On 06/02/2016 08:40 PM, Andrew Morton wrote: > On Thu, 2 Jun 2016 18:51:50 +0300 "Kirill A. Shutemov" <kirill@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On Thu, Jun 02, 2016 at 05:21:41PM +0200, Gerald Schaefer wrote: >>> Christian Borntraeger reported a kernel panic after corrupt page counts, >>> and it turned out to be a regression introduced with commit aa88b68c >>> "thp: keep huge zero page pinned until tlb flush", at least on s390. >>> >>> put_huge_zero_page() was moved over from zap_huge_pmd() to release_pages(), >>> and it was replaced by tlb_remove_page(). However, release_pages() might >>> not always be triggered by (the arch-specific) tlb_remove_page(). >>> >>> On s390 we call free_page_and_swap_cache() from tlb_remove_page(), and not >>> tlb_flush_mmu() -> free_pages_and_swap_cache() like the generic version, >>> because we don't use the MMU-gather logic. Although both functions have very >>> similar names, they are doing very unsimilar things, in particular >>> free_page_xxx is just doing a put_page(), while free_pages_xxx calls >>> release_pages(). >>> >>> This of course results in very harmful put_page()s on the huge zero page, >>> on architectures where tlb_remove_page() is implemented in this way. It >>> seems to affect only s390 and sh, but sh doesn't have THP support, so >>> the problem (currently) probably only exists on s390. >>> >>> The following quick hack fixed the issue: >>> >>> diff --git a/mm/swap_state.c b/mm/swap_state.c >>> index 0d457e7..c99463a 100644 >>> --- a/mm/swap_state.c >>> +++ b/mm/swap_state.c >>> @@ -252,7 +252,10 @@ static inline void free_swap_cache(struct page *page) >>> void free_page_and_swap_cache(struct page *page) >>> { >>> free_swap_cache(page); >>> - put_page(page); >>> + if (is_huge_zero_page(page)) >>> + put_huge_zero_page(); >>> + else >>> + put_page(page); >>> } >>> >>> /* >> >> The fix looks good to me. > > Yes. A bit regrettable, but that's what release_pages() does. > > Can we have a signed-off-by please? Please also add CC: stable for 4.6 -- 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>