On Wed 18-04-18 09:45:39, Cristopher Lameter wrote:
> Mikulas Patoka wants to ensure that no fallback to lower order happens. I
> think __GFP_NORETRY should work correctly in that case too and not fall
> back.

Overriding __GFP_NORETRY is just a bad idea. It will make the semantic
of the flag just more confusing. Note there are users who use
__GFP_NORETRY as a way to suppress heavy memory pressure and/or the OOM
killer. You do not want to change the semantic for them.

Besides that the changelog is less than optimal. What is the actual
problem? Why somebody doesn't want a fallback? Is there a configuration
that could prevent the same?

> Allocating at a smaller order is a retry operation and should not
> be attempted.
> 
> If the caller does not want retries then respect that.
> 
> GFP_NORETRY allows callers to ensure that only maximum order
> allocations are attempted.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Christoph Lameter <c...@linux.com>
> 
> Index: linux/mm/slub.c
> ===================================================================
> --- linux.orig/mm/slub.c
> +++ linux/mm/slub.c
> @@ -1598,7 +1598,7 @@ static struct page *allocate_slab(struct
>               alloc_gfp = (alloc_gfp | __GFP_NOMEMALLOC) & 
> ~(__GFP_RECLAIM|__GFP_NOFAIL);
> 
>       page = alloc_slab_page(s, alloc_gfp, node, oo);
> -     if (unlikely(!page)) {
> +     if (unlikely(!page) && !(flags & __GFP_NORETRY)) {
>               oo = s->min;
>               alloc_gfp = flags;
>               /*

-- 
Michal Hocko
SUSE Labs

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