> When a copy function hits a bad page and the page is not yet known to > be bad, what does it do? (I.e. the page was believed to be fine but > the copy function gets #MC.) Does it unmap it right away? What does > it return?
I suspect that we will only ever find a handful of situations where the kernel can recover from memory that has gone bad that are worth fixing (got to be some code path that touches a meaningful fraction of memory, otherwise we get code complexity without any meaningful payoff). I don't think we'd want different actions for the cases of "we just found out now that this page is bad" and "we got a notification an hour ago that this page had gone bad". Currently we treat those the same for application errors ... SIGBUS either way[1]. -Tony [1] well there are options both globally and at the per-process level to have the "early" notifications delivered right away. _______________________________________________ Linux-nvdimm mailing list -- linux-nvdimm@lists.01.org To unsubscribe send an email to linux-nvdimm-le...@lists.01.org