On Mon, Sep 27, 2021 at 03:53:47PM +0800, Kefeng Wang wrote: > On 2021/9/27 15:22, Vlastimil Babka wrote: > > On 9/27/21 04:15, Kefeng Wang wrote: > > > After commit ("f227f0faf63b slub: fix unreclaimable slab stat for bulk > > > free"), the check for free nonslab page is replaced by VM_BUG_ON_PAGE, > > > which only check with CONFIG_DEBUG_VM enabled, but this config may > > > impact performance, so it only for debug. > > > > > > Commit ("0937502af7c9 slub: Add check for kfree() of non slab objects.") > > > add the ability, which should be needed in any configs to catch the > > > invalid free, they even could be potential issue, eg, memory corruption, > > > use after free and double-free, so replace VM_BUG_ON_PAGE to WARN_ON, and > > > add dump_page() to help use to debug the issue. > > There are other situations in SLUB (such as with smaller allocations that > > don't go directly to page allocator) where use after free and double-free > > are undetected in non-debug configs, and it's expected that anyone debugging > > them will enable slub_debug or even DEBUG_VM. Why should this special case > > with nonslab pages be different? > > I want the check back in kfree, this one is used widely in driver, and the > probability > > of problem occurred is bigger in driver, especially in some out of tree > drivers. Why would we want to improve life for out of tree drivers? Drivers should be in-tree. That's been the Linux Way for thirty years. I remain sceptical that dump_page() is actually useful for debugging drivers anyway. dump_stack(), I could see -- that'll tell you which driver called kfree() on a bogus pointer. But how does dump_page() help?