Re: [RFC PATCH 0/1] vmxnet3: Adjust maximum Rx ring buffer size

From: Florian Fainelli
Date: Wed Jan 08 2025 - 11:53:33 EST


On 1/6/25 16:57, Jakub Kicinski wrote:
On Mon, 6 Jan 2025 15:51:10 -0800 Florian Fainelli wrote:
On 1/6/25 15:47, 'Jakub Kicinski' via BCM-KERNEL-FEEDBACK-LIST,PDL wrote:
On Sun, 5 Jan 2025 21:30:35 +0000 Aaron Tomlin wrote:
I managed to trigger the MAX_PAGE_ORDER warning in the context of function
__alloc_pages_noprof() with /usr/sbin/ethtool --set-ring rx 4096 rx-mini
2048 [devname]' using the maximum supported Ring 0 and Rx ring buffer size.
Admittedly this was under the stock Linux kernel-4.18.0-477.27.1.el8_8
whereby CONFIG_CMA is not enabled. I think it does not make sense to
attempt a large memory allocation request for physically contiguous memory,
to hold the Rx Data ring that could exceed the maximum page-order supported
by the system.

I think CMA should be a bit orthogonal to the warning.

Off the top of my head the usual way to solve the warning is to add
__GFP_NOWARN to the allocations which trigger it. And then handle
the error gracefully.

That IMHO should really be the default for any driver that calls
__netdev_alloc_skb() under the hood, we should not really have to
specify __GFP_NOWARN, rather if people want it, they should specify it.

True, although TBH I don't fully understand why this flag exists
in the first place. Is it just supposed to be catching programming
errors, or is it due to potential DoS implications of users triggering
large allocations?


There is some value IMHO in printing when allocations fail, where they came from, their gfp_t flags and page order so you can track high order offenders in hot paths (one of our Wi-Fi driver was notorious for doing that and having verbose out of memory dumps by default definitively helped). Once you fix those however, hogging the system while dumping lines and lines of information onto a slow console tends to be worse than the recovery from out of memory itself. One could argue that triggering an OOM plus dumping information can result in a DoS, so that should be frowned upon...
--
Florian