On Thu, 21 Dec 2006, Gordon Farquharson wrote:
> 
> I tested 2.6.19 with a version of Linus's patch that applies cleanly
> to 2.6.19 (patch appended to the end of this email) on ARM and apt-get
> failed. It did not segfault this time, but instead got stuck for about
> 20 to 30 minutes and was accessing the hard drive frequently.

Ok, there's definitely something screwy going on.

Andrew located at least one bug: we run cancel_dirty_page() too late in 
"truncate_complete_page()", which means that do_invalidatepage() ends up 
not clearing the page cache.

His patch is appended.

But it sounds like I probably misunderstood something, because I thought 
that Martin had acknowledged that this patch actually worked for him. 
Which sounded very similar to your setup (he has a 32M ARM box too, no?)

And your failure sounds a lot like one that David Miller is reporting. At 
the same time, my own shared file mmap tests on my own machines obviously 
work fine (I lower the dirty-writeback tresholds to force writeback more 
easily, and then mmap a file and write and rewrite to it in memory, and 
truncate it).

Maybe it's mount option issue? I've got data=ordered on my machine, are 
you perhaps runnign with something else?

                Linus

---
commit 3e67c0987d7567ad666641164a153dca9a43b11d
Author: Andrew Morton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date:   Thu Dec 21 11:00:33 2006 -0800

    [PATCH] truncate: clear page dirtiness before running try_to_free_buffers()
    
    truncate presently invalidates the dirty page's buffer_heads then shoots 
down
    the page.  But try_to_free_buffers() will now bale out because the page is
    dirty.
    
    Net effect: the LRU gets filled with dirty pages which have invalidated
    buffer_heads attached.  They have no ->mapping and hence cannot be cleaned.
    The machine leaks memory at an enormous rate.
    
    Fix this by cleaning the page before running try_to_free_buffers(), so
    try_to_free_buffers() can do its work.
    
    Also, remember to do dirty-page-acoounting in cancel_dirty_page() so the
    machine won't wedge up trying to write non-existent dirty pages.
    
    Probably still wrong, but now less so.
    
    Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
    Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

diff --git a/mm/truncate.c b/mm/truncate.c
index bf9e296..89a5c35 100644
--- a/mm/truncate.c
+++ b/mm/truncate.c
@@ -60,11 +60,12 @@ void cancel_dirty_page(struct page *page, unsigned int 
account_size)
                WARN_ON(++warncount < 5);
        }
                
-       if (TestClearPageDirty(page) && account_size)
+       if (TestClearPageDirty(page) && account_size) {
+               dec_zone_page_state(page, NR_FILE_DIRTY);
                task_io_account_cancelled_write(account_size);
+       }
 }
 
-
 /*
  * If truncate cannot remove the fs-private metadata from the page, the page
  * becomes anonymous.  It will be left on the LRU and may even be mapped into
@@ -81,11 +82,11 @@ truncate_complete_page(struct address_space *mapping, 
struct page *page)
        if (page->mapping != mapping)
                return;
 
+       cancel_dirty_page(page, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE);
+
        if (PagePrivate(page))
                do_invalidatepage(page, 0);
 
-       cancel_dirty_page(page, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE);
-
        ClearPageUptodate(page);
        ClearPageMappedToDisk(page);
        remove_from_page_cache(page);
-
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