On Thu 15-08-19 16:18:10, Jason Gunthorpe wrote: > On Thu, Aug 15, 2019 at 09:05:25PM +0200, Michal Hocko wrote: > > > This is what you claim and I am saying that fs_reclaim is about a > > restricted reclaim context and it is an ugly hack. It has proven to > > report false positives. Maybe it can be extended to a generic reclaim. > > I haven't tried that. Do not aim to try it. > > Okay, great, I think this has been very helpful, at least for me, > thanks. I did not know fs_reclaim was so problematic, or the special > cases about OOM 'reclaim'. I am happy that this is more clear now. > On this patch, I have no general objection to enforcing drivers to be > non-blocking, I'd just like to see it done with the existing lockdep > can't sleep detection rather than inventing some new debugging for it. > > I understand this means the debugging requires lockdep enabled and > will not run in production, but I'm of the view that is OK and in line > with general kernel practice. Yes and I do agree with this in general. > The last detail is I'm still unclear what a GFP flags a blockable > invalidate_range_start() should use. Is GFP_KERNEL OK? I hope I will not make this muddy again ;) invalidate_range_start in the blockable mode can use/depend on any sleepable allocation allowed in the context it is called from. So in other words it is no different from any other function in the kernel that calls into allocator. As the API is missing gfp context then I hope it is not called from any restricted contexts (except from the oom which we have !blockable for). > Lockdep has > complained on that in past due to fs_reclaim - how do you know if it > is a false positive? I would have to see the specific lockdep splat. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel