[PATCH v1 13/36] mm/hugetlb: cleanup hugetlb_folio_init_tail_vmemmap()
David Hildenbrand
david at redhat.com
Thu Aug 28 00:44:27 PDT 2025
On 28.08.25 09:21, Mike Rapoport wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 28, 2025 at 12:01:17AM +0200, David Hildenbrand wrote:
>> We can now safely iterate over all pages in a folio, so no need for the
>> pfn_to_page().
>>
>> Also, as we already force the refcount in __init_single_page() to 1,
>> we can just set the refcount to 0 and avoid page_ref_freeze() +
>> VM_BUG_ON. Likely, in the future, we would just want to tell
>> __init_single_page() to which value to initialize the refcount.
>>
>> Further, adjust the comments to highlight that we are dealing with an
>> open-coded prep_compound_page() variant, and add another comment explaining
>> why we really need the __init_single_page() only on the tail pages.
>>
>> Note that the current code was likely problematic, but we never ran into
>> it: prep_compound_tail() would have been called with an offset that might
>> exceed a memory section, and prep_compound_tail() would have simply
>> added that offset to the page pointer -- which would not have done the
>> right thing on sparsemem without vmemmap.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand <david at redhat.com>
>> ---
>> mm/hugetlb.c | 20 ++++++++++++--------
>> 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)
>>
>> diff --git a/mm/hugetlb.c b/mm/hugetlb.c
>> index 4a97e4f14c0dc..1f42186a85ea4 100644
>> --- a/mm/hugetlb.c
>> +++ b/mm/hugetlb.c
>> @@ -3237,17 +3237,18 @@ static void __init hugetlb_folio_init_tail_vmemmap(struct folio *folio,
>> {
>> enum zone_type zone = zone_idx(folio_zone(folio));
>> int nid = folio_nid(folio);
>> + struct page *page = folio_page(folio, start_page_number);
>> unsigned long head_pfn = folio_pfn(folio);
>> unsigned long pfn, end_pfn = head_pfn + end_page_number;
>> - int ret;
>> -
>> - for (pfn = head_pfn + start_page_number; pfn < end_pfn; pfn++) {
>> - struct page *page = pfn_to_page(pfn);
>>
>> + /*
>> + * We mark all tail pages with memblock_reserved_mark_noinit(),
>> + * so these pages are completely uninitialized.
>
> ^ not? ;-)
Can you elaborate?
--
Cheers
David / dhildenb
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