Re: [LSF/MM/BPF TOPIC] Removing GFP_NOFS

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On Thu, Jan 04, 2024 at 09:17:16PM +0000, Matthew Wilcox wrote:
> This is primarily a _FILESYSTEM_ track topic.  All the work has already
> been done on the MM side; the FS people need to do their part.  It could
> be a joint session, but I'm not sure there's much for the MM people
> to say.
> 
> There are situations where we need to allocate memory, but cannot call
> into the filesystem to free memory.  Generally this is because we're
> holding a lock or we've started a transaction, and attempting to write
> out dirty folios to reclaim memory would result in a deadlock.
> 
> The old way to solve this problem is to specify GFP_NOFS when allocating
> memory.  This conveys little information about what is being protected
> against, and so it is hard to know when it might be safe to remove.
> It's also a reflex -- many filesystem authors use GFP_NOFS by default
> even when they could use GFP_KERNEL because there's no risk of deadlock.

There are many uses in XFS where GFP_NOFS has been used because
__GFP_NOLOCKDEP did not exist. A large number of the remaining
GFP_NOFS and KM_NOFS uses in XFS fall under this category.

As a first step, I have a patchset that gets rid of KM_NOFS and
replaces it with either GFP_NOFS or __GFP_NOLOCKDEP:

$ git grep "GFP_NOFS\|KM_NOFS" fs/xfs |wc -l
64
$ git checkout guilt/xfs-kmem-cleanup
Switched to branch 'guilt/xfs-kmem-cleanup'
$ git grep "GFP_NOFS\|KM_NOFS" fs/xfs |wc -l
21

Some of these are in newly merged code that I haven't updated the
patch set to handle yet, others are in kthread/kworker contexts that
don't inherit any allocation context information. There isn't any
big issues remaining to be fixed in XFS, though.

> The new way is to use the scoped APIs -- memalloc_nofs_save() and
> memalloc_nofs_restore().  These should be called when we start a
> transaction or take a lock that would cause a GFP_KERNEL allocation to
> deadlock.  Then just use GFP_KERNEL as normal.  The memory allocators
> can see the nofs situation is in effect and will not call back into
> the filesystem.

Note that this is the only way to use vmalloc() safely with GFP_NOFS
context...

> This results in better code within your filesystem as you don't need to
> pass around gfp flags as much, and can lead to better performance from
> the memory allocators as GFP_NOFS will not be used unnecessarily.
> 
> The memalloc_nofs APIs were introduced in May 2017, but we still have

For everyone else who doesn't know the history of this, the scoped
GFP_NOFS allocation code has been around for a lot longer than this
current API. PF_FSTRANS was added in early 2002 so we didn't have to
hack magic flags into current->journal_info to defermine if we were
in a transaction, and then this was added:

commit 957568938d4030414d71c583bc261fe3558d2c17
Author: Steve Lord <lord@xxxxxxx>
Date:   Thu Jan 31 11:17:26 2002 +0000

    Use PF_FSTRANS to detect being in a transaction

diff --git a/fs/xfs/linux-2.6/xfs_super.c b/fs/xfs/linux-2.6/xfs_super.c
index 08a17984..282b724f 100644
--- a/fs/xfs/linux-2.6/xfs_super.c
+++ b/fs/xfs/linux-2.6/xfs_super.c
@@ -396,16 +396,11 @@ linvfs_release_buftarg(

 static kmem_cache_t * linvfs_inode_cachep;

-#define XFS_TRANS_MAGIC 0x5452414E
-
 static __inline__ unsigned int gfp_mask(void)
 {
         /* If we're not in a transaction, FS activity is ok */
-        if (!current->journal_info) return GFP_KERNEL;
-        /* could be set from some other filesystem */
-        if ((int)current->journal_info != XFS_TRANS_MAGIC)
-                return GFP_KERNEL;
-        return GFP_NOFS;
+        if (current->flags & PF_FSTRANS) return GFP_NOFS;
+       return GFP_KERNEL;
 }

> over 1000 uses of GFP_NOFS in fs/ today (and 200 outside fs/, which is
> really sad).  This session is for filesystem developers to talk about
> what they need to do to fix up their own filesystem, or share stories
> about how they made their filesystem better by adopting the new APIs.
> 
> My interest in this is that I'd like to get rid of the FGP_NOFS flag.

Isn't that flag redundant? i.e. we already have mapping_gfp_mask()
to indicate what gfp mask should be used with the mapping
operations, and at least the iomap code uses that.

Many filesystems call mapping_set_gfp_mask(GFP_NOFS) already, XFS is
the special one that does:

	mapping_set_gfp_mask(inode->i_mapping, (gfp_mask & ~(__GFP_FS)));

so it doesn't actually use GFP_NOFS there.

Given that we already have a generic way of telling mapping
operations the scoped allocation context they should run under,
perhaps we could turn this into scoped context calls somewhere in
the generic IO/mapping operation paths? e.g.
call_read_iter()/call_write_iter()

> It'd also be good to get rid of the __GFP_FS flag since there's always
> demand for more GFP flags.  I have a git branch with some work in this
> area, so there's a certain amount of conference-driven development going
> on here too.

Worry about that when everything is using scoped contexted. Then
nobody will be using GFP_NOFS or __GFP_FS externally, and the
allocator can then reclaim the flag.

> We could mutatis mutandi for GFP_NOIO, memalloc_noio_save/restore,
> __GFP_IO, etc, so maybe the block people are also interested.  I haven't
> looked into that in any detail though.  I guess we'll see what interest
> this topic gains.

That seems a whole lot simpler - just set the GFP_NOIO scope at
entry to the block layer and that should cover a large percentage of
the GFP_NOIO allocations...

Cheers,

Dave.
-- 
Dave Chinner
david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx




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