On 02/24/2016 02:37 AM, Hugh Dickins via Linuxppc-dev wrote: > On Tue, 23 Feb 2016, Kirill A. Shutemov wrote: >> On Tue, Feb 23, 2016 at 06:45:05PM +0530, Anshuman Khandual wrote: >>> Not able to understand the first code block of follow_page_mask >>> function. follow_huge_addr function is expected to find the page >>> struct for the given address if it turns out to be a HugeTLB page >>> but then when it finds the page we bug on if it had been called >>> with FOLL_GET flag. >>> >>> page = follow_huge_addr(mm, address, flags & FOLL_WRITE); >>> if (!IS_ERR(page)) { >>> BUG_ON(flags & FOLL_GET); >>> return page; >>> } >>> >>> do_move_page_to_node_array calls follow_page with FOLL_GET which >>> in turn calls follow_page_mask with FOLL_GET. On POWER, the >>> function follow_huge_addr is defined and does not return -EINVAL >>> like the generic one. It returns the page struct if its a HugeTLB >>> page. Just curious to know what is the purpose behind the BUG_ON. >> >> I would guess requesting pin on non-reclaimable page is considered >> useless, meaning suspicius behavior. BUG_ON() is overkill, I think. >> WARN_ON_ONCE() would make it.
Hugh, thanks for such a detailed response. > > No, it's there to guard against abuse, until the correct functionality > is implemented: which has not so far been required, I think. > > The problem is that a get_page() here is too late: it needs to be done > inside each arch's implementation of follow_huge_addr(), while holding > whatever is the appropriate lock, dropped by the time it returns here. Got it. > > If you look through where FOLL_GET is usually implemented, such as in > follow_page_pte(), but pud and pmd cases too, I hope you'll still find > that they are careful to get the reference on the page while it's safe > in the pagetable. yeah, true. > > But follow_huge_addr() would need some work to offer the same guarantees: > it's good for those "peep at a page without actually getting a reference" > cases, but not good enough for preventing a page for being put to some > other use completely, before we've secured it with our reference. Yeah, I understand that now. > > Unless something's changed: the last time I recall the issue coming up, > was when Naoya Horiguchi was working on hugetlbfs page migration: see > linux-kernel/linux-mm mail thread "BUG at mm/memory.c:1489!" from > 28 May 2014; and the resolution there was not to support the > follow_huge_addr() case (which IIRC is peculiar to powerpc alone?). Yeah correct, looked into that discussion. Also tried out the discussed small patch where we do a get_page(page) if the returned page is a head of a HugeTLB compound page and the flag contains FOLL_GET. That made the do_move_page_to_node_array function work before hitting a race condition with the test case in the commit message of e66f17ff7177 ("mm/hugetlb: take page table lock in follow_huge_pmd()"). I believe the test exposes the locking problem which is not being taken care at the follow_huge_addr function level right now on powerpc and forces it to call follow_huge_pmd (which does a BUG_ON() on powerpc) after failing to detect a huge page at the PMD level when it checked the first time around. _______________________________________________ Linuxppc-dev mailing list Linuxppc-dev@lists.ozlabs.org https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/linuxppc-dev