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authorLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>2021-01-16 15:34:57 -0800
committerLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>2021-01-17 12:08:04 -0800
commitfeb889fb40fafc6933339cf1cca8f770126819fb (patch)
treee2171d2810c6347278e666064a217db05799dc46
parent0da0a8a0a0e1845f495431c3d8d733d2bbf9e9e5 (diff)
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mm: don't put pinned pages into the swap cache
So technically there is nothing wrong with adding a pinned page to the swap cache, but the pinning obviously means that the page can't actually be free'd right now anyway, so it's a bit pointless. However, the real problem is not with it being a bit pointless: the real issue is that after we've added it to the swap cache, we'll try to unmap the page. That will succeed, because the code in mm/rmap.c doesn't know or care about pinned pages. Even the unmapping isn't fatal per se, since the page will stay around in memory due to the pinning, and we do hold the connection to it using the swap cache. But when we then touch it next and take a page fault, the logic in do_swap_page() will map it back into the process as a possibly read-only page, and we'll then break the page association on the next COW fault. Honestly, this issue could have been fixed in any of those other places: (a) we could refuse to unmap a pinned page (which makes conceptual sense), or (b) we could make sure to re-map a pinned page writably in do_swap_page(), or (c) we could just make do_wp_page() not COW the pinned page (which was what we historically did before that "mm: do_wp_page() simplification" commit). But while all of them are equally valid models for breaking this chain, not putting pinned pages into the swap cache in the first place is the simplest one by far. It's also the safest one: the reason why do_wp_page() was changed in the first place was that getting the "can I re-use this page" wrong is so fraught with errors. If you do it wrong, you end up with an incorrectly shared page. As a result, using "page_maybe_dma_pinned()" in either do_wp_page() or do_swap_page() would be a serious bug since it is only a (very good) heuristic. Re-using the page requires a hard black-and-white rule with no room for ambiguity. In contrast, saying "this page is very likely dma pinned, so let's not add it to the swap cache and try to unmap it" is an obviously safe thing to do, and if the heuristic might very rarely be a false positive, no harm is done. Fixes: 09854ba94c6a ("mm: do_wp_page() simplification") Reported-and-tested-by: Martin Raiber <martin@urbackup.org> Cc: Pavel Begunkov <asml.silence@gmail.com> Cc: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk> Cc: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
-rw-r--r--mm/vmscan.c2
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/mm/vmscan.c b/mm/vmscan.c
index 257cba79a96d..b1b574ad199d 100644
--- a/mm/vmscan.c
+++ b/mm/vmscan.c
@@ -1238,6 +1238,8 @@ static unsigned int shrink_page_list(struct list_head *page_list,
if (!PageSwapCache(page)) {
if (!(sc->gfp_mask & __GFP_IO))
goto keep_locked;
+ if (page_maybe_dma_pinned(page))
+ goto keep_locked;
if (PageTransHuge(page)) {
/* cannot split THP, skip it */
if (!can_split_huge_page(page, NULL))