On Tue, Jan 5, 2021 at 12:17 AM Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue 05-01-21 09:01:00, Michal Hocko wrote: > > On Mon 04-01-21 16:44:52, David Hildenbrand wrote: > > > On 04.01.21 16:43, David Hildenbrand wrote: > > > > On 04.01.21 16:33, Michal Hocko wrote: > > > >> On Mon 04-01-21 16:15:23, David Hildenbrand wrote: > > > >>> On 04.01.21 16:10, Michal Hocko wrote: > > > >> [...] > > > >>> Do the physical addresses you see fall into the same section as boot > > > >>> memory? Or what's around these addresses? > > > >> > > > >> Yes I am getting a garbage for the first struct page belonging to the > > > >> pmem section [1] > > > >> [ 0.020161] ACPI: SRAT: Node 0 PXM 0 [mem 0x100000000-0x603fffffff] > > > >> [ 0.020163] ACPI: SRAT: Node 4 PXM 4 [mem 0x6060000000-0x11d5fffffff] non-volatile > > > >> > > > >> The pfn without the initialized struct page is 0x6060000. This is a > > > >> first pfn in a section. > > > > > > > > Okay, so we're not dealing with the "early section" mess I described, > > > > different story. > > > > > > > > Due to [1], is_mem_section_removable() called > > > > pfn_to_page(PHYS_PFN(0x6060000)). page_zone(page) made it crash, as not > > > > initialized. > > > > > > > > Let's assume this is indeed a reserved pfn in the altmap. What's the > > > > actual address of the memmap? > > > > > > > > I do wonder what hosts pfn_to_page(PHYS_PFN(0x6060000)) - is it actually > > > > part of the actual altmap (i.e. > 0x6060000) or maybe even self-hosted? > > > > > > > > If it's not self-hosted, initializing the relevant memmaps should work > > > > just fine I guess. Otherwise things get more complicated. > > > > > > Oh, I forgot: pfn_to_online_page() should at least in your example make > > > sure other pfn walkers are safe. It was just an issue of > > > is_mem_section_removable(). > > > > Hmm, I suspect you are right. I haven't put this together, thanks! The memory > > section is indeed marked offline so pfn_to_online_page would indeed bail > > out: > > crash> p (0x6060000>>15) > > $3 = 3084 > > crash> p mem_section[3084/128][3084 & 127] > > $4 = { > > section_mem_map = 18446736128020054019, > > usage = 0xffff902dcf956680, > > page_ext = 0x0, > > pad = 0 > > } > > crash> p 18446736128020054019 & (1UL<<2) > > $5 = 0 > > > > That makes it considerably less of a problem than I thought! > > Forgot to add that those who are running kernels without 53cdc1cb29e8 > ("drivers/base/memory.c: indicate all memory blocks as removable") for > some reason can fix the crash by the following simple patch. > > Index: linux-5.3-users_mhocko_SLE15-SP2_for-next/drivers/base/memory.c > =================================================================== > --- linux-5.3-users_mhocko_SLE15-SP2_for-next.orig/drivers/base/memory.c > +++ linux-5.3-users_mhocko_SLE15-SP2_for-next/drivers/base/memory.c > @@ -152,9 +152,14 @@ static ssize_t removable_show(struct dev > goto out; > > for (i = 0; i < sections_per_block; i++) { > - if (!present_section_nr(mem->start_section_nr + i)) > + unsigned long nr = mem->start_section_nr + i; > + if (!present_section_nr(nr)) > continue; > - pfn = section_nr_to_pfn(mem->start_section_nr + i); > + if (!online_section_nr()) { I assume that's onlince_section_nr(nr) in the version that compiles? This makes sense because the memory block size is larger than the section size. I suspect you have 1GB memory block size on this system, but since the System RAM and PMEM collide at a 512MB alignment in a memory block you end up walking the back end of the last 512MB of the System RAM memory block and run into the offline PMEM section. So, I don't think it's pfn_to_online_page that necessarily needs to know how to disambiguate each page, it's things that walk sections and memory blocks and expects them to be consistent over the span.