On Sat, 25 Sep 2021, Hugh Dickins wrote: > On Fri, 24 Sep 2021, Hugh Dickins wrote: > > On Thu, 9 Sep 2021, Liu Yuntao wrote: > > > > > In the case of SHMEM_HUGE_WITHIN_SIZE, the page index is not rounded > > > up correctly. When the page index points to the first page in a huge > > > page, round_up() cannot bring it to the end of the huge page, but > > > to the end of the previous one. > > > > > > an example: > > > HPAGE_PMD_NR on my machine is 512(2 MB huge page size). > > > After allcoating a 3000 KB buffer, I access it at location 2050 KB. > > > > Your example is certainly helpful, but weird! It's not impossible, > > but wouldn't it be easier to understand if you said "2048 KB" there? I wanted to emphasize that access to any bit in the first page will trigger this problem, so I didn't use "2048 KB". > > > > > In shmem_is_huge(), the corresponding index happens to be 512. > > > After rounded up by HPAGE_PMD_NR, it will still be 512 which is > > > smaller than i_size, and shmem_is_huge() will return true. > > > As a result, my buffer takes an additional huge page, and that > > > shouldn't happen when shmem_enabled is set to within_size. > > > > A colleague very recently opened my eyes to within_size on shmem_enabled: > > I've always been dubious of both, but they can work quite well together. > > > > > > > > Fixes: f3f0e1d2150b2b ("khugepaged: add support of collapse for tmpfs/shmem pages") > > > Signed-off-by: Liu Yuntao <liuyuntao10@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > > Thanks, with a nice simplification from Kirill. > > > > Acked-by: Hugh Dickins <hughd@xxxxxxxxxx> > > Andrew has just sent this on to Linus - thanks - and that's fine: > no need to get in the way of that. > > But since replying, I have remembered more history, and there is > something that we need to be aware of. > > Whereas to you this is a straightforward off-by-one (or off-by-page) > fix, it also results in a significant change in behaviour - I'd say > usually for the better, but some might be surprised. This patch has > Kirill's Ack and my Ack, and I hope and believe that we can get away > with the change in behaviour: but let's be aware of it. > > The change that concerns me is when, for example, copying a large > file into a huge=within_size tmpfs (or more generally, just writing > to the file by appending at EOF in the usual way). > > With the old WITHIN_SIZE code, the first 2MB was allocated in small > pages, then subsequent 2MB extents were allocated with huge pages; > including the final extent, even if it only needed a single byte. > > I always thought that was very clunky behaviour, the small pages > coming at the wrong end of the file; and that's why I was dubious > about it as a sensible filesystem mount option. But I was under > the impression that it was the intended behaviour. > > With your new WITHIN_SIZE code, all those appending allocations > are outside i_size, and the whole file is allocated in small pages. > (Then maybe later on khugepaged can assemble huge pages for it.) > > Your patch makes within_size more sensible than it was for pre-sized > files (and I think it's fair to say that the majority of files in > shmem's internal mount, subject to thp/shmem_enabled, are likely to > be fixed-size files); and better-defined than it used to be on > growing files, but they won't get the huge pages they used to. Although my patch changes shmem's behaviour, it makes shmem consistent with the documentation. I think with the new code, it will be easier for our users to understand. > > Hugh