On Tue, Dec 04, 2018 at 10:08:40AM +0800, Hou Tao wrote: > There is no need to disable __GFP_FS in ->readpage: > * It's a read-only fs, so there will be no dirty/writeback page and > there will be no deadlock against the caller's locked page > * It just allocates one page, so compaction will not be invoked > * It doesn't take any inode lock, so the reclamation of inode will be fine > > And no __GFP_FS may lead to hang in __alloc_pages_slowpath() if a > squashfs page fault occurs in the context of a memory hogger, because > the hogger will not be killed due to the logic in __alloc_pages_may_oom(). I don't understand your argument here. There's a comment in __alloc_pages_may_oom() saying that we _should_ treat GFP_NOFS specially, but we currently don't. /* * XXX: GFP_NOFS allocations should rather fail than rely on * other request to make a forward progress. * We are in an unfortunate situation where out_of_memory cannot * do much for this context but let's try it to at least get * access to memory reserved if the current task is killed (see * out_of_memory). Once filesystems are ready to handle allocation * failures more gracefully we should just bail out here. */ What problem are you actually seeing?