Re: Problem in pfmemalloc skb handling in net/core/dev.c

From: Mel Gorman
Date: Fri Apr 09 2021 - 06:00:57 EST


On Fri, Apr 09, 2021 at 02:14:12AM -0700, Xie He wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 9, 2021 at 1:44 AM Mel Gorman <mgorman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > That would imply that the tap was communicating with a swap device to
> > allocate a pfmemalloc skb which shouldn't happen. Furthermore, it would
> > require the swap device to be deactivated while pfmemalloc skbs still
> > existed. Have you encountered this problem?
>
> I'm not a user of swap devices or pfmemalloc skbs. I just want to make
> sure the protocols that I'm developing (not IP or IPv6) won't get
> pfmemalloc skbs when receiving, because those protocols cannot handle
> them.
>
> According to the code, it seems always possible to get a pfmemalloc
> skb when a network driver calls "__netdev_alloc_skb". The skb will
> then be queued in per-CPU backlog queues when the driver calls
> "netif_rx". There seems to be nothing preventing "sk_memalloc_socks()"
> from becoming "false" after the skb is allocated and before it is
> handled by "__netif_receive_skb".
>
> Do you mean that at the time "sk_memalloc_socks()" changes from "true"
> to "false", there would be no in-flight skbs currently being received,
> and all network communications have been paused?

Not all network communication, but communication with swap devices
should have stopped once sk_memalloc_socks is false.

--
Mel Gorman
SUSE Labs