[PATCH RESEND v2 4/6] mm/page_alloc: sort out the alloc_contig_range() gfp flags mess
Oscar Salvador
osalvador at suse.de
Wed Dec 4 20:15:14 AEDT 2024
On Wed, Dec 04, 2024 at 10:03:28AM +0100, Vlastimil Babka wrote:
> On 12/4/24 09:59, Oscar Salvador wrote:
> > On Tue, Dec 03, 2024 at 08:19:02PM +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> >> It was always set using "GFP_USER | __GFP_MOVABLE | __GFP_RETRY_MAYFAIL",
> >> and I removed the same flag combination in #2 from memory offline code, and
> >> we do have the exact same thing in do_migrate_range() in
> >> mm/memory_hotplug.c.
> >>
> >> We should investigate if__GFP_HARDWALL is the right thing to use here, and
> >> if we can get rid of that by switching to GFP_KERNEL in all these places.
> >
> > Why would not we want __GFP_HARDWALL set?
> > Without it, we could potentially migrate the page to a node which is not
> > part of the cpuset of the task that originally allocated it, thus violating the
> > policy? Is not that a problem?
>
> The task doing the alloc_contig_range() will likely not be the same task as
> the one that originally allocated the page, so its policy would be
> different, no? So even with __GFP_HARDWALL we might be already migrating
> outside the original tasks's constraint? Am I missing something?
Yes, that is right, I thought we derive the policy from the old page
somehow when migrating it, but reading the code does not seem to be the
case.
Looking at prepare_alloc_pages(), if !ac->nodemask, which would be the
case here, we would get the policy from the current task
(alloc_contig_range()) when cpusets are enabled.
So yes, I am a bit puzzled why __GFP_HARDWALL was chosen in the first
place.
--
Oscar Salvador
SUSE Labs
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