On Wed, 2017-08-02 at 13:44 -0400, Jonathan Toppins wrote: > The RDMA subsystem can generate several thousand of these messages > per > second eventually leading to a kernel crash. Ratelimit these messages > to prevent this crash. > > Signed-off-by: Jonathan Toppins <jtoppins@xxxxxxxxxx> > Reviewed-by: Doug Ledford <dledford@xxxxxxxxxx> > Tested-by: Doug Ledford <dledford@xxxxxxxxxx> > --- > mm/page_alloc.c | 2 +- > 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) > > diff --git a/mm/page_alloc.c b/mm/page_alloc.c > index 6d30e914afb6..07b7d3060b21 100644 > --- a/mm/page_alloc.c > +++ b/mm/page_alloc.c > @@ -7666,7 +7666,7 @@ int alloc_contig_range(unsigned long start, > unsigned long end, > > /* Make sure the range is really isolated. */ > if (test_pages_isolated(outer_start, end, false)) { > - pr_info("%s: [%lx, %lx) PFNs busy\n", > + pr_info_ratelimited("%s: [%lx, %lx) PFNs busy\n", > __func__, outer_start, end); > ret = -EBUSY; > goto done; FWIW, I've been carrying a version of this for several kernel versions. I don't remember when they started, but we have one (and only one) class of machines: Dell PE R730xd, that generate these errors. When it happens, without a rate limit, we get rcu timeouts and kernel oopses. With the rate limit, we just get a lot of annoying kernel messages but the machine continues on, recovers, and eventually the memory operations all succeed. -- Doug Ledford <dledford@xxxxxxxxxx> GPG KeyID: B826A3330E572FDD Key fingerprint = AE6B 1BDA 122B 23B4 265B 1274 B826 A333 0E57 2FDD -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-rdma" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html