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Message-ID: <9b2b86520912020625j31d180a1t1bc2a9b13a9d988d@mail.gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 2 Dec 2009 14:25:27 +0000
From: Alan Jenkins <sourcejedi.lkml@...glemail.com>
To: Mel Gorman <mel@....ul.ie>
Cc: "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rjw@...k.pl>,
pm list <linux-pm@...ts.linux-foundation.org>,
linux-kernel <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
Kernel Testers List <kernel-testers@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: Bisected: s2disk (uswsusp only) hangs just before poweroff
On 12/2/09, Mel Gorman <mel@....ul.ie> wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 02, 2009 at 11:49:47AM +0000, Alan Jenkins wrote:
>> Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
>>> On Tuesday 01 December 2009, Mel Gorman wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Tue, Dec 01, 2009 at 07:59:40PM +0000, Alan Jenkins wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Hi
>>>>>
>>>>> Suspend to disk is (sometimes) hanging for me in 2.6.32-rc. I
>>>>> finally got around to bisecting it, which blamed the following
>>>>> commit by Mel:
>>>>>
>>>>> 5f8dcc2 "page-allocator: split per-cpu list into
>>>>> one-list-per-migrate-type"
>>>>>
>>>>> I was able to confirm this by reverting the commit, which fixed the
>>>>> hang. I had to revert one other commit first to avoid a conflict:
>>>>>
>>>>> a6f9edd "page-allocator: maintain rolling count of pages to free
>>>>> from the PCP"
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> Which RC kernel? Specifically, are the commits
>>>>
>>>> cc4a6851466039a8a688c843962a05689059ff3b always wake kswapd when
>>>> restarting an allocation attempt
>>>> 9d0ed60fe9cd1fbf57f755cd27a23ae9114d7210 Do not allow interrupts to use
>>>> ALLOC_HARDER
>>>>
>>>> applied?
>>>>
>>>> The latter one in particular might make a difference if s2disk is
>>>> pushing the system far below the watermarks. I don't suppose you know
>>>> where it's hanging? i.e. is it hanging in the allocator itself?
>>>>
>>>> If those patches are applied, then one difference that 5f8dcc2 makes is
>>>> that pages on the PCP lists but not of the right migratetype are not
>>>> used. Prior to that commit, an allocation might succeed even if the
>>>> buddy lists were empty because one of the other PCP page types would be
>>>> used.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> -- detail --
>>>>>
>>>>> When I suspend my EeePc 701 to disk, it sometimes hangs after
>>>>> writing out the hibernation image. The system is still able to
>>>>> resume from this image (after working around the hang by pressing
>>>>> the power button).
>>>>>
>>>>> This is specific to s2disk from the uswsusp package (which is now
>>>>> installed by default on debian unstable). It doesn't happen if I
>>>>> uninstall uswsusp and use the in-kernel suspend instead.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> This leads me to believe that uswsusp is able to push available pages
>>>> far below what is expected. It's a total guess though, I have no idea
>>>> how uswsusp is implemented or how it differs from what is in kernel.
>>>>
>>>
>>> It doesn't differ at all in that respect. Actually, it uses the same
>>> code, but
>>> the distro configuration may be such that it leaves fewer available pages
>>> than the default in-kernel hibernation.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Rafael
>>>
>>
>> It seems unintuitive that lack of memory is a problem _after we've
>> written out the hibernation image_. The backtrace I captured shows the
>> hang happens within hibernation_platform_enter()...
>>
>
> I think the backtrace is also showing that it's trying to create a kernel
> thread. For this to be getting locked up, memory must be exceptionally
> tight. One thing that the patch changes is that in certain circumstances,
> an additional 128K of memory per-CPU could be on each the PCP lists.
>
> Ordinarily it doesn't matter because reclaim would resolve the situation
> or the PCP lists would be drained very shortly after. However, if the
> CPUs were no longer being used but still have pages pinned, it could be
> causing a problem.
>
>> Hmm. Doesn't the in-kernel suspend free the in-memory image before
>> powering off?
>>
>> int hibernate(void)
>> ...
>> pr_debug("PM: writing image.\n");
>> error = swsusp_write(flags);
>> swsusp_free();
>> if (!error)
>> power_down();
>>
>>
>>
>> Would that explain why only uswsusp is affected? Do we want to fix
>> snapshot_read() in user.c, so that it calls swsusp_free() once all the
>> data has been read?
>>
>
> Could you try it please?
Yes, that fixes it. I left it running over lunch, and it did 24
hibernations cycles without hanging. I'll post it and we'll see what
Rafael thinks. It's only four lines of code, and I think there's a
strong case for it.
> Another possibility would be to call drain_all_pages() before powering
> off. If that makes a difference, it would confirm that pages are pinned
> on PCP lists of inactive processors.
Probably not, since this is a single processor machine :). It's the
original EeePC model with a Celeron processor, no fancy dual cores or
hyperthreading.
Thanks
Alan
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