Re: INFO: rcu detected stall in ext4_write_checks
From: Paul E. McKenney
Date: Sun Jul 14 2019 - 14:49:25 EST
On Sun, Jul 14, 2019 at 05:48:00PM +0300, Dmitry Vyukov wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 7, 2019 at 4:17 AM Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > > > I suppose RCU could take the dueling-banjos approach and use increasingly
> > > > > aggressive scheduler policies itself, up to and including SCHED_DEADLINE,
> > > > > until it started getting decent forward progress. However, that
> > > > > sounds like the something that just might have unintended consequences,
> > > > > particularly if other kernel subsystems were to also play similar
> > > > > games of dueling banjos.
> > > >
> > > > So long as the RCU threads are well-behaved, using SCHED_DEADLINE
> > > > shouldn't have much of an impact on the system --- and the scheduling
> > > > parameters that you can specify on SCHED_DEADLINE allows you to
> > > > specify the worst-case impact on the system while also guaranteeing
> > > > that the SCHED_DEADLINE tasks will urn in the first place. After all,
> > > > that's the whole point of SCHED_DEADLINE.
> > > >
> > > > So I wonder if the right approach is during the the first userspace
> > > > system call to shced_setattr to enable a (any) real-time priority
> > > > scheduler (SCHED_DEADLINE, SCHED_FIFO or SCHED_RR) on a userspace
> > > > thread, before that's allowed to proceed, the RCU kernel threads are
> > > > promoted to be SCHED_DEADLINE with appropriately set deadline
> > > > parameters. That way, a root user won't be able to shoot the system
> > > > in the foot, and since the vast majority of the time, there shouldn't
> > > > be any processes running with real-time priorities, we won't be
> > > > changing the behavior of a normal server system.
> > >
> > > It might well be. However, running the RCU kthreads at real-time
> > > priority does not come for free. For example, it tends to crank up the
> > > context-switch rate.
> > >
> > > Plus I have taken several runs at computing SCHED_DEADLINE parameters,
> > > but things like the rcuo callback-offload threads have computational
> > > requirements that are controlled not by RCU, and not just by the rest of
> > > the kernel, but also by userspace (keeping in mind the example of opening
> > > and closing a file in a tight loop, each pass of which queues a callback).
> > > I suspect that RCU is not the only kernel subsystem whose computational
> > > requirements are set not by the subsystem, but rather by external code.
> > >
> > > OK, OK, I suppose I could just set insanely large SCHED_DEADLINE
> > > parameters, following syzkaller's example, and then trust my ability to
> > > keep the RCU code from abusing the resulting awesome power. But wouldn't
> > > a much nicer approach be to put SCHED_DEADLINE between SCHED_RR/SCHED_FIFO
> > > priorities 98 and 99 or some such? Then the same (admittedly somewhat
> > > scary) result could be obtained much more simply via SCHED_FIFO or
> > > SCHED_RR priority 99.
> > >
> > > Some might argue that this is one of those situations where simplicity
> > > is not necessarily an advantage, but then again, you can find someone
> > > who will complain about almost anything. ;-)
> > >
> > > > (I suspect there might be some audio applications that might try to
> > > > set real-time priorities, but for desktop systems, it's probably more
> > > > important that the system not tie its self into knots since the
> > > > average desktop user isn't going to be well equipped to debug the
> > > > problem.)
> > >
> > > Not only that, but if core counts continue to increase, and if reliance
> > > on cloud computing continues to grow, there are going to be an increasing
> > > variety of mixed workloads in increasingly less-controlled environments.
> > >
> > > So, yes, it would be good to solve this problem in some reasonable way.
> > >
> > > I don't see this as urgent just yet, but I am sure you all will let
> > > me know if I am mistaken on that point.
> > >
> > > > > Alternatively, is it possible to provide stricter admission control?
> > > >
> > > > I think that's an orthogonal issue; better admission control would be
> > > > nice, but it looks to me that it's going to be fundamentally an issue
> > > > of tweaking hueristics, and a fool-proof solution that will protect
> > > > against all malicious userspace applications (including syzkaller) is
> > > > going to require solving the halting problem. So while it would be
> > > > nice to improve the admission control, I don't think that's a going to
> > > > be a general solution.
> > >
> > > Agreed, and my earlier point about the need to trust the coding abilities
> > > of those writing ultimate-priority code is all too consistent with your
> > > point about needing to solve the halting problem. Nevertheless, I believe
> > > that we could make something that worked reasonably well in practice.
> > >
> > > Here are a few components of a possible solution, in practice, but
> > > of course not in theory:
> > >
> > > 1. We set limits to SCHED_DEADLINE parameters, perhaps novel ones.
> > > For one example, insist on (say) 10 milliseconds of idle time
> > > every second on each CPU. Yes, you can configure beyond that
> > > given sufficient permissions, but if you do so, you just voided
> > > your warranty.
> > >
> > > 2. Only allow SCHED_DEADLINE on nohz_full CPUs. (Partial solution,
> > > given that such a CPU might be running in the kernel or have
> > > more than one runnable task. Just for fun, I will suggest the
> > > option of disabling SCHED_DEADLINE during such times.)
> > >
> > > 3. RCU detects slowdowns, and does something TBD to increase its
> > > priority, but only while the slowdown persists. This likely
> > > relies on scheduling-clock interrupts to detect the slowdowns,
> > > so there might be additional challenges on a fully nohz_full
> > > system.
> >
> > 4. SCHED_DEADLINE treats the other three scheduling classes as each
> > having a period, deadline, and a modest CPU consumption budget
> > for the members of the class in aggregate. But this has to have
> > been discussed before. How did that go?
> >
> > > 5. Your idea here.
>
> Trying to digest this thread.
>
> Do I understand correctly that setting rcutree.kthread_prio=99 won't
> help because the deadline priority is higher?
> And there are no other existing mechanisms to either fix the stalls
> nor make kernel reject the non well-behaving parameters? Kernel tries
> to filter out non well-behaving parameters, but the check detects only
> obvious misconfigurations, right?
> This reminds of priority inversion/inheritance problem. I wonder if
> there are other kernel subsystems that suffer from the same problem.
> E.g. the background kernel thread that destroys net namespaces and any
> other type of async work. A high prio user process can overload the
> queue and make kernel eat all memory. May be relatively easy to do
> even unintentionally. I suspect the problem is not specific to rcu and
> plumbing just rcu may just make the next problem pop up.
> Should user be able to starve basic kernel services? User should be
> able to prioritize across user processes (potentially in radical
> ways), but perhaps it should not be able to badly starve kernel
> functions that just happened to be asynchronous? I guess it's not as
> simple as setting the highest prio for all kernel threads because in
> normal case we want to reduce latency of user work by making the work
> async. But user must not be able to starve kernel threads
> infinitely... sounds like something similar to the deadline scheduling
> -- kernel threads need to get at least some time slice per unit of
> time.
As I understand it, there is provision for giving other threads slack
time even in SCHED_DEADLINE, but the timing of that slack time depends
on the other tasks' SCHED_DEADLINE settings. And RCU's kthreads do
need some response time: Optimally a few milliseconds, preferably about
a hundred milliseconds, but definitely a second. With the huge cycle
time specified, RCU might not get that.
And yes, I suspect that RCU is not the only thing in the system needing
a little CPU time fairly frequently, for some ill-defined notion of
"fairly frequently".
> But short term I don't see any other solution than stop testing
> sched_setattr because it does not check arguments enough to prevent
> system misbehavior. Which is a pity because syzkaller has found some
> bad misconfigurations that were oversight on checking side.
> Any other suggestions?
Keep the times down to a few seconds? Of course, that might also
fail to find interesting bugs.
Thanx, Paul