On Mon 24-09-18 21:56:03, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Mon 24-09-18 12:30:07, David Rientjes wrote: > > Commit 1860033237d4 ("mm: make PR_SET_THP_DISABLE immediately active") > > introduced a regression in that userspace cannot always determine the set > > of vmas where thp is ineligible. > > > > Userspace relies on the "nh" flag being emitted as part of /proc/pid/smaps > > to determine if a vma is eligible to be backed by hugepages. > > I was under impression that nh resp hg flags only tell about the madvise > status. How do you exactly use these flags in an application? > > Your eligible rules as defined here: > > > + [*] A process mapping is eligible to be backed by transparent hugepages (thp) > > + depending on system-wide settings and the mapping itself. See > > + Documentation/admin-guide/mm/transhuge.rst for default behavior. If a > > + mapping has a flag of "nh", it is not eligible to be backed by hugepages > > + in any condition, either because of prctl(PR_SET_THP_DISABLE) or > > + madvise(MADV_NOHUGEPAGE). PR_SET_THP_DISABLE takes precedence over any > > + MADV_HUGEPAGE. > > doesn't seem to match the reality. I do not see all the file backed > mappings to be nh marked. So is this really about eligibility rather > than the madvise status? Maybe it is just the above documentation that > needs to be updated. > > That being said, I do not object to the patch, I am just trying to > understand what is the intended usage for the flag that does try to say > more than the madvise status. And moreover, how is the PR_SET_THP_DISABLE any different from the global THP disabled case. Do we want to set all vmas to nh as well? -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs