Re: [Bug #11342] Linux 2.6.27-rc3: kernel BUG at mm/vmalloc.c - bisected

From: Parag Warudkar
Date: Wed Aug 27 2008 - 12:25:51 EST


On Wed, Aug 27, 2008 at 9:21 AM, Alan Cox <alan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> By your logic though, XFS on x86 should work fine with 4K stacks -
>> many will attest that it does not and blows up due to stack issues.
>>
>> I have first hand experiences of things blowing up with deep call
>> chains when using 4K stacks where 8K worked just fine on same
>> workload.
>>
>> So there is definitely some other problem with 4K stacks.
>
> Nothing of the sort. If it blows up with a 4K stack it will almost
> certainly blow up with an 8K stack *eventually* - when a heavy stack usage
> coincides with a heavy stack using IRQ handler.
>
> You won't catch it in simple testing, you won't catch it in trivial
> simulation and it'll be incredibly hard to reproduce. Not the kind of bug
> you want in a production system really. IRQ stacks make things much more
> predictable.


I see - so if I end up having a workload on 8k where heavy stack using
IRQs and deep kernel call chains come at the same time - even 8K will
blow up.
So 4K will blow too except that it doesn't require IRQs also to use
heavy stack, just XFS is good enough :)

It then seems like the IRQs using lot of stack is not so much of a
problem in the current kernel as much as deeper call chains and stack
usage of normal non-irq path code is.
So 8k makes it possible for the deeper call chains of non-irq path to
survive since they get better part of the 8K to themselves and IRQs
can do with less almost always.

At least that's what I can derive from the fact that we do not have
lots of reports of 8K stack blowing up.

Thanks

Parag
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