On Tue 24-04-18 12:48:50, Chunyu Hu wrote:
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "Michal Hocko" <mho...@kernel.org>
> > To: "Chunyu Hu" <chuhu.nc...@gmail.com>
> > Cc: "Dmitry Vyukov" <dvyu...@google.com>, "Catalin Marinas" 
> > <catalin.mari...@arm.com>, "Chunyu Hu"
> > <ch...@redhat.com>, "LKML" <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>, "Linux-MM" 
> > <linux...@kvack.org>
> > Sent: Tuesday, April 24, 2018 9:20:57 PM
> > Subject: Re: [RFC] mm: kmemleak: replace __GFP_NOFAIL to GFP_NOWAIT in 
> > gfp_kmemleak_mask
> > 
> > On Mon 23-04-18 12:17:32, Chunyu Hu wrote:
> > [...]
> > > So if there is a new flag, it would be the 25th bits.
> > 
> > No new flags please. Can you simply store a simple bool into fail_page_alloc
> > and have save/restore api for that?
> 
> Hi Michal,
> 
> I still don't get your point. The original NOFAIL added in kmemleak was 
> for skipping fault injection in page/slab  allocation for kmemleak object, 
> since kmemleak will disable itself until next reboot, whenever it hit an 
> allocation failure, in that case, it will lose effect to check kmemleak 
> in errer path rose by fault injection. But NOFAULT's effect is more than 
> skipping fault injection, it's also for hard allocation. So a dedicated flag
> for skipping fault injection in specified slab/page allocation was mentioned.

I am not familiar with the kmemleak all that much, but fiddling with the
gfp_mask is a wrong way to achieve kmemleak specific action. I might be
easilly wrong but I do not see any code that would restore the original
gfp_mask down the kmem_cache_alloc path.

> d9570ee3bd1d ("kmemleak: allow to coexist with fault injection") 
>   
> Do you mean something like below, with the save/store api? But looks like
> to make it possible to skip a specified allocation, not global disabling,
> a bool is not enough, and a gfp_flag is also needed. Maybe I missed something?

Yes, this is essentially what I meant. It is still a global thing which
is not all that great and if it matters then you can make it per
task_struct. That really depends on the code flow here.

-- 
Michal Hocko
SUSE Labs

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