Re: [PATCH] mm/page_alloc: avoid high-order page allocation warn with __GFP_NOFAIL

From: Gao Xiang
Date: Mon Mar 06 2023 - 03:04:13 EST




On 2023/3/6 15:51, Michal Hocko wrote:
[Cc couple of more people recently involved with vmalloc code]

On Sun 05-03-23 13:30:35, Gao Xiang wrote:
My knowledge of this is somewhat limited, however, since vmalloc already
supported __GFP_NOFAIL in commit 9376130c390a ("mm/vmalloc: add
support for __GFP_NOFAIL"). __GFP_NOFAIL could trigger the following
stack and allocate high-order pages when CONFIG_HAVE_ARCH_HUGE_VMALLOC
is enabled:

__alloc_pages+0x1cb/0x5b0 mm/page_alloc.c:5549
alloc_pages+0x1aa/0x270 mm/mempolicy.c:2286
vm_area_alloc_pages mm/vmalloc.c:2989 [inline]

__vmalloc_area_node mm/vmalloc.c:3057 [inline]
__vmalloc_node_range+0x978/0x13c0 mm/vmalloc.c:3227
kvmalloc_node+0x156/0x1a0 mm/util.c:606
kvmalloc include/linux/slab.h:737 [inline]
kvmalloc_array include/linux/slab.h:755 [inline]
kvcalloc include/linux/slab.h:760 [inline]
(codebase: Linux 6.2-rc2)

Don't warn such cases since high-order pages with __GFP_NOFAIL is
somewhat legel.

OK, this is definitely a bug and it seems my 9376130c390a was
incomplete because it hasn't covered the high order case. Not sure how
that happened but removing the warning is not the right thing to do
here. The higher order allocation is an optimization rather than a must.
So it is perfectly fine to fail that allocation and retry rather than
go into a very expensive and potentially impossible higher order
allocation that must not fail.

The proper fix should look like this unless I am missing something. I
would appreciate another pair of eyes on this because I am not fully
familiar with the high order optimization part much.

I'm fine with the fix. Although I'm not familiar with such vmalloc
allocation, I thought about this possibility as well.

The original issue was:
https://lore.kernel.org/r/0000000000007796bd05f1852ec2@xxxxxxxxxx

which I used kvcalloc with __GFP_NOFAIL but it warned, and I made
a fix (which now seems wrong) to use kcalloc() but it now warns
the same:
https://lore.kernel.org/r/00000000000072eb6505f376dd4b@xxxxxxxxxx

And I then realized it's a bug in kvmalloc() with __GFP_NOFAIL...

Thanks,
Gao Xiang


Thanks!
---
diff --git a/mm/vmalloc.c b/mm/vmalloc.c
index ef910bf349e1..a8aa2765618a 100644
--- a/mm/vmalloc.c
+++ b/mm/vmalloc.c
@@ -2883,6 +2883,8 @@ vm_area_alloc_pages(gfp_t gfp, int nid,
unsigned int order, unsigned int nr_pages, struct page **pages)
{
unsigned int nr_allocated = 0;
+ gfp_t alloc_gfp = gfp;
+ bool nofail = false;
struct page *page;
int i;
@@ -2931,20 +2933,30 @@ vm_area_alloc_pages(gfp_t gfp, int nid,
if (nr != nr_pages_request)
break;
}
+ } else {
+ alloc_gfp &= ~__GFP_NOFAIL;
+ nofail = true;
}
/* High-order pages or fallback path if "bulk" fails. */
-
while (nr_allocated < nr_pages) {
if (fatal_signal_pending(current))
break;
if (nid == NUMA_NO_NODE)
- page = alloc_pages(gfp, order);
+ page = alloc_pages(alloc_gfp, order);
else
- page = alloc_pages_node(nid, gfp, order);
- if (unlikely(!page))
- break;
+ page = alloc_pages_node(nid, alloc_gfp, order);
+ if (unlikely(!page)) {
+ if (!nofail)
+ break;
+
+ /* fall back to the zero order allocations */
+ alloc_gfp |= __GFP_NOFAIL;
+ order = 0;
+ continue;
+ }
+
/*
* Higher order allocations must be able to be treated as
* indepdenent small pages by callers (as they can with