On Mon 11-09-17 19:36:59, Mikulas Patocka wrote: > > > On Mon, 11 Sep 2017, Michal Hocko wrote: > > > On Mon 11-09-17 02:52:53, Mikulas Patocka wrote: > > > I am occasionally getting these warnings in khugepaged. It is an old > > > machine with 550MHz CPU and 512 MB RAM. > > > > > > Note that khugepaged has nice value 19, so when the machine is loaded with > > > some work, khugepaged is stalled and this stall produces warning in the > > > allocator. > > > > > > khugepaged does allocations with __GFP_NOWARN, but the flag __GFP_NOWARN > > > is masked off when calling warn_alloc. This patch removes the masking of > > > __GFP_NOWARN, so that the warning is suppressed. > > > > > > khugepaged: page allocation stalls for 10273ms, order:10, mode:0x4340ca(__GFP_HIGHMEM|__GFP_IO|__GFP_FS|__GFP_COMP|__GFP_NOMEMALLOC|__GFP_HARDWALL|__GFP_MOVABLE|__GFP_DIRECT_RECLAIM), nodemask=(null) > > > CPU: 0 PID: 3936 Comm: khugepaged Not tainted 4.12.3 #1 > > > Hardware name: System Manufacturer Product Name/VA-503A, BIOS 4.51 PG 08/02/00 > > > Call Trace: > > > ? warn_alloc+0xb9/0x140 > > > ? __alloc_pages_nodemask+0x724/0x880 > > > ? arch_irq_stat_cpu+0x1/0x40 > > > ? detach_if_pending+0x80/0x80 > > > ? khugepaged+0x10a/0x1d40 > > > ? pick_next_task_fair+0xd2/0x180 > > > ? wait_woken+0x60/0x60 > > > ? kthread+0xcf/0x100 > > > ? release_pte_page+0x40/0x40 > > > ? kthread_create_on_node+0x40/0x40 > > > ? ret_from_fork+0x19/0x30 > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Mikulas Patocka <mpatocka@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > > Fixes: 63f53dea0c98 ("mm: warn about allocations which stall for too long") > > > > This patch hasn't introduced this behavior. It deliberately skipped > > warning on __GFP_NOWARN. This has been introduced later by 822519634142 > > ("mm: page_alloc: __GFP_NOWARN shouldn't suppress stall warnings"). I > > disagreed [1] but overall consensus was that such a warning won't be > > harmful. Could you be more specific why do you consider it wrong, > > please? > > I consider the warning wrong, because it warns when nothing goes wrong. > I've got 7 these warnings for 4 weeks of uptime. The warnings typically > happen when I run some compilation. > > A process with low priority is expected to be running slowly when there's > some high-priority process, so there's no need to warn that the > low-priority process runs slowly. I would tend to agree. It is certainly a noise in the log. And a kind of thing I was worried about when objecting the patch previously. > What else can be done to avoid the warning? Skip the warning if the > process has lower priority? No, I wouldn't play with priorities. Either we agree that NOWARN allocations simply do _not_warn_ or we simply explain users that some of those warnings might not be that critical and overloaded system might show them. Let's see what others think about this. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs -- 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>