On 28/09/2023 11:54, Bagas Sanjaya wrote: > On Thu, Sep 28, 2023 at 10:55:17AM +0100, Ryan Roberts wrote: >> Hi all, >> >> I've just noticed that when applied to a file mapping for a file on xfs, MADV_COLLAPSE returns EINVAL. The same test case works fine if the file is on ext4. >> >> I think the root cause is that the implementation bails out if it finds a (non-PMD-sized) large folio in the page cache for any part of the file covered by the region. XFS does readahead into large folios so we hit this issue. See khugepaged.h:collapse_file(): >> >> if (PageTransCompound(page)) { >> struct page *head = compound_head(page); >> >> result = compound_order(head) == HPAGE_PMD_ORDER && >> head->index == start >> /* Maybe PMD-mapped */ >> ? SCAN_PTE_MAPPED_HUGEPAGE >> : SCAN_PAGE_COMPOUND; >> goto out_unlock; >> } > > I don't see any hint to -EINVAL above. Am I missing something? The SCAN_PAGE_COMPOUND result ends up back at madvise_collapse() where it eventually gets converted to -EINVAL by madvise_collapse_errno(). > >> >> I'm not sure if this is already a known issue? I don't have time to work on a fix for this right now, so thought I would highlight it at least. I might get around to it at some point in the future if nobody else tackles it. >> >> Thanks, >> Ryan >> >> >> Test case I've been using: >> >> -->8-- >> >> #include <stdio.h> >> #include <stdlib.h> >> #include <sys/mman.h> >> #include <sys/types.h> >> #include <sys/stat.h> >> #include <fcntl.h> >> #include <unistd.h> >> >> #ifndef MADV_COLLAPSE >> #define MADV_COLLAPSE 25 >> #endif >> >> #define handle_error(msg) do { perror(msg); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } while (0) >> >> #define SZ_1K 1024 >> #define SZ_1M (SZ_1K * SZ_1K) >> #define ALIGN(val, align) (((val) + ((align) - 1)) & ~((align) - 1)) >> >> #if 1 >> // ext4 >> #define DATA_FILE "/home/ubuntu/data.txt" >> #else >> // xfs >> #define DATA_FILE "/boot/data.txt" >> #endif >> >> int main(void) >> { >> int fd; >> char *mem; >> int ret; >> >> fd = open(DATA_FILE, O_RDONLY); >> if (fd == -1) >> handle_error("open"); >> >> mem = mmap(NULL, SZ_1M * 4, PROT_READ | PROT_EXEC, MAP_PRIVATE, fd, 0); >> close(fd); >> if (mem == MAP_FAILED) >> handle_error("mmap"); >> >> printf("1: pid=%d, mem=%p\n", getpid(), mem); >> getchar(); >> >> mem = (char *)ALIGN((unsigned long)mem, SZ_1M * 2); >> ret = madvise(mem, SZ_1M * 2, MADV_COLLAPSE); >> if (ret) >> handle_error("madvise"); >> >> printf("2: pid=%d, mem=%p\n", getpid(), mem); >> getchar(); >> >> return 0; >> } >> >> -->8-- >> > > Confused... This is a user space test case that shows the problem; data.txt needs to be at least 4MB and on a mounted ext4 and xfs filesystem. By toggling the '#if 1' to 0, you can see the different behaviours for ext4 and xfs - handle_error("madvise") fires with EINVAL in the xfs case. The getchar()s are leftovers from me looking at the smaps file. >