On Tue, Nov 20, 2018 at 09:58:58AM -0800, Wengang Wang wrote: >Hi Wei, > > >On 2018/11/17 17:02, Wei Yang wrote: >> On Fri, Nov 16, 2018 at 05:33:35PM -0800, Wengang Wang wrote: >> > The this_cpu_cmpxchg makes the do-while loop pass as long as the >> > s->cpu_slab->partial as the same value. It doesn't care what happened to >> > that slab. Interrupt is not disabled, and new alloc/free can happen in the >> Well, I seems to understand your description. >> >> There are two slabs >> >> * one which put_cpu_partial() trying to free an object >> * one which is the first slab in cpu_partial list >> >> There is some tricky case, the first slab in cpu_partial list we >> reference to will change since interrupt is not disabled. >Yes, two slabs involved here just as you said above. >And yes, the case is really tricky, but it's there. > >> > interrupt handlers. Theoretically, after we have a reference to the it, >> ^^^ >> one more word? >sorry, "the" should not be there. > >> > stored in _oldpage_, the first slab on the partial list on this CPU can be >> ^^^ >> One little suggestion here, mayby use cpu_partial would be more easy to >> understand. I confused this with the partial list in kmem_cache_node at >> the first time. :-) >Right, making others understanding easily is very important. I just meant >cpu_partial. > >> > moved to kmem_cache_node and then moved to different kmem_cache_cpu and >> > then somehow can be added back as head to partial list of current >> > kmem_cache_cpu, though that is a very rare case. If that rare case really >> Actually, no matter what happens after the removal of the first slab in >> cpu_partial, it would leads to problem. >Maybe you are right, what I see is the problem on the page->pobjects. > >> >> > happened, the reading of oldpage->pobjects may get a 0xdead0000 >> > unexpectedly, stored in _pobjects_, if the reading happens just after >> > another CPU removed the slab from kmem_cache_node, setting lru.prev to >> > LIST_POISON2 (0xdead000000000200). The wrong _pobjects_(negative) then >> > prevents slabs from being moved to kmem_cache_node and being finally freed. >> > >> > We see in a vmcore, there are 375210 slabs kept in the partial list of one >> > kmem_cache_cpu, but only 305 in-use objects in the same list for >> > kmalloc-2048 cache. We see negative values for page.pobjects, the last page >> > with negative _pobjects_ has the value of 0xdead0004, the next page looks >> > good (_pobjects is 1). >> > >> > For the fix, I wanted to call this_cpu_cmpxchg_double with >> > oldpage->pobjects, but failed due to size difference between >> > oldpage->pobjects and cpu_slab->partial. So I changed to call >> > this_cpu_cmpxchg_double with _tid_. I don't really want no alloc/free >> > happen in between, but just want to make sure the first slab did expereince >> > a remove and re-add. This patch is more to call for ideas. >> Maybe not an exact solution. >> >> I took a look into the code and change log. >> >> _tid_ is introduced by commit 8a5ec0ba42c4 ('Lockless (and preemptless) >> fastpaths for slub'), which is used to guard cpu_freelist. While we don't >> modify _tid_ when cpu_partial changes. >> >> May need another _tid_ for cpu_partial? >Right, _tid_ changes later than cpu_partial changes. > >As pointed out by Zhong Jiang, the pobjects issue is fixed by commit Where you discussed this issue? Any reference I could get a look? >e5d9998f3e09 (not sure if by side effect, see my replay there), I took a look at this commit e5d9998f3e09 ('slub: make ->cpu_partial unsigned int'), but not see some relationship between them. Would you mind show me a link or cc me in case you have further discussion? Thanks. >I'd skip this patch.?? If we found other problems regarding the change of >cpu_partial, let's fix them. What do you think? > >thanks, >wengang -- Wei Yang Help you, Help me