On Wed 27-04-16 08:58:45, Dave Chinner wrote: > On Tue, Apr 26, 2016 at 01:56:12PM +0200, Michal Hocko wrote: > > From: Michal Hocko <mhocko@xxxxxxxx> > > > > THIS PATCH IS FOR TESTING ONLY AND NOT MEANT TO HIT LINUS TREE > > > > It is desirable to reduce the direct GFP_NO{FS,IO} usage at minimum and > > prefer scope usage defined by memalloc_no{fs,io}_{save,restore} API. > > > > Let's help this process and add a debugging tool to catch when an > > explicit allocation request for GFP_NO{FS,IO} is done from the scope > > context. The printed stacktrace should help to identify the caller > > and evaluate whether it can be changed to use a wider context or whether > > it is called from another potentially dangerous context which needs > > a scope protection as well. > > You're going to get a large number of these from XFS. There are call > paths in XFs that get called both inside and outside transaction > context, and many of them are marked with GFP_NOFS to prevent issues > that have cropped up in the past. > > Often these are to silence lockdep warnings (e.g. commit b17cb36 > ("xfs: fix missing KM_NOFS tags to keep lockdep happy")) because > lockdep gets very unhappy about the same functions being called with > different reclaim contexts. e.g. directory block mapping might > occur from readdir (no transaction context) or within transactions > (create/unlink). hence paths like this are tagged with GFP_NOFS to > stop lockdep emitting false positive warnings.... I would much rather see lockdep being fixed than abusing GFP_NOFS to workaround its limitations. GFP_NOFS has a real consequences to the memory reclaim. I will go and check the commit you mentioned and try to understand why that is a problem. From what you described above I would like to get rid of exactly this kind of usage which is not really needed for the recursion protection. Thanks! -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs _______________________________________________ xfs mailing list xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx http://oss.sgi.com/mailman/listinfo/xfs