On 11.04.19 12:56, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Thu 11-04-19 11:11:05, David Hildenbrand wrote: >> On 11.04.19 10:41, Michal Hocko wrote: >>> On Wed 10-04-19 12:14:55, David Hildenbrand wrote: >>>> While current node handling is probably terribly broken for memory block >>>> devices that span several nodes (only possible when added during boot, >>>> and something like that should be blocked completely), properly put the >>>> device reference we obtained via find_memory_block() to get the nid. >>> >>> The changelog could see some improvements I believe. (Half) stating >>> broken status of multinode memblock is not really useful without a wider >>> context so I would simply remove it. More to the point, it would be much >>> better to actually describe the actual problem and the user visible >>> effect. >>> >>> " >>> d0dc12e86b31 ("mm/memory_hotplug: optimize memory hotplug") has started >>> using find_memory_block to get a nodeid for the beginnig of the onlined >>> pfn range. The commit has missed that the memblock contains a reference >>> counted object and a missing put_device will leak the kobject behind >>> which ADD THE USER VISIBLE EFFECT HERE. >>> " >> >> I don't think mentioning the commit a second time is really needed. >> >> " >> Right now we are using find_memory_block() to get the node id for the >> pfn range to online. We are missing to drop a reference to the memory >> block device. While the device still gets unregistered via >> device_unregister(), resulting in no user visible problem, the device is >> never released via device_release(), resulting in a memory leak. Fix >> that by properly using a put_device(). >> " > > OK, sounds good to me. I was not sure about all the sysfs machinery > and the kobj dependencies but if there are no sysfs files leaking and > crashing upon a later access then a leak of a small amount of memory > that is not user controlable then this is not super urgent. > > Thanks! I think it can be triggered by onlining/offlining memory in a loop. But as you said, only leaks of small amount of memory. Thanks! -- Thanks, David / dhildenb