[ Feh, forgot to attach the damned file. ]
Folks,
Attached is a module, hangcheck-timer. It is used to detect
when the system goes out to lunch for a period of time, such as when a
driver like qla2x00 udelays a bunch.
The module sets a timer. When the timer goes off, it then uses
the TSC (warning: portability needed) to determine how much real time
has passed.
On a normal system, the real elapsed time will be almost
identical to the expected timer duration. However, if a device decided
to udelay for 60 seconds (or some other circumstance), the module takes
notice. If the margin of error passes a threshold, the machine is
rebooted.
The module is currently used in a cluster environment. After
some time out to lunch, the rest of the cluster will have given up on a
machine. If the machine suddenly comes back and assumes it is still
"live", bad things can happen.
We can also see use for this in a debugging sense, for kernel
hangs as well as driver code. That's why I'm proposing it for general
inclusion.
Comments? Thoughts?
Joel
Building:
The module should happily build against most 2.4 kernels. The
usual module building compile line:
gcc -I /scratch/jlbec/kernel/linux-2.4.20-rc2/include \
-DMODULE -D__KERNEL__ -DLINUX -c -o hangcheck-timer.o \
hangcheck-timer.c
Running:
Load the module with insmod. There are two options.
"hangcheck_tick=<seconds>" specifies the timer timeout, and
"hangcheck_margin=<seconds" specifies the margin of error.
--"Friends may come and go, but enemies accumulate." - Thomas Jones
Joel Becker Senior Member of Technical Staff Oracle Corporation E-mail: joel.becker@oracle.com Phone: (650) 506-8127
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