On Fri, May 28, 2021 at 12:42 AM Mel Gorman <mgorman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, May 27, 2021 at 03:17:48PM -0700, Andrii Nakryiko wrote: > > > Andrii Nakryiko bisected the problem to the commit "mm/page_alloc: convert > > > per-cpu list protection to local_lock" currently staged in mmotm. In his > > > own words > > > > > > The immediate problem is two different definitions of numa_node per-cpu > > > variable. They both are at the same offset within .data..percpu ELF > > > section, they both have the same name, but one of them is marked as > > > static and another as global. And one is int variable, while another > > > is struct pagesets. I'll look some more tomorrow, but adding Jiri and > > > Arnaldo for visibility. > > > > > > [110907] DATASEC '.data..percpu' size=178904 vlen=303 > > > ... > > > type_id=27753 offset=163976 size=4 (VAR 'numa_node') > > > type_id=27754 offset=163976 size=4 (VAR 'numa_node') > > > > > > [27753] VAR 'numa_node' type_id=27556, linkage=static > > > [27754] VAR 'numa_node' type_id=20, linkage=global > > > > > > [20] INT 'int' size=4 bits_offset=0 nr_bits=32 encoding=SIGNED > > > > > > [27556] STRUCT 'pagesets' size=0 vlen=1 > > > 'lock' type_id=507 bits_offset=0 > > > > > > [506] STRUCT '(anon)' size=0 vlen=0 > > > [507] TYPEDEF 'local_lock_t' type_id=506 > > > > > > The patch in question introduces a zero-sized per-cpu struct and while > > > this is not wrong, versions of pahole prior to 1.22 get confused during > > > BTF generation with two separate variables occupying the same address. > > > > > > This patch adds a requirement for pahole 1.22 before setting > > > DEBUG_INFO_BTF. While pahole 1.22 does not exist yet, a fix is in the > > > pahole git tree as ("btf_encoder: fix and complete filtering out zero-sized > > > per-CPU variables"). > > > > > > Reported-by: Michal Suchanek <msuchanek@xxxxxxx> > > > Reported-by: Hritik Vijay <hritikxx8@xxxxxxxxx> > > > Debugged-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> > > > Signed-off-by: Mel Gorman <mgorman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > --- > > > > I still think that v1 ([0]) is a more appropriate temporary solution > > until pahole 1.22 is released and widely packaged. Suddenly raising > > the minimum version to 1.22, which is not even released even, is a > > pretty big compatibility concern for all the users that rely on > > CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_BTF. > > On the flip side, we have a situation where a build tool (pahole) has a > problem whereby correct code does not result in a working kernel. It's > not that dissimilar to preventing the kernel being built on an old > compiler. While I accept it's unfortunate, Christoph had a point where > introducing workarounds in the kernel could lead to a prolification of > workarounds for pahole or other reasons that are potentially tricky to > revert as long as distributions exist that do not ship with a sufficiently > reason package. > > > Just a few days ago pahole 1.16 worked fine and > > here we suddenly (and silently due to how Kconfig functions) raise > > that to a version that doesn't exist. That's going to break workflows > > for a lot of people. > > > > People do have a workaround though. For the system building the kernel, > they can patch pahole and revert the check so a bootable kernel can be > built. It's not convenient but it is manageable and pahole has until > 5.13 releases to release a v1.22. The downsides for the alternative -- > a non-booting kernel are much more severe. > > > I'm asking to have that ugly work-around to ensure sizeof(struct > > pagesets) > 0 as a temporary solution only. > > Another temporary solution is to locally build pahole and either revert > the check or fake the 1.22 release number with the self-built pahole. > Well, luckily it seems we anticipated issues like that and added --skip_encoding_btf_vars argument, which I completely forgot about and just accidentally came across reviewing Arnaldo's latest pahole patch. I think that one is a much better solution, as then it will impact only those that explicitly relies on availability of BTF for per-CPU variables, which is a subset of all possible uses for kernel BTF. Sent a patch ([0]), please take a look. [0] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20210530002536.3193829-1-andrii@xxxxxxxxxx/T/#u > -- > Mel Gorman > SUSE Labs