On Mon, Aug 30, 2021 at 04:12:51PM -0700, Sultan Alsawaf wrote: > I apologize in advance for reporting a bug on an EOL kernel. I don't see any > changes as of 5.14 that could address something like this, so I'm emailing in > case whatever happened here may be a bug affecting newer kernels. > > With gdb, it appears that the CPU got stuck in the list_empty(list) loop inside > free_pcppages_bulk(): > ----------------8<---------------- > do { > batch_free++; > if (++migratetype == MIGRATE_PCPTYPES) > migratetype = 0; > list = &pcp->lists[migratetype]; > } while (list_empty(list)); > ---------------->8---------------- > > Although this code snippet is slightly different in 5.14, it's still ultimately > the same. Side note: I noticed that the way `migratetype` is incremented causes > `&pcp->lists[1]` to get looked at first rather than `&pcp->lists[0]`, since > `migratetype` will start out at 1. This quirk is still present in 5.14, though > the variable in question is now called `pindex`. > > With some more gdb digging, I found that the `count` variable was stored in %ESI > at the time of the stall. According to register dump in the splat, %ESI was 7. > > It looks like, for some reason, the pcp count was 7 higher than the number of > pages actually present in the pcp lists. > That's your answer -- the PCP count has been corrupted or misaccounted. Given this is a Fedora kernel, check for any patches affecting mm/page_alloc.c that could be accounting related or that would affect the IRQ disabling or zone lock acquisition for problems. Another possibility is memory corruption -- either kernel or the hardware itself. > I tried to find some way that this could happen, but the only thing I could > think of was that maybe an allocation had both __GFP_RECLAIMABLE and > __GFP_MOVABLE set in its gfp mask, in which case the rmqueue() call in > get_page_from_freelist() would pass in a migratetype equal to MIGRATE_PCPTYPES > and then pages could be added to an out-of-bounds pcp list while still > incrementing the overall pcp count. This seems pretty unlikely though. It's unlikely because it would be an outright bug to specify both flags. > As > another side note, it looks like there's nothing stopping this from occurring; > there's only a VM_WARN_ON() in gfp_migratetype() that checks if both bits are > set. > There is no explicit check for it because they should not be both set. I don't think this happens in kernel but if an out-of-tree module did it, it might corrupt adjacent PCPs. -- Mel Gorman SUSE Labs