Re: [PATCH v2 resend] mm/memory_hotplug: Make unpopulated zones PCP structures unreachable during hot remove

From: David Hildenbrand
Date: Mon Apr 12 2021 - 10:12:18 EST


On 12.04.21 16:08, Mel Gorman wrote:
On Mon, Apr 12, 2021 at 02:40:18PM +0200, Vlastimil Babka wrote:
On 4/12/21 2:08 PM, Mel Gorman wrote:
zone_pcp_reset allegedly protects against a race with drain_pages
using local_irq_save but this is bogus. local_irq_save only operates
on the local CPU. If memory hotplug is running on CPU A and drain_pages
is running on CPU B, disabling IRQs on CPU A does not affect CPU B and
offers no protection.

This patch deletes IRQ disable/enable on the grounds that IRQs protect
nothing and assumes the existing hotplug paths guarantees the PCP cannot be
used after zone_pcp_enable(). That should be the case already because all
the pages have been freed and there is no page to put on the PCP lists.

Signed-off-by: Mel Gorman <mgorman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

Yeah the irq disabling here is clearly bogus, so:

Acked-by: Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@xxxxxxx>


Thanks!

But I think Michal has a point that we might best leave the pagesets around, by
a future change. I'm have some doubts that even with your reordering of the
reset/destroy after zonelist rebuild in v1 they cant't be reachable. We have no
protection between zonelist rebuild and zonelist traversal, and that's why we
just leave pgdats around.

So I can imagine a task racing with memory hotremove might see watermarks as ok
in get_page_from_freelist() for the zone and proceeds to try_this_zone:, then
gets stalled/scheduled out while hotremove rebuilds the zonelist and destroys
the pcplists, then the first task is resumed and proceeds with rmqueue_pcplist().

So that's very rare thus not urgent, and this patch doesn't make it less rare so
not a reason to block it.


After v1 of the patch, the race was reduced to the point between the
zone watermark check and the rmqueue_pcplist but yes, it still existed.
Closing it completely was either complex or expensive. Setting
zone->pageset = &boot_pageset before the free would shrink the race
further but that still leaves a potential memory ordering issue.

While fixable, it's either complex, expensive or both so yes, just leaving
the pageset structures in place would be much more straight-forward
assuming the structures were not allocated in the zone that is being
hot-removed. As things stand, I had trouble even testing zone hot-remove
as there was always a few pages left behind and I did not chase down
why.
Can you elaborate? I can reliably trigger zone present pages going to 0 by just hotplugging a DIMM, onlining the memory block devices to the MOVABLE zone, followed by offlining the memory block again.

--
Thanks,

David / dhildenb