Oliver O'Halloran
9ef34630a4
powerpc/mm: Fallback to RAM if the altmap is unusable
The "altmap" is used to provide a pool of memory that is reserved for the vmemmap backing of hot-plugged memory. This is useful when adding large amount of ZONE_DEVICE memory to a system with a limited amount of normal memory. On ppc64 we use huge pages to map the vmemmap which requires the backing storage to be contigious and aligned to the hugepage size. The altmap implementation allows for the altmap provider to reserve a few PFNs at the start of the range for it's own uses and when this occurs the first chunk of the altmap is not usable for hugepage mappings. On hash there is no sane way to fall back to a normal sized page mapping so we fail the allocation. This results in memory hotplug failing with ENOMEM when the new range doesn't fall into an existing vmemmap block. This patch handles this case by falling back to using system memory rather than failing if we cannot allocate from the altmap. This fallback should only ever be used for the first vmemmap block so it should not cause excess memory consumption. Fixes: 7b73d978a5d0 ("mm: pass the vmem_altmap to vmemmap_populate") Signed-off-by: Oliver O'Halloran <oohall@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
Linux kernel ============ There are several guides for kernel developers and users. These guides can be rendered in a number of formats, like HTML and PDF. Please read Documentation/admin-guide/README.rst first. In order to build the documentation, use ``make htmldocs`` or ``make pdfdocs``. The formatted documentation can also be read online at: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/ There are various text files in the Documentation/ subdirectory, several of them using the Restructured Text markup notation. Please read the Documentation/process/changes.rst file, as it contains the requirements for building and running the kernel, and information about the problems which may result by upgrading your kernel.
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