On 10/14/21 12:16, Mike Rapoport wrote: > On Thu, Oct 14, 2021 at 11:33:03AM +0200, Vlastimil Babka wrote: >> On 10/14/21 10:54, kernel test robot wrote: >> >> In my local testing of the patch, when stackdepot was initialized through >> page owner init, it was using kvmalloc() so slab_is_available() was true. >> Looks like the exact order of slab vs page_owner alloc is non-deterministic, >> could be arch-dependent or just random ordering of init calls. A wrong order >> will exploit the apparent fact that slab_is_available() is not a good >> indicator of using memblock vs page allocator, and we would need a better one. >> Thoughts? > > The order of slab vs page_owner is deterministic, but it is different for > FLATMEM and SPARSEMEM. And page_ext_init_flatmem_late() that initializes > page_ext for FLATMEM is called exactly between buddy and slab setup: Oh, so it was due to FLATMEM, thanks for figuring that out! > static void __init mm_init(void) > { > ... > > mem_init(); > mem_init_print_info(); > /* page_owner must be initialized after buddy is ready */ > page_ext_init_flatmem_late(); > kmem_cache_init(); > > ... > } > > I've stared for a while at page_ext init and it seems that the > page_ext_init_flatmem_late() can be simply dropped because there is anyway > a call to invoke_init_callbacks() in page_ext_init() that is called much > later in the boot process. Yeah, but page_ext_init() only does something for SPARSEMEM, and is empty on FLATMEM. Otherwise it would be duplicating all the work. So I'll just move page_ext_init_flatmem_late() below kmem_cache_init() in mm_init(). Thanks again!