On Thu, Jul 08, 2021 at 08:41:08AM -0700, Alexander Duyck wrote:
On Thu, Jul 8, 2021 at 8:36 AM Ilias Apalodimas ilias.apalodimas@linaro.org wrote:
On Thu, Jul 08, 2021 at 08:29:56AM -0700, Alexander Duyck wrote:
On Thu, Jul 8, 2021 at 8:17 AM Ilias Apalodimas ilias.apalodimas@linaro.org wrote:
<snip>
What do you think about resetting pp_recycle bit on pskb_expand_head()?
I assume you mean specifically in the cloned case?
Yes. Even if we do it unconditionally we'll just loose non-cloned buffers from the recycling. I'll send a patch later today.
If you do it unconditionally you could leak DMA mappings since in the non-cloned case we don't bother with releasing the shared info since we just did a memcpy of it without the reference count tweaks. We have to be really careful here. The idea is that we have to make exactly one call to the __page_pool_put_page function for this page.
If my memory serves me right Eric wanted that from the beginning. Then the cloned/expanded SKB won't trigger the recycling. If that skb hits the free path first, we'll end up recycling the fragments eventually. If the original one goes first, we'll just unmap the page(s) and freeing the cloned one will free all the remaining buffers.
I *think* that should be fine. Effectively what we are doing is making it so that if the original skb is freed first the pages are released, and if it is released after the clone/expended skb then it can be recycled.
Exactly
The issue is we have to maintain it so that there will be exactly one caller of the recycling function for the pages. So any spot where we are updating skb->head we will have to see if there is a clone and if so we have to clear the pp_recycle flag on our skb so that it doesn't try to recycle the page frags as well.
Correct. I'll keep looking around in case there's something less fragile we can do
That is the risk to this kind of thing. We have to make the call once and only once and if we either miss it or call it too many times we can introduce some serious issues.
And I fully agree. Let me fix the obvious one now and I'll have a closer look on the recycling function it self. I can probably pick up the "changed head"/expanded SKB in the generic recycling code and refuse to recycle these packets. Then we'll just accept the fact that if those kind of packets are freed last, we won't recycle.
Thanks, that was a very nice catch /Ilias
Thanks.
- Alex