Change log: v1 - v2: Added Tested-by: Masayoshi Mizuma Answering Andrew Morton's questions:
> Presumably this fixes some real-world problem which someone has observed? Yes, linked below. > Please describe that problem for us in lavish detail. This change helps for three reasons: 1. Insufficient amount of reserved memory due to arguments provided by user. User may request some buffers, increased hash tables sizes etc. Currently, machine panics during boot if it can't allocate memory due to insufficient amount of reserved memory. With this change, it will be able to grow zone before deferred pages are initialized. One observed example is described in the linked discussion [1] Mel Gorman writes: " Yasuaki Ishimatsu reported a premature OOM when trace_buf_size=100m was specified on a machine with many CPUs. The kernel tried to allocate 38.4GB but only 16GB was available due to deferred memory initialisation. " The allocations in the above scenario happen per-cpu in smp_init(), and before deferred pages are initialized. So, there is no way to predict how much memory we should put aside to boot successfully with deferred page initialization feature compiled in. 2. The second reason is future proof. The kernel memory requirements may change, and we do not want to constantly update reset_deferred_meminit() to satisfy the new requirements. In addition, this function is currently in common code, but potentially would need to be split into arch specific variants, as more arches will start taking advantage of deferred page initialization feature. 3. On demand initialization of reserved pages guarantees that we will initialize only as many pages early in boot using only one thread as needed, the rest are going to be efficiently initialized in parallel. [1] https://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-mm/msg139087.html Pavel Tatashin (1): mm: initialize pages on demand during boot include/linux/memblock.h | 10 --- mm/memblock.c | 23 ------- mm/page_alloc.c | 164 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----------- 3 files changed, 125 insertions(+), 72 deletions(-) -- 2.16.1