On Thu 11-03-21 10:21:39, Johannes Weiner wrote: > On Thu, Mar 11, 2021 at 09:37:02AM +0100, Michal Hocko wrote: > > Johannes, Hugh, > > > > what do you think about this approach? If we want to stick with > > split_page approach then we need to update the missing place Matthew has > > pointed out. > > I find the __free_pages() code quite tricky as well. But for that > reason I would actually prefer to initiate the splitting in there, > since that's the place where we actually split the page, rather than > spread the handling of this situation further out. > > The race condition shouldn't be hot, so I don't think we need to be as > efficient about setting page->memcg_data only on the higher-order > buddies as in Willy's scratch patch. We can call split_page_memcg(), > which IMO should actually help document what's happening to the page. > > I think that function could also benefit a bit more from step-by-step > documentation about what's going on. The kerneldoc is helpful, but I > don't think it does justice to how tricky this race condition is. > > Something like this? > > void __free_pages(struct page *page, unsigned int order) > { > /* > * Drop the base reference from __alloc_pages and free. In > * case there is an outstanding speculative reference, from > * e.g. the page cache, it will put and free the page later. > */ > if (likely(put_page_testzero(page))) { > free_the_page(page, order); > return; > } > > /* > * The speculative reference will put and free the page. > * > * However, if the speculation was into a higher-order page > * that isn't marked compound, the other side will know > * nothing about our buddy pages and only free the order-0 > * page at the start of our chunk! We must split off and free > * the buddy pages here. > * > * The buddy pages aren't individually refcounted, so they > * can't have any pending speculative references themselves. > */ > if (!PageHead(page) && order > 0) { > split_page_memcg(page, 1 << order); > while (order-- > 0) > free_the_page(page + (1 << order), order); > } > } Fine with me. Mathew was concerned about more places that do something similar but I would say that if we find out more places we might reconsider and currently stay with a reasonably clear model that it is only head patch that carries the memcg information and split_page_memcg is necessary to break such page into smaller pieces. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs