On Wed, 6 May 2009 01:20:34 +0200 "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rjw@xxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wednesday 06 May 2009, Andrew Morton wrote: > > On Wed, 6 May 2009 00:19:35 +0200 > > "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rjw@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > + && !processes_are_frozen()) { > > > > > if (!try_set_zone_oom(zonelist, gfp_mask)) { > > > > > schedule_timeout_uninterruptible(1); > > > > > goto restart; > > > > > > > > Cool, that looks like the semantics of __GFP_NO_OOM_KILL without requiring > > > > a new gfp flag. Thanks. > > > > > > Well, you're welcome. > > > > > > BTW, I think that Andrew was actually right when he asked if I checked whether > > > the existing __GFP_NORETRY would work as-is for __GFP_FS set and > > > __GFP_NORETRY unset. Namely, in that case we never reach the code before > > > nopage: that checks __GFP_NORETRY, do we? > > > > > > So I think we shouldn't modify the 'else if' condition above and check for > > > !processes_are_frozen() at the beginning of the block below. > > > > Confused. > > > > I'm suspecting that hibernation can allocate its pages with > > __GFP_FS|__GFP_WAIT|__GFP_NORETRY|__GFP_NOWARN, and the page allocator > > will dtrt: no oom-killings. > > > > In which case, processes_are_frozen() is not needed at all? > > __GFP_NORETRY alone causes it to fail relatively quickly, but I'll try with > the combination. OK. __GFP_WAIT is the big hammer. > Anyway, even if the hibernation code itself doesn't trigger the OOM killer, > but anyone else allocates memory in parallel or after we've preallocated the > image memory, that may still trigger it. So it seems processes_are_frozen() > may still be useful? Could be. But only kernel threads are active at this time (yes?), and they won't have much work to do because userspace is asleep. _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm