Hi, it seems that we still have few vmalloc users who perform GFP_NOFS allocation: drivers/mtd/ubi/io.c fs/ext4/xattr.c fs/gfs2/dir.c fs/gfs2/quota.c fs/nfs/blocklayout/extent_tree.c fs/ubifs/debug.c fs/ubifs/lprops.c fs/ubifs/lpt_commit.c fs/ubifs/orphan.c Unfortunatelly vmalloc doesn't suppoer GFP_NOFS semantinc properly because we do have hardocded GFP_KERNEL allocations deep inside the vmalloc layers. That means that if GFP_NOFS really protects from recursion into the fs deadlocks then the vmalloc call is broken. What to do about this? Well, there are two things. Firstly, it would be really great to double check whether the GFP_NOFS is really needed. I cannot judge that because I am not familiar with the code. It would be great if the respective maintainers (hopefully get_maintainer.sh pointed me to all relevant ones). If there is not reclaim recursion issue then simply use the standard vmalloc (aka GFP_KERNEL request). If the use is really valid then we have a way to do the vmalloc allocation properly. We have memalloc_nofs_{save,restore} scope api. How does that work? You simply call memalloc_nofs_save when the reclaim recursion critical section starts (e.g. when you take a lock which is then used in the reclaim path - e.g. shrinker) and memalloc_nofs_restore when the critical section ends. _All_ allocations within that scope will get GFP_NOFS semantic automagically. If you are not sure about the scope itself then the easiest workaround is to wrap the vmalloc itself with a big fat comment that this should be revisited. Does that sound like something that can be done in a reasonable time? I have tried to bring this up in the past but our speed is glacial and there are attempts to do hacks like checking for abusers inside the vmalloc which is just too ugly to live. Please do not hesitate to get back to me if something is not clear. Thanks! -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs