On Wed, Jul 21, 2021 at 11:42 AM Matthew Wilcox (Oracle) <willy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > It's generally dangerous to allocate such large quantities of memory > within the kernel owing to our propensity to use 'int' to represent > a length. If somebody really needs it, we can add a kvmalloc_large() > later, but let's default to "You can't allocate that much memory". I really think that without the WARN_ON_ONCE(), this is just moving that failure point from a known good place ("we know this must not succeed") to a possibly bad place ("this might cause silent and hard-to-understand failures elsewhere"). IOW, in seq_buf_alloc() there's no need to warn. It's clear that a bigger allocation can never be valid. But in kvmalloc(), it needs to warn, because if it ever triggers we need to check what triggered it. So this is not just moving code from one place to another equivalent one. Linus