On Tue, Jan 31, 2023 at 10:30 AM Alexander Potapenko <glider@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Wait, I think there's a problem here. > > > diff --git a/lib/stackdepot.c b/lib/stackdepot.c > > index 79e894cf8406..0eed9bbcf23e 100644 > > --- a/lib/stackdepot.c > > +++ b/lib/stackdepot.c > > @@ -105,12 +105,13 @@ static bool init_stack_slab(void **prealloc) > > if (depot_index + 1 < STACK_ALLOC_MAX_SLABS) { > If we get to this branch, but the condition is false, this means that: > - next_slab_inited == 0 > - depot_index == STACK_ALLOC_MAX_SLABS+1 > - stack_slabs[depot_index] != NULL. > > So stack_slabs[] is at full capacity, but upon leaving > init_stack_slab() we'll always keep next_slab_inited==0. > > Now every time __stack_depot_save() is called for a known stack trace, > it will preallocate 1<<STACK_ALLOC_ORDER pages (because > next_slab_inited==0), then find the stack trace id in the hash, then > pass the preallocated pages to init_stack_slab(), which will not > change the value of next_slab_inited. > Then the preallocated pages will be freed, and next time > __stack_depot_save() is called they'll be allocated again. Ah, right, missed that. What do you think about renaming next_slab_inited to next_slab_required and inverting the used values (0/1 -> 1/0)? This would make this part of code less confusing.