On 3/1/19 5:21 AM, Alexandre Ghiti wrote: > On 03/01/2019 07:25 AM, Alex Ghiti wrote: >> On 2/28/19 5:26 PM, Mike Kravetz wrote: >>> On 2/28/19 12:23 PM, Dave Hansen wrote: >>>> On 2/28/19 11:50 AM, Mike Kravetz wrote: >>>>> On 2/28/19 11:13 AM, Dave Hansen wrote: >>>>>>> + if (hstate_is_gigantic(h) && !IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_CONTIG_ALLOC)) { >>>>>>> + spin_lock(&hugetlb_lock); >>>>>>> + if (count > persistent_huge_pages(h)) { >>>>>>> + spin_unlock(&hugetlb_lock); >>>>>>> + return -EINVAL; >>>>>>> + } >>>>>>> + goto decrease_pool; >>>>>>> + } >>>>>> This choice confuses me. The "Decrease the pool size" code already >>>>>> works and the code just falls through to it after skipping all the >>>>>> "Increase the pool size" code. >>>>>> >>>>>> Why did did you need to add this case so early? Why not just let it >>>>>> fall through like before? >>>>> I assume you are questioning the goto, right? You are correct in that >>>>> it is unnecessary and we could just fall through. >>>> Yeah, it just looked odd to me. > >> I'd rather avoid useless checks when we already know they won't >> be met and I think that makes the code more understandable. >> >> But that's up to you for the next version. I too find some value in the goto. It tells me this !CONFIG_CONTIG_ALLOC case is special and we are skipping the normal checks. But, removing the goto is not a requirement for me. >>>>> However, I wonder if we might want to consider a wacky condition that the >>>>> above check would prevent. Consider a system/configuration with 5 gigantic ... >> >> If I may, I think that this is the kind of info the user wants to have and we should >> return an error when it is not possible to allocate runtime huge pages. >> I already noticed that if someone asks for 10 huge pages, and only 5 are allocated, >> no error is returned to the user and I found that surprising. Upon further thought, let's not consider this wacky permanent -> surplus -> permanent case. I just can't see it being an actual use case. IIUC, that 'no error' behavior is somewhat expected. I seem to recall previous discussions about changing with the end result to leave as is. >>>> @@ -2428,7 +2442,9 @@ static ssize_t __nr_hugepages_store_common(bool obey_mempolicy, >>>> } else >>>> nodes_allowed = &node_states[N_MEMORY]; >>>> - h->max_huge_pages = set_max_huge_pages(h, count, nodes_allowed); >>>> + err = set_max_huge_pages(h, count, nodes_allowed); >>>> + if (err) >>>> + goto out; >>>> if (nodes_allowed != &node_states[N_MEMORY]) >>>> NODEMASK_FREE(nodes_allowed); >>> Do note that I beleive there is a bug the above change. The code after >>> the out label is: >>> >>> out: >>> NODEMASK_FREE(nodes_allowed); >>> return err; >>> } >>> >>> With the new goto, we need the same >>> if (nodes_allowed != &node_states[N_MEMORY]) before NODEMASK_FREE(). >>> >>> Sorry, I missed this in previous versions. >> >> Oh right, I'm really sorry I missed that, thank you for noticing. This is the only issue I have with the code in hugetlb.c. For me, the goto can stay or go. End result is the same. -- Mike Kravetz