On Mon, 20 Sep 2021 13:59:35 +0300 Vasily Averin <vvs@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 9/20/21 4:22 AM, Tetsuo Handa wrote: > > On 2021/09/20 8:31, Andrew Morton wrote: > >> On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 11:06:49 +0300 Vasily Averin <vvs@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >>> Huge vmalloc allocation on heavy loaded node can lead to a global > >>> memory shortage. A task called vmalloc can have the worst badness > >>> and be chosen by OOM-killer, however received fatal signal and > >>> oom victim mark does not interrupt allocation cycle. Vmalloc will > >>> continue allocating pages over and over again, exacerbating the crisis > >>> and consuming the memory freed up by another killed tasks. > >>> > >>> This patch allows OOM-killer to break vmalloc cycle, makes OOM more > >>> effective and avoid host panic. > >>> > >>> Unfortunately it is not 100% safe. Previous attempt to break vmalloc > >>> cycle was reverted by commit b8c8a338f75e ("Revert "vmalloc: back off when > >>> the current task is killed"") due to some vmalloc callers did not handled > >>> failures properly. Found issues was resolved, however, there may > >>> be other similar places. > >> > >> Well that was lame of us. > >> > >> I believe that at least one of the kernel testbots can utilize fault > >> injection. If we were to wire up vmalloc (as we have done with slab > >> and pagealloc) then this will help to locate such buggy vmalloc callers. > > Andrew, could you please clarify how we can do it? > Do you mean we can use exsiting allocation fault injection infrastructure to trigger > such kind of issues? Unfortunately I found no ways to reach this goal. > It allows to emulate single faults with small probability, however it is not enough, > we need to completely disable all vmalloc allocations. I don't see why there's a problem? You're saying "there might still be vmalloc() callers which don't correctly handle allocation failures", yes? I'm suggesting that we use fault injection to cause a small proportion of vmalloc() calls to artificially fail, so such buggy callers will eventually be found and fixed. Why does such a scheme require that *all* vmalloc() calls fail?