On Thu, Aug 24, 2023 at 7:05 AM David Hildenbrand <david@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 24.08.23 15:59, Zach O'Keefe wrote: > > On Thu, Aug 24, 2023 at 12:39 AM David Hildenbrand <david@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> On 22.08.23 01:48, Zach O'Keefe wrote: > >>> The 6.0 commits: > >>> > >>> commit 9fec51689ff6 ("mm: thp: kill transparent_hugepage_active()") > >>> commit 7da4e2cb8b1f ("mm: thp: kill __transhuge_page_enabled()") > >>> > >>> merged "can we have THPs in this VMA?" logic that was previously done > >>> separately by fault-path, khugepaged, and smaps "THPeligible" checks. > >>> > >>> During the process, the semantics of the fault path check changed in two > >>> ways: > >>> > >>> 1) A VM_NO_KHUGEPAGED check was introduced (also added to smaps path). > >>> 2) We no longer checked if non-anonymous memory had a vm_ops->huge_fault > >>> handler that could satisfy the fault. Previously, this check had been > >>> done in create_huge_pud() and create_huge_pmd() routines, but after > >>> the changes, we never reach those routines. > >>> > >>> During the review of the above commits, it was determined that in-tree > >>> users weren't affected by the change; most notably, since the only relevant > >>> user (in terms of THP) of VM_MIXEDMAP or ->huge_fault is DAX, which is > >>> explicitly approved early in approval logic. However, there is at least > >>> one occurrence where an out-of-tree driver that used > >>> VM_HUGEPAGE|VM_MIXEDMAP with a vm_ops->huge_fault handler, was broken. > >> > >> ... so all we did is break an arbitrary out-of-tree driver? Sorry to > >> say, but why should we care? > >> > >> Is there any in-tree code affected and needs a "Fixes:" ? > > > > The in-tree code was taken care of during the rework .. but I didn't > > know about the possibility of a driver hooking in here. > > And that's the problem of the driver, no? It's not the job of the kernel > developers to be aware of each out-of-tree driver to not accidentally > break something in there. > > > > > I don't know what the normal policy / stance here is, but I figured > > the change was simple enough that it was worth helping out. > > If you decide to be out-of-tree, then you have be prepared to only > support tested kernels and fix your driver when something changes > upstream -- like upstream developers would do for you when it would be > in-tree. > > So why can't the out-of-tree driver be fixed, similarly to how we would > have fixed it if it would be in-tree? I don't know much about driver development, but perhaps they are / need to use a pristine upstream kernel, with their driver as a loadable kernel module. Saurabh can comment on this, I don't know. But your point is very valid otherwise. > -- > Cheers, > > David / dhildenb >