On 2024/6/27 19:54, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Thu 27-06-24 19:43:06, xiujianfeng wrote: >> >> >> On 2024/6/27 19:20, Michal Hocko wrote: >>> On Thu 27-06-24 16:33:00, xiujianfeng wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> On 2024/6/27 15:13, Michal Hocko wrote: >>>>> On Wed 26-06-24 09:42:32, Xiu Jianfeng wrote: >>>>>> Both the end of memory_stat_format() and memcg_stat_format() will call >>>>>> WARN_ON_ONCE(seq_buf_has_overflowed()). However, memory_stat_format() >>>>>> is the only caller of memcg_stat_format(), when memcg is on the default >>>>>> hierarchy, seq_buf_has_overflowed() will be executed twice, so remove >>>>>> the reduntant one. >>>>> >>>>> Shouldn't we rather remove both? Are they giving us anything useful >>>>> actually? Would a simpl pr_warn be sufficient? Afterall all we care >>>>> about is to learn that we need to grow the buffer size because our stats >>>>> do not fit anymore. It is not really important whether that is an OOM or >>>>> cgroupfs interface path. >>>> >>>> I did a test, when I removed both of them and added a lot of prints in >>>> memcg_stat_format() to make the seq_buf overflow, and then cat >>>> memory.stat in user mode, no OOM occurred, and there were no warning >>>> logs in the kernel. >>> >>> The default buffer size is PAGE_SIZE. >> >> Hi Michal, >> >> I'm sorry, I didn't understand what you meant by this sentence. What I >> mean is that we can't remove both, otherwise, neither the kernel nor >> user space would be aware of a buffer overflow. From my test, there was >> no OOM or other exceptions when the overflow occurred; it just resulted >> in the displayed information being truncated. Therefore, we need to keep >> one. > > I've had this in mind > > diff --git a/mm/memcontrol.c b/mm/memcontrol.c > index 71fe2a95b8bd..3e17b9c3a27a 100644 > --- a/mm/memcontrol.c > +++ b/mm/memcontrol.c > @@ -1845,9 +1845,6 @@ static void memcg_stat_format(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, struct seq_buf *s) > vm_event_name(memcg_vm_event_stat[i]), > memcg_events(memcg, memcg_vm_event_stat[i])); > } > - > - /* The above should easily fit into one page */ > - WARN_ON_ONCE(seq_buf_has_overflowed(s)); > } > > static void memcg1_stat_format(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, struct seq_buf *s); > @@ -1858,7 +1855,8 @@ static void memory_stat_format(struct mem_cgroup *memcg, struct seq_buf *s) > memcg_stat_format(memcg, s); > else > memcg1_stat_format(memcg, s); > - WARN_ON_ONCE(seq_buf_has_overflowed(s)); > + if (seq_buf_has_overflowed(s)) > + pr_warn("%s: Stat buffer insufficient please report\n", __FUNCTION__); I found that after the change, the effect is as follows: # dmesg [ 51.028327] memory_stat_format: Stat buffer insufficient please report with no keywords such as "Failed", "Warning" to draw attention to this printout. Should we change it to the following? if (seq_buf_has_overflowed(s)) pr_warn("%s: Warning, Stat buffer overflow, please report\n", __FUNCTION__); > } > > /** > > Because WARN_ON_ONCE doesn't buy us anything actually. It will dump > stack trace and it seems really mouthfull (and it will panic when > panic_on_warn is enabled which is likely not a great thing).