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authorJeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>2012-07-11 17:09:35 +0400
committerGreg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>2012-07-29 19:04:18 +0400
commitc82cd13737cfab6cb9d1b31e624896e627f9c9e4 (patch)
treebf85c3373040be2cecfb9574575afb9a8aa1c950
parentf952e137849253c0584a60cc2d73a220d9a091f8 (diff)
downloadlinux-c82cd13737cfab6cb9d1b31e624896e627f9c9e4.tar.xz
cifs: on CONFIG_HIGHMEM machines, limit the rsize/wsize to the kmap space
commit 3ae629d98bd5ed77585a878566f04f310adbc591 upstream. We currently rely on being able to kmap all of the pages in an async read or write request. If you're on a machine that has CONFIG_HIGHMEM set then that kmap space is limited, sometimes to as low as 512 slots. With 512 slots, we can only support up to a 2M r/wsize, and that's assuming that we can get our greedy little hands on all of them. There are other users however, so it's possible we'll end up stuck with a size that large. Since we can't handle a rsize or wsize larger than that currently, cap those options at the number of kmap slots we have. We could consider capping it even lower, but we currently default to a max of 1M. Might as well allow those luddites on 32 bit arches enough rope to hang themselves. A more robust fix would be to teach the send and receive routines how to contend with an array of pages so we don't need to marshal up a kvec array at all. That's a fairly significant overhaul though, so we'll need this limit in place until that's ready. Reported-by: Jian Li <jiali@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Steve French <smfrench@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
-rw-r--r--fs/cifs/connect.c18
1 files changed, 18 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/fs/cifs/connect.c b/fs/cifs/connect.c
index 402fa0f9bc01..87ce8af1ce40 100644
--- a/fs/cifs/connect.c
+++ b/fs/cifs/connect.c
@@ -3348,6 +3348,18 @@ void cifs_setup_cifs_sb(struct smb_vol *pvolume_info,
#define CIFS_DEFAULT_NON_POSIX_RSIZE (60 * 1024)
#define CIFS_DEFAULT_NON_POSIX_WSIZE (65536)
+/*
+ * On hosts with high memory, we can't currently support wsize/rsize that are
+ * larger than we can kmap at once. Cap the rsize/wsize at
+ * LAST_PKMAP * PAGE_SIZE. We'll never be able to fill a read or write request
+ * larger than that anyway.
+ */
+#ifdef CONFIG_HIGHMEM
+#define CIFS_KMAP_SIZE_LIMIT (LAST_PKMAP * PAGE_CACHE_SIZE)
+#else /* CONFIG_HIGHMEM */
+#define CIFS_KMAP_SIZE_LIMIT (1<<24)
+#endif /* CONFIG_HIGHMEM */
+
static unsigned int
cifs_negotiate_wsize(struct cifs_tcon *tcon, struct smb_vol *pvolume_info)
{
@@ -3378,6 +3390,9 @@ cifs_negotiate_wsize(struct cifs_tcon *tcon, struct smb_vol *pvolume_info)
wsize = min_t(unsigned int, wsize,
server->maxBuf - sizeof(WRITE_REQ) + 4);
+ /* limit to the amount that we can kmap at once */
+ wsize = min_t(unsigned int, wsize, CIFS_KMAP_SIZE_LIMIT);
+
/* hard limit of CIFS_MAX_WSIZE */
wsize = min_t(unsigned int, wsize, CIFS_MAX_WSIZE);
@@ -3419,6 +3434,9 @@ cifs_negotiate_rsize(struct cifs_tcon *tcon, struct smb_vol *pvolume_info)
if (!(server->capabilities & CAP_LARGE_READ_X))
rsize = min_t(unsigned int, CIFSMaxBufSize, rsize);
+ /* limit to the amount that we can kmap at once */
+ rsize = min_t(unsigned int, rsize, CIFS_KMAP_SIZE_LIMIT);
+
/* hard limit of CIFS_MAX_RSIZE */
rsize = min_t(unsigned int, rsize, CIFS_MAX_RSIZE);