On Sun, Mar 27, 2016 at 12:37:09AM +1100, Gavin Shan wrote: >On Sat, Mar 26, 2016 at 08:47:17PM +1100, Michael Ellerman wrote: >>Hi Gavin, >> >>On Fri, 2016-25-03 at 16:05:29 UTC, Gavin Shan wrote: >>> During deferred page initialization, the pages are moved from memblock >>> or bootmem to buddy allocator without checking they were reserved. Those >>> reserved pages can be reallocated to somebody else by buddy/slab allocator. >>> It leads to memory corruption and potential kernel crash eventually. >> >>Can you give me a bit more detail on what the bug is? >> >>I haven't seen any issues on my systems, but I realise now I haven't enabled >>DEFERRED_STRUCT_PAGE_INIT - I assumed it was enabled by default. >> >>How did this get tested before submission? >> > >Michael, I have to reply with same context in another thread in case >somebody else wants to understand more: Li, who is in the cc list, is >backporting deferred page initialization (CONFIG_DEFERRED_STRUCT_PAGE_INIT) >from upstream kernel to RHEL 7.2 or 7.3 kernel (3.10.0-357.el7). RHEL kernel >has (!CONFIG_NO_BOOTMEM && CONFIG_DEFERRED_STRUCT_PAGE_INIT), meaning >bootmem is enabled. She eventually runs into kernel crash and I jumped >in to help understanding the root cause. > >There're two related kernel config options: ARCH_SUPPORTS_DEFERRED_STRUCT_PAGE_INIT >and DEFERRED_STRUCT_PAGE_INIT. The former one is enabled on PPC by default. >The later one isn't enabled by default. > >There are two test cases I had: > >- With (!CONFIG_NO_BOOTMEM && CONFIG_DEFERRED_STRUCT_PAGE_INIT) >on PowerNV platform, upstream kernel (4.5.rc7) and additional patch to support >bootmem as it was removed on powerpc a while ago. > >- With (CONFIG_NO_BOOTMEM && CONFIG_DEFERRED_STRUCT_PAGE_INIT) on PowerNV platform, >upstream kernel (4.5.rc7), I dumped the reserved memblock regions and added printk >in function deferred_init_memmap() to check if memblock reserved PFN 0x1fff80 (one >page in memblock reserved region#31, refer to the below kernel log) is released >to buddy allocator or not when doing deferred page struct initialization. I did >see that PFN is released to buddy allocator at that time. However, I didn't see >kernel crash and it would be luck and the current deferred page struct initialization >implementation: The pages in region [0, 2GB] except the memblock reserved ones are >presented to buddy allocator at early stage. It's not deferred. So for the pages in >[0, 2GB], we don't have consistency issue between memblock and buddy allocator. >The pages in region [2GB ...] are all presented to buddy allocator despite they're >reserved in memblock or not. It ensures the kernel text section isn't corrupted >and we're lucky not seeing program interrupt because of illegal instruction. > After more debugging, it turns out that Michael is correct: we don't have problem when CONFIG_NO_BOOTMEM=y. In the case, the page frames in [2G ...] is marked as reserved in early stage (as below function calls reveal). During the deferred initialization stage, those reserved pages won't be released to buddy allocator: - Below function calls mark reserved pages according to memblock reserved regions: init/main.c::start_kernel() init/main.c::mm_init() arch/powerpc/mm/mem.c::mem_init() nobootmem.c::free_all_bootmem() <-> bootmem.c::free_all_bootmem() on !CONFIG_NO_BOOTMEM nobootmem.c::free_low_memory_core_early() nobootmem.c::reserve_bootmem_region() - In page_alloc.c::deferred_init_memmap(), the reserved pages aren't released to buddy allocator with below check: if (page->flags) { VM_BUG_ON(page_zone(page) != zone); goto free_range; } So the issue is only existing when CONFIG_NO_BOOTMEM=n. The alternative fix would be similar to what we have on !CONFIG_NO_BOOTMEM: In early stage, all page structs for bootmem reserved pages are initialized and mark them with PG_reserved. I'm not sure it's worthy to fix it as we won't support bootmem as Michael mentioned. Thanks, Gavin -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxx. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>