Re: [PATCH] Fix panic in __d_lookup with high dentry hashtablecounts

From: Dimitri Sivanich
Date: Tue Jan 17 2012 - 12:41:29 EST


On Tue, Jan 17, 2012 at 12:22:29PM -0500, David Miller wrote:
> From: Dimitri Sivanich <sivanich@xxxxxxx>
> Date: Tue, 17 Jan 2012 11:13:52 -0600
>
> > When the number of dentry cache hash table entries gets too high
> > (2147483648 entries), as happens by default on a 16TB system, use
> > of a signed integer in the dcache_init() initialization loop prevents
> > the dentry_hashtable from getting initialized, causing a panic in
> > __d_lookup().
> >
> > In addition, the _hash_mask returned from alloc_large_system_hash() does
> > not support more than a 32 bit hash table size.
> >
> > Changing the _hash_mask size returned from alloc_large_system_hash() to
> > support larger hash table sizes in the future, and changing loop counter
> > sizes appropriately.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Dimitri Sivanich <sivanich@xxxxxxx>
>
> To be honest I think this is overkill.

I'm not going to flat-out disagree with you. These would be huge hash
tables. The thought was to make this __init code as flexible as possible.

>
> Supporting anything larger than a 32-bit hash mask is not even close
> to being reasonable. Nobody needs a 4GB hash table, not for anything.

Yes, at this point that is likely true.

>
> Instead I would just make sure everything is "unsigned int" or "u32"
> and calculations use things like "((u32) 1) << shift", and enforce an
> upper bounds of 0x80000000 or similar unconditionally in the hash
> allocator itself (rather than conditionally in the networking code).

OK. I had mentioned capping the value in alloc_large_system_hash() to
32 bits, but got no response to that proposal. I'll create a proper
patch.

>
> All of this "long" stuff is madness, what the heck is a long? It's a
> non-fixed type, yet you put constants in your code (0x80000000) which
> depend upon that type's size.
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