On Tue 04-12-18 09:11:05, Naoya Horiguchi wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 04, 2018 at 09:48:26AM +0100, Michal Hocko wrote:
> > On Tue 04-12-18 07:21:16, Naoya Horiguchi wrote:
> > > On Mon, Dec 03, 2018 at 11:03:09AM +0100, Michal Hocko wrote:
> > > > From: Michal Hocko <mho...@suse.com>
> > > > 
> > > > We have received a bug report that an injected MCE about faulty memory
> > > > prevents memory offline to succeed. The underlying reason is that the
> > > > HWPoison page has an elevated reference count and the migration keeps
> > > > failing. There are two problems with that. First of all it is dubious
> > > > to migrate the poisoned page because we know that accessing that memory
> > > > is possible to fail. Secondly it doesn't make any sense to migrate a
> > > > potentially broken content and preserve the memory corruption over to a
> > > > new location.
> > > > 
> > > > Oscar has found out that it is the elevated reference count from
> > > > memory_failure that is confusing the offlining path. HWPoisoned pages
> > > > are isolated from the LRU list but __offline_pages might still try to
> > > > migrate them if there is any preceding migrateable pages in the pfn
> > > > range. Such a migration would fail due to the reference count but
> > > > the migration code would put it back on the LRU list. This is quite
> > > > wrong in itself but it would also make scan_movable_pages stumble over
> > > > it again without any way out.
> > > > 
> > > > This means that the hotremove with hwpoisoned pages has never really
> > > > worked (without a luck). HWPoisoning really needs a larger surgery
> > > > but an immediate and backportable fix is to skip over these pages during
> > > > offlining. Even if they are still mapped for some reason then
> > > > try_to_unmap should turn those mappings into hwpoison ptes and cause
> > > > SIGBUS on access. Nobody should be really touching the content of the
> > > > page so it should be safe to ignore them even when there is a pending
> > > > reference count.
> > > > 
> > > > Debugged-by: Oscar Salvador <osalva...@suse.com>
> > > > Cc: stable
> > > > Signed-off-by: Michal Hocko <mho...@suse.com>
> > > > ---
> > > > Hi,
> > > > I am sending this as an RFC now because I am not fully sure I see all
> > > > the consequences myself yet. This has passed a testing by Oscar but I
> > > > would highly appreciate a review from Naoya about my assumptions about
> > > > hwpoisoning. E.g. it is not entirely clear to me whether there is a
> > > > potential case where the page might be still mapped.
> > > 
> > > One potential case is ksm page, for which we give up unmapping and leave
> > > it unmapped. Rather than that I don't have any idea, but any new type of
> > > page would be potentially categorized to this class.
> > 
> > Could you be more specific why hwpoison code gives up on ksm pages while
> > we can safely unmap here?
> 
> Actually no big reason. Ksm pages never dominate memory, so we simply didn't
> have strong motivation to save the pages.

OK, so the unmapping is safe. I will drop a comment. Does this look good
to you?
diff --git a/mm/memory_hotplug.c b/mm/memory_hotplug.c
index 08c576d5a633..ef5d42759aa2 100644
--- a/mm/memory_hotplug.c
+++ b/mm/memory_hotplug.c
@@ -1370,7 +1370,9 @@ do_migrate_range(unsigned long start_pfn, unsigned long 
end_pfn)
                /*
                 * HWPoison pages have elevated reference counts so the 
migration would
                 * fail on them. It also doesn't make any sense to migrate them 
in the
-                * first place. Still try to unmap such a page in case it is 
still mapped.
+                * first place. Still try to unmap such a page in case it is 
still mapped
+                * (e.g. current hwpoison implementation doesn't unmap KSM 
pages but keep
+                * the unmap as the catch all safety net).
                 */
                if (PageHWPoison(page)) {
                        if (page_mapped(page))
-- 
Michal Hocko
SUSE Labs

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