On 09.04.20 09:59, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Thu 09-04-20 17:26:01, Michael Ellerman wrote: >> David Hildenbrand <da...@redhat.com> writes: >> >>> In commit 53cdc1cb29e8 ("drivers/base/memory.c: indicate all memory >>> blocks as removable"), the user space interface to compute whether a memory >>> block can be offlined (exposed via >>> /sys/devices/system/memory/memoryX/removable) has effectively been >>> deprecated. We want to remove the leftovers of the kernel implementation. >>> >>> When offlining a memory block (mm/memory_hotplug.c:__offline_pages()), >>> we'll start by: >>> 1. Testing if it contains any holes, and reject if so >>> 2. Testing if pages belong to different zones, and reject if so >>> 3. Isolating the page range, checking if it contains any unmovable pages >>> >>> Using is_mem_section_removable() before trying to offline is not only racy, >>> it can easily result in false positives/negatives. Let's stop manually >>> checking is_mem_section_removable(), and let device_offline() handle it >>> completely instead. We can remove the racy is_mem_section_removable() >>> implementation next. >>> >>> We now take more locks (e.g., memory hotplug lock when offlining and the >>> zone lock when isolating), but maybe we should optimize that >>> implementation instead if this ever becomes a real problem (after all, >>> memory unplug is already an expensive operation). We started using >>> is_mem_section_removable() in commit 51925fb3c5c9 ("powerpc/pseries: >>> Implement memory hotplug remove in the kernel"), with the initial >>> hotremove support of lmbs. >> >> It's also not very pretty in dmesg. >> >> Before: >> >> pseries-hotplug-mem: Attempting to hot-add 10 LMB(s) >> pseries-hotplug-mem: Memory hot-add failed, removing any added LMBs >> dlpar: Could not handle DLPAR request "memory add count 10" > > Yeah, there is more output but isn't that useful? Or put it differently > what is the actual problem from having those messages in the kernel log? > > From the below you can clearly tell that there are kernel allocations > which prevent hot remove from happening. > > If the overall size of the debugging output is a concern then we can > think of a way to reduce it. E.g. once you have a couple of pages > reported then all others from the same block are likely not interesting > much. >
IIRC, we only report one page per block already. (and stop, as we detected something unmovable) -- Thanks, David / dhildenb