On Tue, 20 Aug 2013 14:54:53 +0800 Wanpeng Li <liw...@linux.vnet.ibm.com> wrote:

> preallocate_pmds will continue to preallocate pmds even if failure
> occurrence, and then free all the preallocate pmds if there is
> failure, this patch fix it by stop preallocate if failure occurrence
> and go to free path.
>
> ...
>
> --- a/arch/x86/mm/pgtable.c
> +++ b/arch/x86/mm/pgtable.c
> @@ -196,21 +196,18 @@ static void free_pmds(pmd_t *pmds[])
>  static int preallocate_pmds(pmd_t *pmds[])
>  {
>       int i;
> -     bool failed = false;
>  
>       for(i = 0; i < PREALLOCATED_PMDS; i++) {
>               pmd_t *pmd = (pmd_t *)__get_free_page(PGALLOC_GFP);
>               if (pmd == NULL)
> -                     failed = true;
> +                     goto err;
>               pmds[i] = pmd;
>       }
>  
> -     if (failed) {
> -             free_pmds(pmds);
> -             return -ENOMEM;
> -     }
> -
>       return 0;
> +err:
> +     free_pmds(pmds);
> +     return -ENOMEM;
>  }

Nope.  If the error path is taken, free_pmds() will free uninitialised
items from pmds[], which is a local in pgd_alloc() and contains random
stack junk.  The kernel will crash.

You could pass an nr_pmds argument to free_pmds(), or zero out the
remaining items on the error path.  However, although the current code
is a bit kooky, I don't see that it is harmful in any way.

> Reviewed-by: Dave Hansen <dave.han...@linux.intel.com>

Ahem.
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