From: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
To: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Cc: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>, Matthew Wilcox <willy@infradead.org>,
Amir Goldstein <amir73il@gmail.com>,
paulmck@kernel.org, lsf-pc@lists.linux-foundation.org,
linux-mm@kvack.org,
linux-fsdevel <linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org>,
Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Subject: Re: [Lsf-pc] [LSF/MM/BPF TOPIC] Reclamation interactions with RCU
Date: Fri, 1 Mar 2024 15:20:24 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <pv2chxwnrufut6wecm47q2z7222tzdl3gi6s5wgvmk3b2gq3n5@d23qr5odwyxl> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <ZeFtrzN34cLhjjHK@dread.disaster.area>
On Fri, Mar 01, 2024 at 04:54:55PM +1100, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 01, 2024 at 01:16:18PM +1100, NeilBrown wrote:
> > While we are considering revising mm rules, I would really like to
> > revised the rule that GFP_KERNEL allocations are allowed to fail.
> > I'm not at all sure that they ever do (except for large allocations - so
> > maybe we could leave that exception in - or warn if large allocations
> > are tried without a MAY_FAIL flag).
> >
> > Given that GFP_KERNEL can wait, and that the mm can kill off processes
> > and clear cache to free memory, there should be no case where failure is
> > needed or when simply waiting will eventually result in success. And if
> > there is, the machine is a gonner anyway.
>
> Yes, please!
>
> XFS was designed and implemented on an OS that gave this exact
> guarantee for kernel allocations back in the early 1990s. Memory
> allocation simply blocked until it succeeded unless the caller
> indicated they could handle failure. That's what __GFP_NOFAIL does
> and XFS is still heavily dependent on this behaviour.
I'm not saying we should get rid of __GFP_NOFAIL - actually, I'd say
let's remove the underscores and get rid of the silly two page limit.
GFP_NOFAIL|GFP_KERNEL is perfectly safe for larger allocations, as long
as you don't mind possibly waiting a bit.
But it can't be the default because, like I mentioned to Neal, there are
a _lot_ of different places where we allocate memory in the kernel, and
they have to be able to fail instead of shoving everything else out of
memory.
> This is the sort of thing I was thinking of in the "remove
> GFP_NOFS" discussion thread when I said this to Kent:
>
> "We need to start designing our code in a way that doesn't require
> extensive testing to validate it as correct. If the only way to
> validate new code is correct is via stochastic coverage via error
> injection, then that is a clear sign we've made poor design choices
> along the way."
>
> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-fsdevel/ZcqWh3OyMGjEsdPz@dread.disaster.area/
>
> If memory allocation doesn't fail by default, then we can remove the
> vast majority of allocation error handling from the kernel. Make the
> common case just work - remove the need for all that code to handle
> failures that is hard to exercise reliably and so are rarely tested.
>
> A simple change to make long standing behaviour an actual policy we
> can rely on means we can remove both code and test matrix overhead -
> it's a win-win IMO.
We definitely don't want to make GFP_NOIO/GFP_NOFS allocations nofail by
default - a great many of those allocations have mempools in front of
them to avoid deadlocks, and if you do that you've made the mempools
useless.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2024-03-01 20:20 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 52+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2024-02-27 18:56 Paul E. McKenney
2024-02-27 19:19 ` [Lsf-pc] " Amir Goldstein
2024-02-27 22:59 ` Paul E. McKenney
2024-03-01 3:28 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-05 2:43 ` Paul E. McKenney
2024-03-05 2:56 ` Yosry Ahmed
2024-02-28 19:37 ` Matthew Wilcox
2024-02-29 1:29 ` Dave Chinner
2024-02-29 4:20 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-02-29 4:17 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-02-29 4:24 ` Matthew Wilcox
2024-02-29 4:44 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-01 2:16 ` NeilBrown
2024-03-01 2:39 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-01 2:48 ` Matthew Wilcox
2024-03-01 3:09 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-01 3:33 ` James Bottomley
2024-03-01 3:52 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-01 4:01 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-01 4:09 ` NeilBrown
2024-03-01 4:18 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-01 4:18 ` James Bottomley
2024-03-01 4:08 ` James Bottomley
2024-03-01 4:15 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-05 2:54 ` Yosry Ahmed
2024-03-01 5:54 ` Dave Chinner
2024-03-01 20:20 ` Kent Overstreet [this message]
2024-03-01 23:47 ` NeilBrown
2024-03-02 0:02 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-02 11:33 ` Tetsuo Handa
2024-03-02 16:53 ` Matthew Wilcox
2024-03-03 22:45 ` NeilBrown
2024-03-03 22:54 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-04 0:20 ` Dave Chinner
2024-03-04 1:16 ` NeilBrown
2024-03-04 0:35 ` Matthew Wilcox
2024-03-04 1:27 ` NeilBrown
2024-03-04 2:05 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-12 14:46 ` Vlastimil Babka
2024-03-12 22:09 ` NeilBrown
2024-03-20 18:32 ` Dan Carpenter
2024-03-20 18:48 ` Vlastimil Babka
2024-03-20 18:55 ` Matthew Wilcox
2024-03-20 19:07 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-20 19:14 ` Matthew Wilcox
2024-03-20 19:33 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-20 19:09 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-03-21 6:27 ` Dan Carpenter
2024-03-22 1:47 ` NeilBrown
2024-03-22 6:13 ` Dan Carpenter
2024-03-24 22:31 ` NeilBrown
2024-03-25 8:43 ` Dan Carpenter
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