On 26/04/2017 10:59, Balbir Singh wrote: > On Wed, 2017-04-26 at 04:46 +0000, Naoya Horiguchi wrote: >> On Wed, Apr 26, 2017 at 01:45:00PM +1000, Balbir Singh wrote: >>>>>> static int delete_from_lru_cache(struct page *p) >>>>>> { >>>>>> + if (memcg_kmem_enabled()) >>>>>> + memcg_kmem_uncharge(p, 0); >>>>>> + >>>>> >>>>> The changelog is not quite clear, so we are uncharging a page using >>>>> memcg_kmem_uncharge for a page in swap cache/page cache? >>>> >>>> Hi Balbir, >>>> >>>> Yes, in the normal page lifecycle, uncharge is done in page free time. >>>> But in memory error handling case, in-use pages (i.e. swap cache and page >>>> cache) are removed from normal path and they don't pass page freeing code. >>>> So I think that this change is to keep the consistent charging for such a case. >>> >>> I agree we should uncharge, but looking at the API name, it seems to >>> be for kmem pages, why are we not using mem_cgroup_uncharge()? Am I missing >>> something? >> >> Thank you for pointing out. >> Actually I had the same question and this surely looks strange. >> But simply calling mem_cgroup_uncharge() here doesn't work because it >> assumes that page_refcount(p) == 0, which is not true in hwpoison context. >> We need some other clearer way or at least some justifying comment about >> why this is ok. >> > > We should call mem_cgroup_uncharge() after isolate_lru_page()/put_page(). Thanks for the review Naoya and Balbir, I changed the patch to call mem_cgroup_uncharge() once isolate_lru_page() succeeded, but before calling put_page(). It seems to work fine. > We could check if page_count() is 0 or force if required (!MF_RECOVERED && > !MF_DELAYED). We could even skip the VM_BUG_ON if the page is poisoned. This doesn't seem to be needed. Am I still missing something here ? Cheers, Laurent. -- 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>