XFS leaves stray mappings around when it vmaps memory to make it
virtually contigious. This upsets Xen if one of those pages is being
recycled into a pagetable, since it finds an extra writable mapping of
the page.
This patch solves the problem in a brute force way, by making XFS
always eagerly unmap its mappings. David Chinner says this shouldn't
have any performance impact on filesystems with default block sizes;
it will only affect filesystems with large block sizes.
Signed-off-by: Jeremy Fitzhardinge <jeremy@xensource.com>
Acked-by: David Chinner <dgc@sgi.com>
Cc: Nick Piggin <nickpiggin@yahoo.com.au>
Cc: XFS masters <xfs-masters@oss.sgi.com>
Cc: Stable kernel <stable@kernel.org>
Cc: Morten =?utf-8?q?B=C3=B8geskov?= <xen-users@morten.bogeskov.dk>
Cc: Mark Williamson <mark.williamson@cl.cam.ac.uk>
{
a_list_t *aentry;
+#ifdef CONFIG_XEN
+ /*
+ * Xen needs to be able to make sure it can get an exclusive
+ * RO mapping of pages it wants to turn into a pagetable. If
+ * a newly allocated page is also still being vmap()ed by xfs,
+ * it will cause pagetable construction to fail. This is a
+ * quick workaround to always eagerly unmap pages so that Xen
+ * is happy.
+ */
+ vunmap(addr);
+ return;
+#endif
+
aentry = kmalloc(sizeof(a_list_t), GFP_NOWAIT);
if (likely(aentry)) {
spin_lock(&as_lock);