Re: [PATCH 02/11] mm: compaction: introduceisolate_{free,migrate}pages_range().
From: Mel Gorman
Date: Mon Dec 12 2011 - 12:20:20 EST
On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 05:46:13PM +0100, Michal Nazarewicz wrote:
> On Mon, 12 Dec 2011 17:30:52 +0100, Mel Gorman <mel@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> >On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 04:22:39PM +0100, Michal Nazarewicz wrote:
> >>> <SNIP>
> >>>
> >>>>+ if (!pfn_valid_within(pfn))
> >>>>+ goto skip;
> >>>
> >>>The flow of this function in general with gotos of skipped and next
> >>>is confusing in comparison to the existing function. For example,
> >>>if this PFN is not valid, and no freelist is provided, then we call
> >>>__free_page() on a PFN that is known to be invalid.
> >>>
> >>>>+ ++nr_scanned;
> >>>>+
> >>>>+ if (!PageBuddy(page)) {
> >>>>+skip:
> >>>>+ if (freelist)
> >>>>+ goto next;
> >>>>+ for (; start < pfn; ++start)
> >>>>+ __free_page(pfn_to_page(pfn));
> >>>>+ return 0;
> >>>>+ }
> >>>
> >>>So if a PFN is valid and !PageBuddy and no freelist is provided, we
> >>>call __free_page() on it regardless of reference count. That does not
> >>>sound safe.
> >>
> >>Sorry about that. It's a bug in the code which was caught later on. The
> >>code should read ???__free_page(pfn_to_page(start))???.
>
> On Mon, 12 Dec 2011 17:30:52 +0100, Mel Gorman <mel@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >That will call free on valid PFNs but why is it safe to call
> >__free_page() at all? You say later that CMA requires that all
> >pages in the range be valid but if the pages are in use, that does
> >not mean that calling __free_page() is safe. I suspect you have not
> >seen a problem because the pages in the range were free as expected
> >and not in use because of MIGRATE_ISOLATE.
>
> All pages from [start, pfn) have passed through the loop body which
> means that they are valid and they have been removed from buddy (for
> caller's use). Also, because of split_free_page(), all of those pages
> have been split into 0-order pages.
Ah, I see. Even though you are not putting the pages on a freelist, the
function still returns with an elevated reference count and it's up to
the caller to find them again.
> Therefore, in error recovery, to
> undo what the loop has done so far, we put give back to buddy by
> calling __free_page() on each 0-order page.
>
Ok.
> >>>> /* Found a free page, break it into order-0 pages */
> >>>> isolated = split_free_page(page);
> >>>> total_isolated += isolated;
> >>>>- for (i = 0; i < isolated; i++) {
> >>>>- list_add(&page->lru, freelist);
> >>>>- page++;
> >>>>+ if (freelist) {
> >>>>+ struct page *p = page;
> >>>>+ for (i = isolated; i; --i, ++p)
> >>>>+ list_add(&p->lru, freelist);
> >>>> }
> >>>>
> >>>>- /* If a page was split, advance to the end of it */
> >>>>- if (isolated) {
> >>>>- blockpfn += isolated - 1;
> >>>>- cursor += isolated - 1;
> >>>>- }
> >>>>+next:
> >>>>+ pfn += isolated;
> >>>>+ page += isolated;
> >>>
> >>>The name isolated is now confusing because it can mean either
> >>>pages isolated or pages scanned depending on context. Your patch
> >>>appears to be doing a lot more than is necessary to convert
> >>>isolate_freepages_block into isolate_freepages_range and at this point,
> >>>it's unclear why you did that.
> >>
> >>When CMA uses this function, it requires all pages in the range to be valid
> >>and free. (Both conditions should be met but you never know.)
>
> To be clear, I meant that the CMA expects pages to be in buddy when the function
> is called but after the function finishes, all the pages in the range are removed
> from buddy. This, among other things, is why the call to split_free_page() is
> necessary.
>
Understood.
--
Mel Gorman
SUSE Labs
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