On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 04:45:13PM +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote: > On 15.03.22 05:21, Andrew Morton wrote: > > On Tue, 15 Mar 2022 11:05:15 +0800 Andrew Yang <andrew.yang@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >> When memory is tight, system may start to compact memory for large > >> continuous memory demands. If one process tries to lock a memory page > >> that is being locked and isolated for compaction, it may wait a long time > >> or even forever. This is because compaction will perform non-atomic > >> PG_Isolated clear while holding page lock, this may overwrite PG_waiters > >> set by the process that can't obtain the page lock and add itself to the > >> waiting queue to wait for the lock to be unlocked. > >> > >> CPU1 CPU2 > >> lock_page(page); (successful) > >> lock_page(); (failed) > >> __ClearPageIsolated(page); SetPageWaiters(page) (may be overwritten) > >> unlock_page(page); > >> > >> The solution is to not perform non-atomic operation on page flags while > >> holding page lock. > > > > Sure, the non-atomic bitop optimization is really risky and I suspect > > we reach for it too often. Or at least without really clearly > > demonstrating that it is safe, and documenting our assumptions. > > I agree. IIRC, non-atomic variants are mostly only safe while the > refcount is 0. Everything else is just absolutely fragile. We could add an assertion ... I just tried this: +++ b/include/linux/page-flags.h @@ -342,14 +342,16 @@ static __always_inline \ void __folio_set_##lname(struct folio *folio) \ { __set_bit(PG_##lname, folio_flags(folio, FOLIO_##policy)); } \ static __always_inline void __SetPage##uname(struct page *page) \ -{ __set_bit(PG_##lname, &policy(page, 1)->flags); } +{ VM_BUG_ON_PGFLAGS(atomic_read(&policy(page, 1)->_refcount), page); \ + __set_bit(PG_##lname, &policy(page, 1)->flags); } #define __CLEARPAGEFLAG(uname, lname, policy) \ static __always_inline \ void __folio_clear_##lname(struct folio *folio) \ { __clear_bit(PG_##lname, folio_flags(folio, FOLIO_##policy)); } \ static __always_inline void __ClearPage##uname(struct page *page) \ -{ __clear_bit(PG_##lname, &policy(page, 1)->flags); } +{ VM_BUG_ON_PGFLAGS(atomic_read(&policy(page, 1)->_refcount), page); \ + __clear_bit(PG_##lname, &policy(page, 1)->flags); } #define TESTSETFLAG(uname, lname, policy) \ static __always_inline \ ... but it dies _really_ early: (gdb) bt #0 0xffffffff820055e5 in native_halt () at ../arch/x86/include/asm/irqflags.h:57 #1 halt () at ../arch/x86/include/asm/irqflags.h:98 #2 early_fixup_exception (regs=regs@entry=0xffffffff81e03cf8, trapnr=trapnr@entry=6) at ../arch/x86/mm/extable.c:283 #3 0xffffffff81ff243c in do_early_exception (regs=0xffffffff81e03cf8, trapnr=6) at ../arch/x86/kernel/head64.c:419 #4 0xffffffff81ff214f in early_idt_handler_common () at ../arch/x86/kernel/head_64.S:417 #5 0x0000000000000000 in ?? () and honestly, I'm not sure how to debug something that goes wrong this early. Maybe I need to make that start warning 5 seconds after boot or only if we're not in pid 1, or something ...