawn Starr
- Re: [ANOMALIES]: 2.4.2 - __alloc... Mike Galbraith
- Re: [ANOMALIES]: 2.4.2 - __a... Shawn Starr
- Re: [ANOMALIES]: 2.4.2 - __a... Mike Galbraith