On Tue, Oct 28, 2008 at 08:11:48PM -0400, Mike Snitzer wrote: > The gfp_mask that is passed to __page_symlink() is being completely > dropped on the floor. Historically this mask was at least used by > ext3 and ext4 to avoid recursing back into the FS from within a > journal transaction; Kirill fixed that issue with this commit: > 0adb25d2e71ab047423d6fc63d5d184590d0a66f > > I'm quite naive when it comes to Nick's relatively new (>= 2.6.24) AOP > pagecache_write_{begin,end} code that motivated __page_symlink to > change with this commit: > afddba49d18f346e5cc2938b6ed7c512db18ca68 > > Nick's change clearly did away with using the explicitly passed > gfp_mask in __page_symlink(). > So at a minimum it would seem __page_symlink() now has an unused > parameter that should be removed. > > But a more serious concern would be: have ext[34]_symlink() regressed > to being susceptible to the bug that Kirill fixed some time ago? Yeah, I think this would be a potential problem for ext3/4. Looks like pagemap_write_begin() should take a gfp_mask argument, and then pass it down through to __grab_cache_page(), which should then call __page_cache_alloc() instead of _page_cache_alloc(). Then __page_symlink() can actually pass in its gfp_mask to pagemap_write_begin(). Nick, do you agree? - Ted -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html