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* netconsole problems
@ 2007-10-04 17:59 Tina Yang
  2007-10-05  0:27 ` Matt Mackall
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Tina Yang @ 2007-10-04 17:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Matt Mackall, netdev

We recently run into a few problems with netconsole
in at least 2.6.9, 2.6.18 and 2.6.23.  It either panicked
at netdevice.h:890 or hung the system, and sometimes depending
on which NIC we are using, the following console message,
 e1000:
      "e1000: eth0: e1000_clean_tx_irq: Detected Tx Unit Hang"
 tg3:
      "NETDEV WATCHDOG: eth4: transmit timed out"
      "tg3: eth4: transmit timed out, resetting"

The postmortem vmcore analysis indicated race between normal
network stack (net_rx_action) and netpoll, and disabling the
following code segment cures all the problems.

netpoll.c
    178         /* Process pending work on NIC */
    179         np->dev->poll_controller(np->dev);
    180         if (np->dev->poll)
    181                 poll_napi(np);

Big or small, there seems to be several race windows in the code,
and fixing them probably has consequence on overall system performance.
Maybe this code should only run when the machine is single-threaded ?
Suggestions ?  Thanks.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: netconsole problems
  2007-10-04 17:59 netconsole problems Tina Yang
@ 2007-10-05  0:27 ` Matt Mackall
  2007-10-05  1:22   ` Tina Yang
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Matt Mackall @ 2007-10-05  0:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tina Yang; +Cc: netdev

On Thu, Oct 04, 2007 at 10:59:38AM -0700, Tina Yang wrote:
> We recently run into a few problems with netconsole
> in at least 2.6.9, 2.6.18 and 2.6.23.  It either panicked
> at netdevice.h:890 or hung the system, and sometimes depending
> on which NIC we are using, the following console message,
> e1000:
>      "e1000: eth0: e1000_clean_tx_irq: Detected Tx Unit Hang"
> tg3:
>      "NETDEV WATCHDOG: eth4: transmit timed out"
>      "tg3: eth4: transmit timed out, resetting"
> 
> The postmortem vmcore analysis indicated race between normal
> network stack (net_rx_action) and netpoll, and disabling the
> following code segment cures all the problems.

That doesn't tell us much. Can you provide any more details? Like the
call chains on both sides?
 
> netpoll.c
>    178         /* Process pending work on NIC */
>    179         np->dev->poll_controller(np->dev);
>    180         if (np->dev->poll)
>    181                 poll_napi(np);

There are a couple different places this gets called, and for
different reasons. If we have a -large- netconsole dump (like
sysrq-t), we'll swallow up all of our SKB pool and may get stuck waiting
for the NIC to send them (because it's waiting to hand packets back to
the kernel and has no free buffers for outgoing packets).

> Big or small, there seems to be several race windows in the code,
> and fixing them probably has consequence on overall system performance.

Yes, the networking layer goes to great lengths to avoid having any
locking in its fast paths and we don't want to undo any of that
effort.

> Maybe this code should only run when the machine is single-threaded ?

In the not-very-distant future, such machines will be extremely rare.

-- 
Mathematics is the supreme nostalgia of our time.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: netconsole problems
  2007-10-05  0:27 ` Matt Mackall
@ 2007-10-05  1:22   ` Tina Yang
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Tina Yang @ 2007-10-05  1:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Matt Mackall; +Cc: netdev

Matt Mackall wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 04, 2007 at 10:59:38AM -0700, Tina Yang wrote:
>   
>> We recently run into a few problems with netconsole
>> in at least 2.6.9, 2.6.18 and 2.6.23.  It either panicked
>> at netdevice.h:890 or hung the system, and sometimes depending
>> on which NIC we are using, the following console message,
>> e1000:
>>      "e1000: eth0: e1000_clean_tx_irq: Detected Tx Unit Hang"
>> tg3:
>>      "NETDEV WATCHDOG: eth4: transmit timed out"
>>      "tg3: eth4: transmit timed out, resetting"
>>
>> The postmortem vmcore analysis indicated race between normal
>> network stack (net_rx_action) and netpoll, and disabling the
>> following code segment cures all the problems.
>>     
>
> That doesn't tell us much. Can you provide any more details? Like the
> call chains on both sides?
>   
       I've filed a bug with details, 
http://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=9124
       Basically for 2.6.9, tg3_poll from net_rx_action had panicked 
because
        __LINK_STATE_RX_SCHED is not set, and the net_device from the vmcore
       showed the device is not on any of the per_cpu poll_list at the time.
       For 2.6.18, same crash, however, the net_device showed the dev is 
on one
       poll_list.  The discrepancy between the two crashes can be 
explained as follows,
       1) netpoll on cpu0 called dev->poll(), removed the dev from the 
list and enabled the interrupt
       2) net_rx_action on cpu1 called dev->poll() again, panicked on 
removing the dev from the list
       3) interrupt delivered to, say cpu2, and scheduled the device again

       Because of the race, it could result in a condition where you 
could have more than
       one cpu deal with interrupt (hw or soft) from the same device at 
the same time ?
     
>  
>   
>> netpoll.c
>>    178         /* Process pending work on NIC */
>>    179         np->dev->poll_controller(np->dev);
>>    180         if (np->dev->poll)
>>    181                 poll_napi(np);
>>     
>
> There are a couple different places this gets called, and for
> different reasons. If we have a -large- netconsole dump (like
> sysrq-t), we'll swallow up all of our SKB pool and may get stuck waiting
> for the NIC to send them (because it's waiting to hand packets back to
> the kernel and has no free buffers for outgoing packets).
>
>   
       But the softirq will process and free them ?  The problem is the 
poll_list
       is in a per_cpu structure, shouldn't be manipulated by another 
cpu where
       netpoll is running.
>> Big or small, there seems to be several race windows in the code,
>> and fixing them probably has consequence on overall system performance.
>>     
>
> Yes, the networking layer goes to great lengths to avoid having any
> locking in its fast paths and we don't want to undo any of that
> effort.
>
>   
>> Maybe this code should only run when the machine is single-threaded ?
>>     
>
> In the not-very-distant future, such machines will be extremely rare.
>
>   
       I meant the special case such as in crash mode.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

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2007-10-04 17:59 netconsole problems Tina Yang
2007-10-05  0:27 ` Matt Mackall
2007-10-05  1:22   ` Tina Yang

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