Re: [debug PATCHes] Re: smp_call_function_single lockups

From: Chris J Arges
Date: Tue Mar 31 2015 - 18:38:44 EST


On Tue, Mar 31, 2015 at 12:56:56PM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote:
>
> * Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > Ok, interesting. So the whole "we try to do an APIC ACK with the ISR
> > bit clear" seems to be a real issue.
>
> It's interesting in particular when it happens with an edge-triggered
> interrupt source: it's much harder to miss level triggered IRQs, which
> stay around until actively handled. Edge triggered irqs are more
> fragile to loss of event processing.
>
> > > Anyway, maybe this sheds some more light on this issue. I can
> > > reproduce this at will, so let me know of other experiments to do.
>
> Btw., could you please describe (again) what your current best method
> for reproduction is? It's been a long discussion ...
>

Ingo,

To set this up, I've done the following on a Xeon E5620 / Xeon E312xx machine
( Although I've heard of others that have reproduced on other machines. )

1) Create an L1 KVM VM with 2 vCPUs (single vCPU case doesn't reproduce)
2) Create an L2 KVM VM inside the L1 VM with 1 vCPU
3) Add the following to the L1 cmdline:
nmi_watchdog=panic hung_task_panic=1 softlockup_panic=1 unknown_nmi_panic
3) Run something like 'stress -c 1 -m 1 -d 1 -t 1200' inside the L2 VM

Sometimes this is sufficient to reproduce the issue, I've observed that running
KSM in the L1 VM can agitate this issue (it calls native_flush_tlb_others).
If this doesn't reproduce then you can do the following:
4) Migrate the L2 vCPU randomly (via virsh vcpupin --live OR tasksel) between
L1 vCPUs until the hang occurs.

I attempted to write a module that used smp_call_function_single calls to
trigger IPIs but have been unable to create a more simple reproducer.

> > Somebody else who knows the apic needs to also take a look, but I'd
> > love to hear what the actual hardware interrupt is (from that
> > "vector_irq[vector]" thing above.
> >
> > I'm not recognizing 0xe1 as any of the hardcoded SMP vectors (they
> > are 0xf0-0xff), so it sounds like an external one. But that then
> > requires the whole mapping table thing.
> >
> > Ingo/Peter/Jiang - is there anything else useful we could print out?
> > I worry about the irq movement code. Can we add printk's to when an
> > irq is chasing from one CPU to another and doing that
> > "move_in_progress" thing? I've always been scared of that code.
>
> 1)
>
> So the irq_cfg::move_in_progress field originates from:
>
> 610142927b5b ("[PATCH] x86_64 irq: Safely cleanup an irq after moving it.")
>
> and I agree that it looks fragile, so it would be nice to see how much
> (if at all?) it gets used, by sticking a few pr_info()s in it.
>
> Debug patch for the vector movement state machine attached below.
> Untested.
>
> 2)
>
> But ... having taken a quick look at the vector movement handling, I
> am scared more than ever,and I cannot convince myself that it's race
> free. It's possibly harmless, but still, famous last words ...
>
> For example, most ->move_in_progress transitions happen with the
> vector_lock held - with the exception of send_cleanup_vector(): there
> we are only holding the desc->lock, but that's not enough! For
> example, this codepath:
>
> static void __irq_complete_move(struct irq_cfg *cfg, unsigned vector)
> {
> unsigned me;
>
> if (likely(!cfg->move_in_progress))
> return;
>
> me = smp_processor_id();
>
> if (vector == cfg->vector && cpumask_test_cpu(me, cfg->domain))
> send_cleanup_vector(cfg);
>
> ...
>
> void send_cleanup_vector(struct irq_cfg *cfg)
> {
> ...
>
> cfg->move_in_progress = 0;
> }
>
> is blatantly racy, unless I missed something obvious?
>
> 2b)
>
> Initially I thought this only affects slowpaths like driver unregister
> or CPU hotplug, but I think this would be relevant for the fastpath of
> edge triggered irqs as well:
>
> void apic_ack_edge(struct irq_data *data)
> {
> irq_complete_move(irqd_cfg(data));
> irq_move_irq(data);
> ack_APIC_irq();
> }
>
> and irq_complete_move() checks and clears cfg->move_in_progress as
> listed above.
>
> So in most scenarios this is probably harmless, because it can in the
> worst case result in the missing of a ->move_in_progress flag setting.
>
> But it does not look harmless in the apic_set_affinity() code path:
> there we call into assign_irq_vector() without the desc->lock held,
> due to this gem in the IRQ core:
>
> int irq_set_affinity_hint(unsigned int irq, const struct cpumask *m)
> {
> unsigned long flags;
> struct irq_desc *desc = irq_get_desc_lock(irq, &flags, IRQ_GET_DESC_CHECK_GLOBAL);
>
> if (!desc)
> return -EINVAL;
> desc->affinity_hint = m;
> irq_put_desc_unlock(desc, flags);
> /* set the initial affinity to prevent every interrupt being on CPU0 */
> if (m)
> __irq_set_affinity(irq, m, false);
> return 0;
> }
>
> argh!
>
> Now if this ever crosses path with an assign_irq_vector() call on
> another CPU, then I really cannot see what would save us from deep
> trouble: we use cfg->vector while that is possibly being modified,
> right?
>
> So I'd suggest to put a printk into irq_set_affinity_hint() as well,
> to make sure it's not used during this test. In particular:
>
> drivers/virtio/virtio_pci_common.c: irq_set_affinity_hint(irq, NULL);
> drivers/virtio/virtio_pci_common.c: irq_set_affinity_hint(irq, mask);
>
> might be triggering it in the virtualization code...
>
> The second patch below adds the relevant pr_info(). (untested)
>
> Now this too might be unrelated, because the affinity hint was added
> ages ago, in:
>
> e7a297b0d7d6 ("genirq: Add CPU mask affinity hint")
>
> and the potentially racy nature of calling into set_affinity without
> the desc lock held was probably not realized back then.
>
> VirtIO's use of the affinity-hint was added a while ago as well, four
> years ago, in:
>
> 75a0a52be3c2 ("virtio: introduce an API to set affinity for a virtqueue")
>
> 2c)
>
> The other thing that worries me here is that we apparently send an
> IRQ-move IPI while having an un-acked local APIC (!). I have vague
> memories that this was problematic and fragile before.
>
> To ease my worries in this area I've attached a third patch below that
> changes the order around.
>
> This too is ancient behavior - but might be more prominent on certain
> hardware (and virtualization) variants, so it has a chance to be
> relevant.
>
> 3)
>
> Furthermore, I also noticed that the whole vector_lock()/unlock()
> business is actively misleading IMHO, the vector_lock looks local to
> vector.c, while we have these two calls that essentially export it ...
>
> Some of that damage was inflicted in this ancient commit:
>
> d388e5fdc461 ("x86: Restore proper vector locking during cpu hotplug")
>
> the proper approach would be to protect against hotplug events in
> assign_irq_vector(), not the other way around!
>
> Probably not a functional problem, yet somewhat disgusting.
>
> -------------------------------
>
> So ... all in one, these various problems might be related to the
> regression or not, but they sure need addressing.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Ingo
>

I've merged the below patch with Linus' patch here:
https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/3/31/955

This was only tested only on the L1, so I can put this on the L0 host and run
this as well. The results:

[ 124.897002] apic: vector c1, new-domain move in progress
[ 124.954827] apic: vector d1, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 163.477270] apic: vector d1, new-domain move in progress
[ 164.041938] apic: vector e1, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 213.466971] apic: vector e1, new-domain move in progress
[ 213.775639] apic: vector 22, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 365.996747] apic: vector 22, new-domain move in progress
[ 366.011136] apic: vector 42, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 393.836032] apic: vector 42, new-domain move in progress
[ 393.837727] apic: vector 52, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 454.977514] apic: vector 52, new-domain move in progress
[ 454.978880] apic: vector 62, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 467.055730] apic: vector 62, new-domain move in progress
[ 467.058129] apic: vector 72, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 545.280125] apic: vector 72, new-domain move in progress
[ 545.282801] apic: vector 82, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 567.631652] apic: vector 82, new-domain move in progress
[ 567.632207] apic: vector 92, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 628.940638] apic: vector 92, new-domain move in progress
[ 628.965274] apic: vector a2, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 635.187433] apic: vector a2, new-domain move in progress
[ 635.191643] apic: vector b2, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 673.548020] apic: vector b2, new-domain move in progress
[ 673.553843] apic: vector c2, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 688.221906] apic: vector c2, new-domain move in progress
[ 688.229487] apic: vector d2, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 723.818916] apic: vector d2, new-domain move in progress
[ 723.828970] apic: vector e2, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 733.485435] apic: vector e2, new-domain move in progress
[ 733.615007] apic: vector 23, sent cleanup vector, move completed
[ 824.092036] NMI watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#0 stuck for 22s! [ksmd:26]

Thanks,
--chris j arges

> diff --git a/arch/x86/kernel/apic/vector.c b/arch/x86/kernel/apic/vector.c
> index 6cedd7914581..1dd1de9dd690 100644
> --- a/arch/x86/kernel/apic/vector.c
> +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/apic/vector.c
> @@ -143,6 +143,8 @@ __assign_irq_vector(int irq, struct irq_cfg *cfg, const struct cpumask *mask)
> cpumask_andnot(cfg->old_domain, cfg->domain, tmp_mask);
> cfg->move_in_progress =
> cpumask_intersects(cfg->old_domain, cpu_online_mask);
> + if (cfg->move_in_progress)
> + pr_info("apic: vector %02x, same-domain move in progress\n", cfg->vector);
> cpumask_and(cfg->domain, cfg->domain, tmp_mask);
> break;
> }
> @@ -178,6 +180,8 @@ __assign_irq_vector(int irq, struct irq_cfg *cfg, const struct cpumask *mask)
> cpumask_copy(cfg->old_domain, cfg->domain);
> cfg->move_in_progress =
> cpumask_intersects(cfg->old_domain, cpu_online_mask);
> + if (cfg->move_in_progress)
> + pr_info("apic: vector %02x, new-domain move in progress\n", cfg->vector);
> }
> for_each_cpu_and(new_cpu, tmp_mask, cpu_online_mask)
> per_cpu(vector_irq, new_cpu)[vector] = irq;
> @@ -232,6 +236,7 @@ void clear_irq_vector(int irq, struct irq_cfg *cfg)
> }
> }
> cfg->move_in_progress = 0;
> + pr_info("apic: vector %02x, vector cleared, move completed\n", cfg->vector);
> raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&vector_lock, flags);
> }
>
> @@ -391,6 +396,7 @@ void send_cleanup_vector(struct irq_cfg *cfg)
> free_cpumask_var(cleanup_mask);
> }
> cfg->move_in_progress = 0;
> + pr_info("apic: vector %02x, sent cleanup vector, move completed\n", cfg->vector);
> }
>
> asmlinkage __visible void smp_irq_move_cleanup_interrupt(void)
>
> diff --git a/kernel/irq/manage.c b/kernel/irq/manage.c
> index c0a1100d911f..18300a7b8ed2 100644
> --- a/kernel/irq/manage.c
> +++ b/kernel/irq/manage.c
> @@ -250,8 +250,10 @@ int irq_set_affinity_hint(unsigned int irq, const struct cpumask *m)
> desc->affinity_hint = m;
> irq_put_desc_unlock(desc, flags);
> /* set the initial affinity to prevent every interrupt being on CPU0 */
> - if (m)
> + if (m) {
> + pr_info("irq/core: Called irq_set_affinity_hint(%d)\n", irq);
> __irq_set_affinity(irq, m, false);
> + }
> return 0;
> }
> EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(irq_set_affinity_hint);
>
> diff --git a/arch/x86/kernel/apic/vector.c b/arch/x86/kernel/apic/vector.c
> index 6cedd7914581..833a981c5420 100644
> --- a/arch/x86/kernel/apic/vector.c
> +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/apic/vector.c
> @@ -335,9 +340,11 @@ int apic_retrigger_irq(struct irq_data *data)
>
> void apic_ack_edge(struct irq_data *data)
> {
> + ack_APIC_irq();
> +
> + /* Might generate IPIs, so do this after having ACKed the APIC: */
> irq_complete_move(irqd_cfg(data));
> irq_move_irq(data);
> - ack_APIC_irq();
> }
>
> /*
>
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