On Fri, Jan 24, 2020 at 09:48:30AM -0800, Yang Shi wrote: > > >On 1/24/20 7:26 AM, Wei Yang wrote: >> On Fri, Jan 24, 2020 at 07:46:49AM +0100, Michal Hocko wrote: >> > On Fri 24-01-20 06:56:47, Wei Yang wrote: >> > > On Thu, Jan 23, 2020 at 09:55:26AM +0100, Michal Hocko wrote: >> > > > On Thu 23-01-20 11:27:36, Wei Yang wrote: >> > > > > On Thu, Jan 23, 2020 at 07:38:51AM +0800, Yang Shi wrote: >> > > > > > Since commit a49bd4d71637 ("mm, numa: rework do_pages_move"), >> > > > > > the semantic of move_pages() was changed to return the number of >> > > > > > non-migrated pages (failed to migration) and the call would be aborted >> > > > > > immediately if migrate_pages() returns positive value. But it didn't >> > > > > > report the number of pages that we even haven't attempted to migrate. >> > > > > > So, fix it by including non-attempted pages in the return value. >> > > > > > >> > > > > First, we want to change the semantic of move_pages(2). The return value >> > > > > indicates the number of pages we didn't managed to migrate? >> > > > > >> > > > > Second, the return value from migrate_pages() doesn't mean the number of pages >> > > > > we failed to migrate. For example, one -ENOMEM is returned on the first page, >> > > > > migrate_pages() would return 1. But actually, no page successfully migrated. >> > > > ENOMEM is considered a permanent failure and as such it is returned by >> > > > migrate pages (see goto out). >> > > > >> > > > > Third, even the migrate_pages() return the exact non-migrate page, we are not >> > > > > sure those non-migrated pages are at the tail of the list. Because in the last >> > > > > case in migrate_pages(), it just remove the page from list. It could be a page >> > > > > in the middle of the list. Then, in userspace, how the return value be >> > > > > leveraged to determine the valid status? Any page in the list could be the >> > > > > victim. >> > > > Yes, I was wrong when stating that the caller would know better which >> > > > status to check. I misremembered the original patch as it was quite some >> > > > time ago. While storing the error code would be possible after some >> > > > massaging of migrate_pages is this really something we deeply care >> > > > about. The caller can achieve the same by initializing the status array >> > > > to a non-node number - e.g. -1 - and check based on that. >> > > > >> > > So for a user, the best practice is to initialize the status array to -1 and >> > > check each status to see whether the page is migrated successfully? >> > Yes IMO. Just consider -errno return value. You have no way to find out >> > which pages have been migrated until we reached that error. The >> > possitive return value would fall into the same case. >> > >> > > Then do we need to return the number of non-migrated page? What benefit could >> > > user get from the number. How about just return an error code to indicate the >> > > failure? I may miss some point, would you mind giving me a hint? >> > This is certainly possible. We can return -EAGAIN if some pages couldn't >> > be migrated because they are pinned. But please read my previous email >> > to the very end for arguments why this might cause more problems than it >> > actually solves. >> > >> Let me put your comment here: >> >> Because new users could have started depending on it. It >> is not all that unlikely that the current implementation would just >> work for them because they are migrating a set of pages on to the same >> node so the batch would be a single list throughout the whole given >> page set. >> >> Your idea is to preserve current semantic, return non-migrated pages number to >> userspace. >> >> And the reason is: >> >> 1. Users have started depending on it. >> 2. No real bug reported yet. >> 3. User always migrate page to the same node. (If my understanding is >> correct) >> >> I think this gets some reason, since we want to minimize the impact to >> userland. >> >> While let's see what user probably use this syscall. Since from the man page, >> we never told the return value could be positive, the number of non-migrated >> pages, user would think only 0 means a successful migration and all other >> cases are failure. Then user probably handle negative and positive return >> value the same way, like (!err). >> >> If my guess is true, return a negative error value for this case could >> minimize the impact to userland here. >> 1. Preserve the semantic of move_pages(2): 0 means success, negative means >> some error and needs extra handling. >> 2. Trivial change to the man page. >> 3. Suppose no change to users. >> >> Well, in case I missed your point, sorry about that. > >I think we should compare the new semantic with the old one. With the old >semantic the move_pages() return 0 for both success *and* migration failure. >So, I'm supposed (I don't have any real usecase) the user may do the below >with the old semantic: > - Just check if it is failed (ignore migration failure), "!err" is good >enough. This usecase is fine as well with the new semantic since migration >failure is also a kind of error cases. > - Care about migration failure, the user needs traverse all bits in the >status array. With the new semantic they just need check if "err > 0", if >they want to know what specific pages are failed to migrate, then traverse >the status array (with initialized as -1 as Michal suggested in earlier >email). > >So, with returning errno for migration failure if the userspace wants to see >if migration is failed, they need do: > 1. Check "!err" > 2. Read errno if #1 returns false > 3. Traverse status array to see how many pages are failed to migrate > You are right. I misunderstand the mechanism of error handling on err and errno. >But with the new semantic they just need check if "err > 0", one step is fine >for the most cases. So I said this approach seems more straightforward to the >userspace and makes more sense IMHO. > >> > > > This system call has quite a complex semantic and I am not 100% sure >> > > > what is the right thing to do here. Maybe we do want to continue and try >> > > > to migrate as much as possible on non-fatal migration failures and >> > > > accumulate the number of failed pages while doing so. >> > > > >> > > > The main problem is that we can have an academic discussion but >> > > > the primary question is what do actual users want. A lack of real >> > > > bug reports suggests that nobody has actually noticed this. So I >> > > > would rather keep returning the correct number of non-migrated >> > > > pages. Why? Because new users could have started depending on it. It >> > > > is not all that unlikely that the current implementation would just >> > > > work for them because they are migrating a set of pages on to the same >> > > > node so the batch would be a single list throughout the whole given >> > > > page set. >> > -- >> > Michal Hocko >> > SUSE Labs -- Wei Yang Help you, Help me