On Thu, Oct 22, 2020 at 07:23:33AM -0600, William Kucharski wrote: > > > > On Oct 21, 2020, at 6:49 PM, Matthew Wilcox <willy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Wed, Oct 21, 2020 at 08:30:18PM -0400, Qian Cai wrote: > >> Today's linux-next starts to trigger this wondering if anyone has any clue. > > > > I've seen that occasionally too. I changed that BUG_ON to VM_BUG_ON_PAGE > > to try to get a clue about it. Good to know it's not the THP patches > > since they aren't in linux-next. > > > > I don't understand how it can happen. We have the page locked, and then we do: > > > > if (PageWriteback(page)) { > > if (wbc->sync_mode != WB_SYNC_NONE) > > wait_on_page_writeback(page); > > else > > goto continue_unlock; > > } > > > > VM_BUG_ON_PAGE(PageWriteback(page), page); > > > > Nobody should be able to put this page under writeback while we have it > > locked ... right? The page can be redirtied by the code that's supposed > > to be writing it back, but I don't see how anyone can make PageWriteback > > true while we're holding the page lock. > > Looking at __test_set_page_writeback(), I see that it (and most other > callers to lock_page_memcg()) do the following: lock_page_memcg() is, unfortunately, completely unrelated to lock_page(). I believe all callers of __test_set_page_writeback() have the page lock held already, but I'm going to put in an assert to that effect.