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Message-ID: <20070805204114.GA19857@dreamland.darkstar.lan>
Date:	Sun, 5 Aug 2007 22:41:14 +0200
From:	Luca Tettamanti <kronos.it@...il.com>
To:	Andrew Morton <akpm@...ux-foundation.org>
Cc:	Jeff Dike <jdike@...toit.com>, LKML <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH 4/5] UML - Simplify helper stack handling

Il Wed, Jun 27, 2007 at 11:37:01PM -0700, Andrew Morton ha scritto: 
> 
> So I'm running the generic version of this on i386 with 8k stacks (below),
> with a quick LTP run.
> 
> Holy cow, either we use a _lot_ of stack or these numbers are off:
> 
> vmm:/home/akpm> dmesg -s 1000000|grep 'bytes left' 
> khelper used greatest stack depth: 7176 bytes left
> khelper used greatest stack depth: 7064 bytes left
> khelper used greatest stack depth: 6840 bytes left
> khelper used greatest stack depth: 6812 bytes left
> hostname used greatest stack depth: 6636 bytes left
> uname used greatest stack depth: 6592 bytes left
> uname used greatest stack depth: 6284 bytes left
> hotplug used greatest stack depth: 5568 bytes left
> rpc.nfsd used greatest stack depth: 5136 bytes left
> chown02 used greatest stack depth: 4956 bytes left
> fchown01 used greatest stack depth: 4892 bytes left
> 
> That's the sum of process stack and interrupt stack, but I doubt if this
> little box is using much interrupt stack space.
> 
> No wonder people are still getting stack overflows with 4k stacks...

Hi Andrew,
I was a bit worried about stack usage on my setup and google found your
mail :P

FYI:

khelper used greatest stack depth: 3228 bytes left
khelper used greatest stack depth: 3124 bytes left
busybox used greatest stack depth: 2808 bytes left
modprobe used greatest stack depth: 2744 bytes left
busybox used greatest stack depth: 2644 bytes left
modprobe used greatest stack depth: 1836 bytes left
modprobe used greatest stack depth: 1176 bytes left
java used greatest stack depth: 932 bytes left
java used greatest stack depth: 540 bytes left

I'm running git-current, with 4KiB stacks; filesystems are ext3 and XFS
on LVM (on libata devices).
Does it make sense to raise STACK_WARN to get a stack trace in do_IRQ?
Or is 540 bytes still "safe" taking into account the separate IRQ stack?

Luca
-- 
42
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