Re: OOM behavior in constrained memory situations

From: Andrew Morton
Date: Mon Feb 06 2006 - 17:26:27 EST


Christoph Lameter <clameter@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Mon, 6 Feb 2006, Andi Kleen wrote:
>
> > At least remnants from my old 80% hack to avoid this (huge_page_needed)
> > seem to be still there in mainline:
> >
> > fs/hugetlbfs/inode.c:hugetlbfs_file_mmap
> >
> > bytes = huge_pages_needed(mapping, vma);
> > if (!is_hugepage_mem_enough(bytes))
> > return -ENOMEM;
> >
> >
> > So something must be broken if this doesn't work. Or did you allocate
> > the pages in some other way?
>
> huge pages are now allocated in the huge fault handler. If it would be
> returning an OOM then the OOM killer may be activated.

?

The oom-killer is invoked from the page allocator. A hugetlb pagefault
won't use the page allocator. So there shouldn't be an oom-killing on
hugepage exhaustion.

I think this comment is just wrong:

/* Logically this is OOM, not a SIGBUS, but an OOM
* could cause the kernel to go killing other
* processes which won't help the hugepage situation
* at all (?) */

A VM_FAULT_OOM from there won't cause the oom-killer to do anything. We
should return VM_FAULT_OOM and let do_page_fault() commit suicide with
SIGKILL.
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