From: Artem Bityutskiy <dedekind1@gmail.com>
To: Johns Daniel <johns.daniel@gmail.com>
Cc: linux-mtd@lists.infradead.org
Subject: Re: Slab memory leak in JFFS2 filesystems
Date: Fri, 25 Feb 2011 18:27:58 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1298651278.2346.2.camel@koala> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <AANLkTimvqdu1k3ZL4rqC-DBiMkNmytBXZ1YWXNE0Gs6F@mail.gmail.com>
On Fri, 2011-02-25 at 10:12 -0600, Johns Daniel wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 6:38 AM, Artem Bityutskiy <dedekind1@gmail.com> wrote:
> > On Thu, 2011-02-24 at 18:41 -0600, Johns Daniel wrote:
> >> I have discovered a kernel memory leak associated with JFFS2
> >> filesystems. I have verified the leak in kernels 2.6.28 and 2.6.36 on
> >> a Freescale PowerPC board using this script:
> >>
> >> while :; do FN=$(mktemp /jffs2fs/TMP.XXXXXXXX); \
> >> cat /proc/slabinfo |grep "dentry\|size-64 "; sleep 1; /bin/rm $FN; done
> >
> > Please, check whether they go away after:
> >
> > echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
> >
> > See Documentation/sysctl/vm.txt for more information about what this
> > means.
>
> Thanks for that suggestion, Artem! Here is what I tried:
Hi, you can try to play with kmemleak - this is a kernel feature which
slows down the system a lot but is great in catching memory leaks. It
may have false positives sometimes, though. You can read about kmemleak
in the Documentation/ directory. I think if there are leaks in JFFS2 -
kmemleak would spot them.
--
Best Regards,
Artem Bityutskiy (Битюцкий Артём)
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2011-02-25 16:28 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 6+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2011-02-25 0:41 Slab memory leak in JFFS2 filesystems Johns Daniel
2011-02-25 12:38 ` Artem Bityutskiy
2011-02-25 16:12 ` Johns Daniel
2011-02-25 16:27 ` Artem Bityutskiy [this message]
2011-02-25 17:11 ` Johns Daniel
2011-02-28 13:46 ` Artem Bityutskiy
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