On Wed, Mar 31, 2021 at 03:15:47PM +1100, Alistair Popple wrote: > On Wednesday, 31 March 2021 2:56:38 PM AEDT John Hubbard wrote: > > On 3/30/21 3:56 PM, Alistair Popple wrote: > > ... > > >> +1 for renaming "munlock*" items to "mlock*", where applicable. good > grief. > > > > > > At least the situation was weird enough to prompt further investigation :) > > > > > > Renaming to mlock* doesn't feel like the right solution to me either > though. I > > > am not sure if you saw me responding to myself earlier but I am thinking > > > renaming try_to_munlock() -> page_mlocked() and try_to_munlock_one() -> > > > page_mlock_one() might be better. Thoughts? > > > > > > > Quite confused by this naming idea. Because: try_to_munlock() returns > > void, so a boolean-style name such as "page_mlocked()" is already not a > > good fit. > > > > Even more important, though, is that try_to_munlock() is mlock-ing the > > page, right? Is there some subtle point I'm missing? It really is doing > > an mlock to the best of my knowledge here. Although the kerneldoc > > comment for try_to_munlock() seems questionable too: > > It's mlocking the page if it turns out it still needs to be locked after > unlocking it. But I don't think you're missing anything. It is really searching all VMA's to see if the VMA flag is set and if any are found then it mlocks the page. But presenting this rountine in its simplified form raises lots of questions: - What locking is being used to read the VMA flag? - Why do we need to manipulate global struct page flags under the page table locks of a single VMA? - Why do we need to check for huge pages inside the VMA loop, not before going to the rmap? PageTransCompoundHead() is not sensitive to the PTEs. (and what happens if the huge page breaks up concurrently?) - Why do we clear the mlock bit then run around to try and set it? Feels racey. Jason _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel