With transparent hugepage support, handle_mm_fault() has to be careful
that a normal PMD has been established before handling a PTE fault. To
achieve this, it used __pte_alloc() directly instead of pte_alloc_map
as pte_alloc_map is unsafe to run against a huge PMD. pte_offset_map()
is called once it is known the PMD is safe.

pte_alloc_map() is smart enough to check if a PTE is already present
before calling __pte_alloc but this check was lost. As a consequence,
PTEs may be allocated unnecessarily and the page table lock taken.
Thi useless PTE does get cleaned up but it's a performance hit which
is visible in page_test from aim9.

This patch simply re-adds the check normally done by pte_alloc_map to
check if the PTE needs to be allocated before taking the page table
lock. The effect is noticable in page_test from aim9.

AIM9
                2.6.38-vanilla 2.6.38-checkptenone
creat-clo      446.10 ( 0.00%)   424.47 (-5.10%)
page_test       38.10 ( 0.00%)    42.04 ( 9.37%)
brk_test        52.45 ( 0.00%)    51.57 (-1.71%)
exec_test      382.00 ( 0.00%)   456.90 (16.39%)
fork_test       60.11 ( 0.00%)    67.79 (11.34%)
MMTests Statistics: duration
Total Elapsed Time (seconds)                611.90    612.22

(While this affects 2.6.38, it is a performance rather than a
functional bug and normally outside the rules -stable. While the big
performance differences are to a microbench, the difference in fork
and exec performance may be significant enough that -stable wants to
consider the patch)

Reported-by: Raz Ben Yehuda <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Mel Gorman <[email protected]>
-- 
 mm/memory.c |    2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/mm/memory.c b/mm/memory.c
index 5823698..1659574 100644
--- a/mm/memory.c
+++ b/mm/memory.c
@@ -3322,7 +3322,7 @@ int handle_mm_fault(struct mm_struct *mm, struct 
vm_area_struct *vma,
         * run pte_offset_map on the pmd, if an huge pmd could
         * materialize from under us from a different thread.
         */
-       if (unlikely(__pte_alloc(mm, vma, pmd, address)))
+       if (unlikely(pmd_none(*pmd)) && __pte_alloc(mm, vma, pmd, address))
                return VM_FAULT_OOM;
        /* if an huge pmd materialized from under us just retry later */
        if (unlikely(pmd_trans_huge(*pmd)))

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