Re: [PATCHv2] mm/vmalloc: avoid soft lockup warnings when vunmap()'ing large ranges

From: Andrew Morton
Date: Tue Mar 11 2014 - 15:47:15 EST


On Tue, 11 Mar 2014 18:40:23 +0000 David Vrabel <david.vrabel@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> If vunmap() is used to unmap a large (e.g., 50 GB) region, it may take
> sufficiently long that it triggers soft lockup warnings.
>
> Add a cond_resched() into vunmap_pmd_range() so the calling task may
> be resheduled after unmapping each PMD entry. This is how
> zap_pmd_range() fixes the same problem for userspace mappings.
>
> All callers may sleep except for the APEI GHES driver (apei/ghes.c)
> which calls unmap_kernel_range_no_flush() from NMI and IRQ contexts.
> This driver only unmaps a single pages so don't call cond_resched() if
> the unmap doesn't cross a PMD boundary.
>
> Reported-by: Dietmar Hahn <dietmar.hahn@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Signed-off-by: David Vrabel <david.vrabel@xxxxxxxxxx>
> ---
> v2: don't call cond_resched() at the end of a PMD range.
> ---
> mm/vmalloc.c | 2 ++
> 1 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/mm/vmalloc.c b/mm/vmalloc.c
> index 0fdf968..1a8b162 100644
> --- a/mm/vmalloc.c
> +++ b/mm/vmalloc.c
> @@ -75,6 +75,8 @@ static void vunmap_pmd_range(pud_t *pud, unsigned long addr, unsigned long end)
> if (pmd_none_or_clear_bad(pmd))
> continue;
> vunmap_pte_range(pmd, addr, next);
> + if (next != end)
> + cond_resched();
> } while (pmd++, addr = next, addr != end);
> }

Worried. This adds a schedule into a previously atomic function. Are
there any callers which call into here from interrupt or with a lock
held, etc?

I started doing an audit, got to
mvebu_hwcc_dma_ops.free->__dma_free_remap->unmap_kernel_range->vunmap_page_range
and gave up - there's just too much.

The best I can suggest is to do

--- a/mm/vmalloc.c~mm-vmalloc-avoid-soft-lockup-warnings-when-vunmaping-large-ranges-fix
+++ a/mm/vmalloc.c
@@ -71,6 +71,8 @@ static void vunmap_pmd_range(pud_t *pud,
pmd_t *pmd;
unsigned long next;

+ might_sleep();
+
pmd = pmd_offset(pud, addr);
do {
next = pmd_addr_end(addr, end);

so we at least find out about bugs promptly, but that's a pretty lame
approach.

Who the heck is mapping 50GB?
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