Re: [tracing] cd8f62b481: BUG:sleeping_function_called_from_invalid_context_at_mm/slab.h
From: Steven Rostedt
Date: Fri Apr 03 2020 - 09:16:48 EST
On Fri, 3 Apr 2020 15:47:02 +0900
Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > +#define STATIC_TEMP_BUF_SIZE 128
> > +static char static_temp_buf[STATIC_TEMP_BUF_SIZE];
> > +
> > /* Find the next real entry, without updating the iterator itself */
> > struct trace_entry *trace_find_next_entry(struct trace_iterator *iter,
> > int *ent_cpu, u64 *ent_ts)
> > @@ -3480,13 +3483,26 @@ struct trace_entry *trace_find_next_entry(struct trace_iterator *iter,
> > int ent_size = iter->ent_size;
> > struct trace_entry *entry;
> >
> > + /*
> > + * If called from ftrace_dump(), then the iter->temp buffer
> > + * will be the static_temp_buf and not created from kmalloc.
> > + * If the entry size is greater than the buffer, we can
> > + * not save it. Just return NULL in that case. This is only
> > + * used to add markers when two consecutive events' time
> > + * stamps have a large delta. See trace_print_lat_context()
> > + */
> > + if (iter->temp == static_temp_buf &&
> > + STATIC_TEMP_BUF_SIZE < ent_size)
> > + return NULL;
> > +
> > /*
> > * The __find_next_entry() may call peek_next_entry(), which may
> > * call ring_buffer_peek() that may make the contents of iter->ent
> > * undefined. Need to copy iter->ent now.
> > */
> > if (iter->ent && iter->ent != iter->temp) {
> > - if (!iter->temp || iter->temp_size < iter->ent_size) {
> > + if ((!iter->temp || iter->temp_size < iter->ent_size) &&
> > + !WARN_ON_ONCE(iter->temp == static_temp_buf)) {
>
> This must not happen because ent_size == iter->ent_size.
> If it happens, it should return NULL without any trial of kfree() and
> kmalloc(), becuase it will cause illegal freeing memory and memory leak.
> (Note that the iter->temp never be freed in ftrace_dump() path)
Correct, which is why there's a ! in there. It's a paranoid check which
should never trigger, which is why there's a WARN_ON_ONCE() there. But as
the "!" is not easy to see, the above is the same logic as:
if ((!iter->temp || iter->temp_size < iter->ent_size) &&
(iter->temp != static_temp_buf)) {
Thus, if we get to that test against static_temp_buf, and it's true, then
we will trigger the WARN_ON, but it wont call the kfree().
>
> Anyway, this condition is completery same as above return code.
>
> > kfree(iter->temp);
> > iter->temp = kmalloc(iter->ent_size, GFP_KERNEL);
> > if (!iter->temp)
> > @@ -9203,6 +9219,8 @@ void ftrace_dump(enum ftrace_dump_mode oops_dump_mode)
> >
> > /* Simulate the iterator */
> > trace_init_global_iter(&iter);
> > + /* Can not use kmalloc for iter.temp */
> > + iter.temp = static_temp_buf;
> >
>
> You may miss initializing temp_size here.
>
> iter.temp_size = STATIC_TEMP_BUF_SIZE;
Oh, damn! You're right.
>
> BTW, as I pointed, if the iter->temp is for avoiding the data overwritten
> by ringbuffer writer, would we need to use it for ftrace_dump() too?
> It seems that ftrace_dump() stops tracing.
Yes, it is still needed. That's because the old way use to just leave the
iter->ent pointing into the ring buffer itself. The new way, the ring
buffer makes a copy of the event, and passes that back. When you do another
read, it overwrites the copy. It doesn't matter if the ring buffer is
stopped or not.
-- Steve