Michal Hocko wrote: > On Wed 22-11-17 09:43:46, Zi Yan wrote: >> >> Michal Hocko wrote: >>> On Wed 22-11-17 09:54:16, Michal Hocko wrote: >>>> On Mon 20-11-17 21:18:55, Zi Yan wrote: >>> [...] >>>>> diff --git a/include/linux/migrate.h b/include/linux/migrate.h >>>>> index 895ec0c4942e..a2246cf670ba 100644 >>>>> --- a/include/linux/migrate.h >>>>> +++ b/include/linux/migrate.h >>>>> @@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ static inline struct page *new_page_nodemask(struct page *page, >>>>> new_page = __alloc_pages_nodemask(gfp_mask, order, >>>>> preferred_nid, nodemask); >>>>> >>>>> - if (new_page && PageTransHuge(page)) >>>>> + if (new_page && PageTransHuge(new_page)) >>>>> prep_transhuge_page(new_page); >>>> I would keep the two checks consistent. But that leads to a more >>>> interesting question. new_page_nodemask does >>>> >>>> if (thp_migration_supported() && PageTransHuge(page)) { >>>> order = HPAGE_PMD_ORDER; >>>> gfp_mask |= GFP_TRANSHUGE; >>>> } >>> And one more question/note. Why do we need thp_migration_supported >>> in the first place? 9c670ea37947 ("mm: thp: introduce >>> CONFIG_ARCH_ENABLE_THP_MIGRATION") says >>> : Introduce CONFIG_ARCH_ENABLE_THP_MIGRATION to limit thp migration >>> : functionality to x86_64, which should be safer at the first step. >>> >>> but why is unsafe to enable the feature on other arches which support >>> THP? Is there any plan to do the next step and remove this config >>> option? >> Because different architectures have their own way of specifying a swap >> entry. This means, to support THP migration, each architecture needs to >> add its own __pmd_to_swp_entry() and __swp_entry_to_pmd(), which are >> used for arch-independent pmd_to_swp_entry() and swp_entry_to_pmd(). > > I understand that part. But this smells like a matter of coding, no? > I was suprised to see the note about safety which didn't make much sense > to me. And testing as well. I had powerpc book3s support in my initial patch submission, but removed it because I do not have access to the powerpc machine any more. I also tried ARM64, which seems working by adding the code, but I have no hardware to test it now. Any suggestions? -- Best Regards, Yan Zi
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