[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Xen PVM: Strange lockups when running PostgreSQL load
On 17.10.2012 15:55, Ian Campbell wrote: > On Wed, 2012-10-17 at 14:28 +0100, Andrew Cooper wrote: >> In our case, certain processes were locking up, and it turned out that >> the kernel was issuing SCHOP_poll hypercalls (same the stack trace on >> your launchpad ticket) on its own spinlock IPI event channel >> (understandable, as its a spinlock), but with the event channel >> masked, so it would never wake up from the poll. > > I think (but you might want to check) that SCHEDOP_poll works (or is > supposed to work!) regardless of whether the specific evtchn you ask for > is masked or not. I was assuming it to be supposed to work at least in Xen 4.1.2. Or at least if it did not I would hope to catch VCPUs rather sitting on the hypercall than doing nothing. Of course I cannot say how reliable information in crash is as this is something new to do after Daniel fixed crash. > > The Linux PV spinlock implementation takes advantage of this because it > never wants to take a real interrupt from the spinlock poller evtchn. Right, I probably should have realized that. Though I guess it is still interesting to see whether the channel is pending. So when just recreating, I got the q and e info which is (assuming the guest domain is enough): (XEN) Event channel information for domain 1: (XEN) Polling vCPUs: {1,4,6} (XEN) port [p/m] (XEN) 1 [0/0]: s=3 n=0 d=0 p=68 x=0 (XEN) 2 [1/0]: s=3 n=0 d=0 p=69 x=0 (XEN) 3 [1/0]: s=5 n=0 v=0 x=0 (XEN) 4 [1/1]: s=6 n=0 x=0 (XEN) 5 [1/0]: s=6 n=0 x=0 (XEN) 6 [0/0]: s=6 n=0 x=0 (XEN) 7 [0/0]: s=5 n=0 v=1 x=0 (XEN) 8 [0/0]: s=6 n=0 x=0 (XEN) 9 [1/0]: s=5 n=1 v=0 x=0 (XEN) 10 [0/1]: s=6 n=1 x=0 (XEN) 11 [1/0]: s=6 n=1 x=0 (XEN) 12 [0/0]: s=6 n=1 x=0 (XEN) 13 [0/0]: s=5 n=1 v=1 x=0 (XEN) 14 [0/0]: s=6 n=1 x=0 (XEN) 15 [0/0]: s=5 n=2 v=0 x=0 (XEN) 16 [1/1]: s=6 n=2 x=0 (XEN) 17 [0/0]: s=6 n=2 x=0 (XEN) 18 [0/0]: s=6 n=2 x=0 (XEN) 19 [0/0]: s=5 n=2 v=1 x=0 (XEN) 20 [0/0]: s=6 n=2 x=0 (XEN) 21 [0/0]: s=5 n=3 v=0 x=0 (XEN) 22 [1/1]: s=6 n=3 x=0 (XEN) 23 [0/0]: s=6 n=3 x=0 (XEN) 24 [0/0]: s=6 n=3 x=0 (XEN) 25 [0/0]: s=5 n=3 v=1 x=0 (XEN) 26 [0/0]: s=6 n=3 x=0 (XEN) 27 [1/0]: s=5 n=4 v=0 x=0 (XEN) 28 [0/1]: s=6 n=4 x=0 (XEN) 29 [1/0]: s=6 n=4 x=0 (XEN) 30 [0/0]: s=6 n=4 x=0 (XEN) 31 [0/0]: s=5 n=4 v=1 x=0 (XEN) 32 [0/0]: s=6 n=4 x=0 (XEN) 33 [0/0]: s=5 n=5 v=0 x=0 (XEN) 34 [0/1]: s=6 n=5 x=0 (XEN) 35 [0/0]: s=6 n=5 x=0 (XEN) 36 [0/0]: s=6 n=5 x=0 (XEN) 37 [0/0]: s=5 n=5 v=1 x=0 (XEN) 38 [0/0]: s=6 n=5 x=0 (XEN) 39 [1/0]: s=5 n=6 v=0 x=0 (XEN) 40 [0/1]: s=6 n=6 x=0 (XEN) 41 [1/0]: s=6 n=6 x=0 (XEN) 42 [0/0]: s=6 n=6 x=0 (XEN) 43 [0/0]: s=5 n=6 v=1 x=0 (XEN) 44 [0/0]: s=6 n=6 x=0 (XEN) 45 [0/0]: s=5 n=7 v=0 x=0 (XEN) 46 [1/1]: s=6 n=7 x=0 (XEN) 47 [0/0]: s=6 n=7 x=0 (XEN) 48 [0/0]: s=6 n=7 x=0 (XEN) 49 [0/0]: s=5 n=7 v=1 x=0 (XEN) 50 [0/0]: s=6 n=7 x=0 (XEN) 51 [0/0]: s=3 n=7 d=0 p=70 x=0 (XEN) 52 [0/0]: s=3 n=0 d=0 p=71 x=0 (XEN) 53 [0/0]: s=3 n=0 d=0 p=72 x=0 (XEN) 54 [0/0]: s=3 n=0 d=0 p=73 x=0 (XEN) 55 [1/0]: s=3 n=0 d=0 p=74 x=0 [maybe someone can tell me what the s,n,d,p and x mean] (XEN) Rangesets belonging to domain 1: (XEN) I/O Ports { } (XEN) Interrupts { } (XEN) I/O Memory { } (XEN) Memory pages belonging to domain 1: (XEN) DomPage list too long to display (XEN) XenPage 00000000008000ab: caf=c000000000000002, taf=7400000000000002 (XEN) XenPage 00000000008000aa: caf=c000000000000002, taf=7400000000000002 (XEN) XenPage 00000000008000a9: caf=c000000000000002, taf=7400000000000002 (XEN) XenPage 00000000008000a8: caf=c000000000000001, taf=7400000000000001 (XEN) XenPage 00000000000dfae4: caf=c000000000000002, taf=7400000000000002 (XEN) VCPU information and callbacks for domain 1: (XEN) VCPU0: CPU3 [has=T] flags=0 poll=0 upcall_pend = 01, upcall_mask = 01 dirty_cpus={3} cpu_affinity={0-127} (XEN) No periodic timer (XEN) VCPU1: CPU7 [has=F] flags=1 poll=10 upcall_pend = 01, upcall_mask = 01 dirty_cpus={} cpu_affinity={0-127} (XEN) No periodic timer (XEN) VCPU2: CPU4 [has=F] flags=1 poll=0 upcall_pend = 00, upcall_mask = 00 dirty_cpus={} cpu_affinity={0-127} (XEN) No periodic timer (XEN) VCPU3: CPU5 [has=F] flags=1 poll=0 upcall_pend = 00, upcall_mask = 00 dirty_cpus={} cpu_affinity={0-127} (XEN) No periodic timer (XEN) VCPU4: CPU6 [has=F] flags=1 poll=28 upcall_pend = 01, upcall_mask = 01 dirty_cpus={} cpu_affinity={0-127} (XEN) No periodic timer (XEN) VCPU5: CPU7 [has=F] flags=1 poll=0 upcall_pend = 00, upcall_mask = 00 dirty_cpus={7} cpu_affinity={0-127} (XEN) No periodic timer (XEN) VCPU6: CPU0 [has=F] flags=1 poll=40 upcall_pend = 01, upcall_mask = 01 dirty_cpus={} cpu_affinity={0-127} (XEN) No periodic timer (XEN) VCPU7: CPU6 [has=T] flags=0 poll=0 upcall_pend = 00, upcall_mask = 01 dirty_cpus={6} cpu_affinity={0-127} (XEN) No periodic timer (XEN) Notifying guest 0:0 (virq 1, port 5, stat 0/0/0) (XEN) Notifying guest 0:1 (virq 1, port 11, stat 0/0/0) (XEN) Notifying guest 0:2 (virq 1, port 17, stat 0/0/0) (XEN) Notifying guest 0:3 (virq 1, port 23, stat 0/0/0) (XEN) Notifying guest 0:4 (virq 1, port 29, stat 0/0/0) (XEN) Notifying guest 0:5 (virq 1, port 35, stat 0/0/0) (XEN) Notifying guest 0:6 (virq 1, port 41, stat 0/0/0) (XEN) Notifying guest 0:7 (virq 1, port 47, stat 0/0/0) (XEN) Notifying guest 1:0 (virq 1, port 7, stat 0/0/-1) (XEN) Notifying guest 1:1 (virq 1, port 13, stat 0/0/-1) (XEN) Notifying guest 1:2 (virq 1, port 19, stat 0/0/0) (XEN) Notifying guest 1:3 (virq 1, port 25, stat 0/0/0) (XEN) Notifying guest 1:4 (virq 1, port 31, stat 0/0/-1) (XEN) Notifying guest 1:5 (virq 1, port 37, stat 0/0/0) (XEN) Notifying guest 1:6 (virq 1, port 43, stat 0/0/-1) (XEN) Notifying guest 1:7 (virq 1, port 49, stat 0/0/0) When the guest was unresponsive the console would still show: [10174.372092] INFO: rcu_sched detected stalls on CPUs/tasks: { 0 1} (detected by 4, t=15002 jiffies) [10284.448089] INFO: rcu_bh detected stalls on CPUs/tasks: { 0 1 4 6} (detected by 5, t=15004 jiffies) in a repeating pattern. So I take the above as cpus 1,4 and 6 are polling. From the dump and the content of lock_spinners I get: cpu 0 and 1 -> ffff8803bfc13700 (which is runqueue[0] and is unlocked again) cpu 4 and 6 -> ffffffff81f15ef0 (which is blkif_io_lock and is locked) Backtraces would be somewhat inconsistent (as always). Note, I should mention that I still had a kernel with my patch applied on that guest. That changes things a bit (actually it takes a bit longer to hang but again that might be just a matter of timing). The strange lock state of 2 spinners on an unlocked lock remains the same with or without it. One question about the patch actually, would anybody think that there could be a case where the unlocking cpu has itself on the spinners list? I did not think so but that might be wrong. > > The IRQ handler for the spinlock evtchn in Linux is: > static irqreturn_t dummy_handler(int irq, void *dev_id) > { > BUG(); > return IRQ_HANDLED; > } > > and right after we register it: > disable_irq(irq); /* make sure it's never delivered */ > > The is no enable -- ignoring bugs of which there have been couple of > instances, but those trigger the BUG() so are pretty obvious. > > Ian. > > Attachment:
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