hugetlbfs for ppc440 - kernel BUG -- follow up

Satya satyakiran at gmail.com
Wed Jul 18 12:18:47 EST 2007


On 7/17/07, Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh at kernel.crashing.org> wrote:
> On Tue, 2007-07-17 at 16:07 -0500, Satya wrote:
> > hello,
> >
> > Upon investigating the below issue further, I found that
> > pte_alloc_map() calls kmap_atomic. The allocated pte page must be
> > unmapped before invoking any function that might_sleep.
> >
> > In this case clear_huge_page() is being called without invoking
> > pte_unmap(). The 'normal' counterpart of hugetlb_no_page (which is
> > do_no_page() in mm/memory.c) does call pte_unmap() before calling
> > alloc_page() (which might sleep).
> >
> > So, I believe pte_unmap() must be invoked first in hugetlb_no_page().
> > But the problem here is, we do not have a reference to the pmd to map
> > the pte again (using pte_offset_map()). The do_no_page() function does
> > have a pmd_t* parameter, so it can remap the pte when required.
> >
> > For now, I resolved the problem by expanding the pte_alloc_map() macro
> > by hand and replacing kmap_atomic with kmap(), although I think it is
> > not the right thing to do.
> >
> > Let me know if my analysis is helping you figure out the problem here. Thanks!
>
> Except that I don't see where pte_alloc_map() has been called before
> hand... hugetlb_no_page() is called by hugetlb_fault() which is called
> by __handle_mm_fault(), with no lock held.
>

the calling sequence is :

__handle_mm_fault -> hugetlb_fault -> huge_pte_alloc() -> pte_alloc_map()

where -> stands for 'calls'.

hugetlb_fault() calls hugetlb_no_page() after returning from huge_pte_alloc().

[huge_pte_alloc() is an arch specific call back implemented in the
patch referred to in my earlier posts]

Satya.

> Ben.
>
>
>


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