Calling is_huge_zero_folio(NULL) should not be legal - it makes no sense, and a different (theoretical) implementation may dereference the pointer. But currently, lacking any explicit documentation, this call is legal. But if somebody really passes NULL, the function should not return true - this isn't the huge zero folio after all! However, if the `huge_zero_folio` hasn't been allocated yet, it's NULL, and is_huge_zero_folio(NULL) just happens to return true, which is a lie. I believe this is a negligible corner case and I don't want to add any overhead for this; but in debugging kernels, it may be helpful to add this check, therefore I put it inside an `#ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_VM`. This weird side effect prevented me from reproducing a kernel crash that occurred when the elements of a folio_batch were NULL - since folios_put_refs() skips huge zero folios, this sometimes causes a crash, but sometimes does not. For debugging, it is better to reveal such bugs reliably and not hide them behind random preconditions like "has the huge zero folio already been created?" Signed-off-by: Max Kellermann --- include/linux/huge_mm.h | 7 ++++++- 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/include/linux/huge_mm.h b/include/linux/huge_mm.h index 7748489fde1b..e4c617c0b445 100644 --- a/include/linux/huge_mm.h +++ b/include/linux/huge_mm.h @@ -479,7 +479,12 @@ extern unsigned long huge_zero_pfn; static inline bool is_huge_zero_folio(const struct folio *folio) { - return READ_ONCE(huge_zero_folio) == folio; + const struct folio *hzf = READ_ONCE(huge_zero_folio); +#ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_VM + if (hzf == NULL) + return false; +#endif + return hzf == folio; } static inline bool is_huge_zero_pfn(unsigned long pfn) -- 2.47.2