Hugetlb can now safely handle faults under the VMA lock, so allow it to do so. This patch may cause ltp hugemmap10 to "fail". Hugemmap10 tests hugetlb counters, and expects the counters to remain unchanged on failure to handle a fault. In hugetlb_no_page(), vmf_anon_prepare() may bailout with no anon_vma under the VMA lock after allocating a folio for the hugepage. In free_huge_folio(), this folio is completely freed on bailout iff there is a surplus of hugetlb pages. This will remove a folio off the freelist and decrement the number of hugepages while ltp expects these counters to remain unchanged on failure. Originally this could only happen due to OOM failures, but now it may also occur after we allocate a hugetlb folio without a suitable anon_vma under the VMA lock. This should only happen for the first freshly allocated hugepage in this vma. Signed-off-by: Vishal Moola (Oracle) <vishal.moola@xxxxxxxxx> --- mm/hugetlb.c | 6 ------ 1 file changed, 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/mm/hugetlb.c b/mm/hugetlb.c index ae8c8b3da981..688017ca0cc2 100644 --- a/mm/hugetlb.c +++ b/mm/hugetlb.c @@ -6354,12 +6354,6 @@ vm_fault_t hugetlb_fault(struct mm_struct *mm, struct vm_area_struct *vma, */ }; - /* TODO: Handle faults under the VMA lock */ - if (flags & FAULT_FLAG_VMA_LOCK) { - vma_end_read(vma); - return VM_FAULT_RETRY; - } - /* * Serialize hugepage allocation and instantiation, so that we don't * get spurious allocation failures if two CPUs race to instantiate -- 2.43.0