On Wed, 5 Feb 2014, Nathan Zimmer wrote:

> > That looks a little problematic, what happens if a nid is being brought
> > online and a registered callback does something like allocate resources
> > for the arg->status_change_nid and the above two hunks of this patch end
> > up racing?
> > 
> > Before, a registered callback would be guaranteed to see either a
> > MEMORY_CANCEL_ONLINE or MEMORY_ONLINE after it has already done
> > MEMORY_GOING_ONLINE.
> > 
> > With your patch, we could race and see one cpu doing MEMORY_GOING_ONLINE,
> > another cpu doing MEMORY_GOING_ONLINE, and then MEMORY_ONLINE and
> > MEMORY_CANCEL_ONLINE in either order.
> > 
> > So I think this patch will break most registered callbacks that actually
> > depend on lock_memory_hotplug(), it's a coarse lock for that reason.
> 
> Since the argument being passed in is the pfn and size it would be an issue
> only if two threads attepted to online the same piece of memory. Right?
> 

No, I'm referring to registered callbacks that provide a resource for 
arg->status_change_nid.  An example would be the callbacks I added to the 
slub allocator in slab_memory_callback().  If we are now able to get a 
racy MEM_GOING_ONLINE -> MEM_GOING_ONLINE -> MEM_ONLINE -> 
MEM_CANCEL_ONLINE, which is possible with your patch _and_ the node being 
successfully onlined at the end, then we get a NULL pointer dereference 
because the kmem_cache_node for each slab cache has been freed.

> That seems very unlikely but if it can happen it needs to be protected
> against.
> 

The protection for registered memory online or offline callbacks is 
lock_memory_hotplug() which is eliminated with your patch, the locking for 
memory_notify() that you're citing is irrelevant.
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