Re: [RFC PATCH v2] iommu/amd: gray the 'irq_remap_table' object for kmemleak
From: Michael Wang
Date: Thu Dec 03 2015 - 03:47:54 EST
On 12/02/2015 06:36 PM, Catalin Marinas wrote:
> On 2 December 2015 at 13:59, Borislav Petkov <bp@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
[snip]
>
> 1. The sl?b allocators themselves use page allocations, so kmemleak
> could end up detecting the same pointer twice, hiding a potential leak
>
> 2. Most page allocations do not contain data/pointers relevant to
> kmemleak (e.g. page cache pages), however the randomness of such data
> greatly diminishes kmemleak's ability to detect real leaks
>
> Arguably, kmemleak could be made to detect both cases above by a
> combination of page flags, additional annotations or specific page
> alloc API. However, this has its own drawbacks in terms of code
> complexity (potentially outside mm/kmemleak.c) and overhead.
Thanks for the very nice explain :-) I used to thought overhead is
the only concern, missing the point regarding allocator it self.
Regards,
Michael Wang
>
> Regarding a kmemleak_alloc() annotation like in the patch I suggested,
> that's the second one I've seen needed outside alloc APIs (the first
> one is commit f75782e4e067 - "block: kmemleak: Track the page
> allocations for struct request"). If the number of such explicit
> annotations stays small, it's better to keep it this way.
>
> There are other explicit annotations like kmemleak_not_leak() or
> kmemleak_ignore() but these are for objects kmemleak knows about and
> incorrectly reports them as leaks. Most of the time is because the
> pointers to such objects are stored in a different form (e.g. physical
> address).
>
> Anyway, kmemleak is not the only tool requiring annotations (take
> spin_lock_nested() for example). If needed, we could do with an
> additional page alloc/free API which informs kmemleak in the process
> but I don't think it's worth it.
>
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