Hi Miaohe, On Thu, Apr 07, 2022 at 09:03:52PM +0800, Miaohe Lin wrote: > If me_huge_page meets a truncated huge page, hpage won't be dissolved I might not understand correctly what "truncated huge page" means. If it means the page passed to me_huge_page() and truncate_error_page() is called on it, the else branch you're trying to update is not chosen, so maybe it sounds irrelevant to me? Could you elaborate it or share the procedure to reproduce the case you care about? > even if we hold the last refcnt. It's because the truncated huge page > has NULL page_mapping while it's not anonymous page too. Thus we lose > the last chance to dissolve it into buddy to save healthy subpages. > Remove PageAnon check to handle these huge pages too. > > Signed-off-by: Miaohe Lin <linmiaohe@xxxxxxxxxx> > --- > mm/memory-failure.c | 3 +-- > 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 2 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/mm/memory-failure.c b/mm/memory-failure.c > index bd563f47630c..3f054dbb169d 100644 > --- a/mm/memory-failure.c > +++ b/mm/memory-failure.c > @@ -1046,8 +1046,7 @@ static int me_huge_page(struct page_state *ps, struct page *p) > * hugepage, so we can free and dissolve it into buddy to > * save healthy subpages. > */ > - if (PageAnon(hpage)) > - put_page(hpage); I think that the reason of this "if (PageAnon(hpage))" is to not remove hugepages for hugetlbfs files. Unlike anonymous hugepage, it can be accessed from file after error handling, so we can't simply dissolve it because otherwise another process reading the hugepage sees zeroed one without knowing the memory error. Thanks, Naoya Horiguchi > + put_page(hpage); > if (__page_handle_poison(p)) { > page_ref_inc(p); > res = MF_RECOVERED; > -- > 2.23.0