On 09/04, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
>
> On Wed, Sep 03, 2014 at 06:08:19PM +0200, Oleg Nesterov wrote:
>
> > And a stupid (really, I don't understand this code) question:
> >
> >     /* for example, ksmd faulting in a user's mm */
> >     if (!p->mm)
> >             return;
>
> In general kernel threads have !->mm, and those cannot do the
> accounting. The only way to get here is through get_user_pages() with
> tsk != current and/or mm != current->mm.
>
> > OK, but perhaps it make sense to pass "mm" as another argument and do
> >
> >     /* ksmd faulting in a user's mm, or debugger, or kthread use_mm() 
> > caller */
> >     if (p->mm != mm)
> >             return;
> >
> > ?
>
> I'm still somewhat fuzzy in the brain but that doesn't appear to
> actually work, use_mm() explicitly sets ->mm so in that case it would
> match just fine.

Yes, yes, sorry, I meant

        if (p->mm != mm || PF_KTHREAD)
                return;

> That said; I don't think we really need to worry about this. The !->mm
> case is special in that that cannot ever work, the other cases are
> extremely rare and will not skew accounting much if anything.

Sure, this is not bugfix. To me this change looks like a cleanup because
I think that, say, ksmd doesn't really differ from debugger in this case
(ignoring the fact that ->mm == NULL can probably lead to crash), or from
use_mm().

But of course I agree, this is minor.

Oleg.

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