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authorMichal Hocko <[email protected]>2015-02-27 15:51:46 -0800
committerLinus Torvalds <[email protected]>2015-02-28 09:57:51 -0800
commit4e54dede38b45052a941bcf709f7d29f2e18174d (patch)
tree4640490752366d061856ce0632fa94ae8a45b1fc /scripts/gdb
parentda616534ed7f6e8ffaab699258b55c8d78d0b4ea (diff)
memcg: fix low limit calculation
A memcg is considered low limited even when the current usage is equal to the low limit. This leads to interesting side effects e.g. groups/hierarchies with no memory accounted are considered protected and so the reclaim will emit MEMCG_LOW event when encountering them. Another and much bigger issue was reported by Joonsoo Kim. He has hit a NULL ptr dereference with the legacy cgroup API which even doesn't have low limit exposed. The limit is 0 by default but the initial check fails for memcg with 0 consumption and parent_mem_cgroup() would return NULL if use_hierarchy is 0 and so page_counter_read would try to dereference NULL. I suppose that the current implementation is just an overlook because the documentation in Documentation/cgroups/unified-hierarchy.txt says: "The memory.low boundary on the other hand is a top-down allocated reserve. A cgroup enjoys reclaim protection when it and all its ancestors are below their low boundaries" Fix the usage and the low limit comparision in mem_cgroup_low accordingly. Fixes: 241994ed8649 (mm: memcontrol: default hierarchy interface for memory) Reported-by: Joonsoo Kim <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Michal Hocko <[email protected]> Acked-by: Johannes Weiner <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <[email protected]>
Diffstat (limited to 'scripts/gdb')
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