Re: [syzbot] WARNING in follow_hugetlb_page

From: Mike Kravetz
Date: Sat May 21 2022 - 19:52:55 EST


On 5/21/22 11:25, Minchan Kim wrote:
> On Sat, May 21, 2022 at 06:46:27PM +0200, David Hildenbrand wrote:
>
> < snip >
>
>>>> The general rules are:
>>>>
>>>> ZONE_MOVABLE: nobody is allowed to place unmovable allocations there; it
>>>> could prevent memory offlining/unplug.
>>>>
>>>> CMA: nobody *but the designated owner* is allowed to place unmovable
>>>> memory there; it could prevent the actual owner to allocate contiguous
>>>> memory.
>>>
>>> I am confused what's the meaning of designated owner and actuall owner
>>> in your context.
>>
>> designated==actual here. I just wanted to distinguish from someone
>> current temporary owner of the page ("allocated it via a movable
>> allocation") but the actual designated owner (e.g., hugetlb CMA)
>>
>> The page/memory owner terminology is just confusing. Let's rephrase to:
>> only the CMA area owner is allowed to place unmovable allocations there.
>
> Yeah, the CMA area owner is much better.
>
>>
>>>
>>> What I thought about the issue based on you explanation:
>>>
>>> HugeTLB allocates its page by two types of allocation
>>>
>>> 1. alloc_pages(GFP_MOVABLE)
>>>
>>> It could allocate the hugetlb page from CMA area but longterm pin
>>> should migrate them out of cma before the pinning so allowing
>>> the pinning on the page is no problem and current code works like
>>> that.
>>>
>>> check_and_migrate_movable_pages
>>>
>>
>> Yes.
>>
>>> 2. cma_alloc
>>>
>>> The cma_alloc is used only for *gigantic page* and the hugetlbfs
>>> is the very owner of the page. IOW, if the hugetlbfs was succeeded
>>> to allocate the gigantic page by cma_alloc, there is no other
>>> owner to be able to claim the page any longer so it's fine to
>>> allow longterm pinning againt the gingantic page but current.
>>> However, current code doesn't work like that due to
>>> is_pinnable_page. IOW, hugetlbfs need a way to distinguish
>>> whether the page owner is hugetlbfs or not.
>>>
>>> Are we on same page?
>>
>> Yes, exactly. What I wanted to express is: for huge pages we have to
>> make a smarter decision because there are cases where we want to
>> migrate, and cases where we don't want to migrate.
>
> Sure, maybe hugetlbfs could squeeze a bit in one of subpage of the
> CMA compound page. "I am CMA allocated but allow to pinned for longterm"
>

Thanks for all the ideas here. Yes, we already have a whole word for hugetlb
specific page flags (see hugetlb_page_flags in linux/hugetlb.h). I'm pretty
sure I even proposed a 'allocated from CMA' flag, but there was another way to
get that information. We can add such a flag to for the purpose if making a
decision about long term pinning.

BTW - It is possible that a gigantic page allocated in CMA could be demoted
(split) into smaller hugetlb pages. I 'think' we would also want to allow
long term pinning in this case.
--
Mike Kravetz