I'm having a really hard time tying all the pieces back together.  Let
me give it a shot and you can tell me where I go wrong.

On 02/27/2018 07:26 PM, Baoquan He wrote:
> In sparse_init(), two temporary pointer arrays, usemap_map and map_map
> are allocated with the size of NR_MEM_SECTIONS.

In sparse_init(), two temporary pointer arrays, usemap_map and map_map
are allocated to hold the maps for every possible memory section
(NR_MEM_SECTIONS).  However, we obviously only need the array sized for
nr_present_sections (introduced in patch 1).

The reason this is a problem is that, with 5-level paging,
NR_MEM_SECTIONS (8M->512M) went up dramatically and these temporary
arrays can eat all of memory, like on kdump kernels.

This patch does two things: it makes sure to give usemap_map/mem_map a
less gluttonous size on small systems, and it changes the map allocation
and handling to handle the now more compact, less sparse arrays.

---

The code looks fine to me.  It's a bit of a shame that there's no
verification to ensure that idx_present never goes beyond the shiny new
nr_present_sections.


> @@ -583,6 +592,7 @@ void __init sparse_init(void)
>       unsigned long *usemap;
>       unsigned long **usemap_map;
>       int size;
> +     int idx_present = 0;

I wonder whether idx_present is a good name.  Isn't it the number of
consumed mem_map[]s or usemaps?

> 
>               if (!map) {
>                       ms->section_mem_map = 0;
> +                     idx_present++;
>                       continue;
>               }
>  


This hunk seems logically odd to me.  I would expect a non-used section
to *not* consume an entry from the temporary array.  Why does it?  The
error and success paths seem to do the same thing.

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