Re: kernel 3.2.27 on arm: WARNING: at mm/page_alloc.c:2109__alloc_pages_nodemask+0x1d4/0x68c()
From: Eric Dumazet
Date: Thu Oct 04 2012 - 12:29:28 EST
On Thu, 2012-10-04 at 18:02 +0200, Maxime Bizon wrote:
> On Fri, 2012-08-31 at 19:21 -0700, Hugh Dickins wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> > Francois is right that a GFP_ATOMIC allocation from pskb_expand_head()
> > is failing, which can easily happen, and cause your "failed to reallocate
> > TX buffer" errors; but it's well worth looking up what's actually on
> > lines 2108 and 2109 of mm/page_alloc.c in 3.2.27:
> >
> > if (order >= MAX_ORDER) {
> > WARN_ON_ONCE(!(gfp_mask & __GFP_NOWARN));
> >
> > That was probably not a sane allocation request, it has gone out of range:
> > maybe the skb header is even corrupted. If you're lucky, it might be
> > something that netdev will recognize as already fixed.
>
> I have the same problem on the exact same hardware and found the cause:
>
> Author: Eric Dumazet <eric.dumazet@xxxxxxxxx>
> Date: Tue Apr 10 20:08:39 2012 +0000
>
> net: allow pskb_expand_head() to get maximum tailroom
>
> [ Upstream commit 87151b8689d890dfb495081f7be9b9e257f7a2df ]
>
>
> It turns out this change has a bad side effect on drivers that uses
> skb_recycle(), in that case mv643xx_eth.c
>
> Since skb_recycle() resets skb->data using (skb->head + NET_SKB_PAD), a
> recycled skb going multiple times through a path that needs to expand
> skb head will get bigger and bigger each time, and you eventually end up
> with an allocation failure.
>
> An idea to fix this would be to pass needed skb size to skb_resize() and
> set skb->data to MIN(NET_SKB_PAD, (skb->end - skb->head - skb_size) / 2)
>
> skb recycling gives a small speed boost, but does not get a lot of test
> coverage since only 3 drivers uses it
>
Thanks Maxime
Sure we can probably fix this issue, but its really not worth the pain.
I would get rid of it, its superseded by build_skb() to get cache hot
skbs anyway, and more over, rx path now uses skb->head allocated from a
page fragment for optimal GRO/TCP coalescing behavior.
skb_recycle() assumes skb allocation is slow, but its not per se.
Cache line misses are expensive, thats the real issue.
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