On Fri, Feb 12, 2021 at 02:18:20PM +0100, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Fri 12-02-21 11:42:15, David Hildenbrand wrote: > > On 12.02.21 11:33, Michal Hocko wrote: > [...] > > > I have to digest this but my first impression is that this is more heavy > > > weight than it needs to. Pfn walkers should normally obey node range at > > > least. The first pfn is usually excluded but I haven't seen real > > > > We've seen examples where this is not sufficient. Simple example: > > > > Have your physical memory end within a memory section. Easy via QEMU, just > > do a "-m 4000M". The remaining part of the last section has fake/wrong > > node/zone info. > > Does this really matter though. If those pages are reserved then nobody > will touch them regardless of their node/zone ids. > > > Hotplug memory. The node/zone gets resized such that PFN walkers might > > stumble over it. > > > > The basic idea is to make sure that any initialized/"online" pfn belongs to > > exactly one node/zone and that the node/zone spans that PFN. > > Yeah, this sounds like a good idea but what is the poper node for hole > between two ranges associated with a different nodes/zones? This will > always be a random number. We should have a clear way to tell "do not > touch those pages" and PageReserved sounds like a good way to tell that. Nobody should touch reserved pages, but I don't think we can ensure that. We can correctly set the zone links for the reserved pages for holes in the middle of a zone based on the architecture constraints and with only the holes in the beginning/end of the memory will be not spanned by any node/zone which in practice does not seem to be a problem as the VM_BUG_ON in set_pfnblock_flags_mask() never triggered on pfn 0. I believe that any improvement in memory map consistency is a step forward. > > > problems with that. The VM_BUG_ON blowing up is really bad but as said > > > above we can simply make it less offensive in presence of reserved pages > > > as those shouldn't reach that path AFAICS normally. > > > > Andrea tried tried working around if via PG_reserved pages and it resulted > > in quite some ugly code. Andrea also noted that we cannot rely on any random > > page walker to do the right think when it comes to messed up node/zone info. > > I am sorry, I haven't followed previous discussions. Has the removal of > the VM_BUG_ON been considered as an immediate workaround? It was never discussed, but I'm not sure it's a good idea. Judging by the commit message that introduced the VM_BUG_ON (commit 86051ca5eaf5 ("mm: fix usemap initialization")) there was yet another inconsistency in the memory map that required a special care. -- Sincerely yours, Mike.