| Using RCU's CPU Stall Detector |
| |
| This document first discusses what sorts of issues RCU's CPU stall |
| detector can locate, and then discusses kernel parameters and Kconfig |
| options that can be used to fine-tune the detector's operation. Finally, |
| this document explains the stall detector's "splat" format. |
| |
| |
| What Causes RCU CPU Stall Warnings? |
| |
| So your kernel printed an RCU CPU stall warning. The next question is |
| "What caused it?" The following problems can result in RCU CPU stall |
| warnings: |
| |
| o A CPU looping in an RCU read-side critical section. |
| |
| o A CPU looping with interrupts disabled. |
| |
| o A CPU looping with preemption disabled. |
| |
| o A CPU looping with bottom halves disabled. |
| |
| o For !CONFIG_PREEMPT kernels, a CPU looping anywhere in the kernel |
| without invoking schedule(). If the looping in the kernel is |
| really expected and desirable behavior, you might need to add |
| some calls to cond_resched(). |
| |
| o Booting Linux using a console connection that is too slow to |
| keep up with the boot-time console-message rate. For example, |
| a 115Kbaud serial console can be -way- too slow to keep up |
| with boot-time message rates, and will frequently result in |
| RCU CPU stall warning messages. Especially if you have added |
| debug printk()s. |
| |
| o Anything that prevents RCU's grace-period kthreads from running. |
| This can result in the "All QSes seen" console-log message. |
| This message will include information on when the kthread last |
| ran and how often it should be expected to run. It can also |
| result in the "rcu_.*kthread starved for" console-log message, |
| which will include additional debugging information. |
| |
| o A CPU-bound real-time task in a CONFIG_PREEMPT kernel, which might |
| happen to preempt a low-priority task in the middle of an RCU |
| read-side critical section. This is especially damaging if |
| that low-priority task is not permitted to run on any other CPU, |
| in which case the next RCU grace period can never complete, which |
| will eventually cause the system to run out of memory and hang. |
| While the system is in the process of running itself out of |
| memory, you might see stall-warning messages. |
| |
| o A CPU-bound real-time task in a CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT kernel that |
| is running at a higher priority than the RCU softirq threads. |
| This will prevent RCU callbacks from ever being invoked, |
| and in a CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU kernel will further prevent |
| RCU grace periods from ever completing. Either way, the |
| system will eventually run out of memory and hang. In the |
| CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU case, you might see stall-warning |
| messages. |
| |
| o A periodic interrupt whose handler takes longer than the time |
| interval between successive pairs of interrupts. This can |
| prevent RCU's kthreads and softirq handlers from running. |
| Note that certain high-overhead debugging options, for example |
| the function_graph tracer, can result in interrupt handler taking |
| considerably longer than normal, which can in turn result in |
| RCU CPU stall warnings. |
| |
| o Testing a workload on a fast system, tuning the stall-warning |
| timeout down to just barely avoid RCU CPU stall warnings, and then |
| running the same workload with the same stall-warning timeout on a |
| slow system. Note that thermal throttling and on-demand governors |
| can cause a single system to be sometimes fast and sometimes slow! |
| |
| o A hardware or software issue shuts off the scheduler-clock |
| interrupt on a CPU that is not in dyntick-idle mode. This |
| problem really has happened, and seems to be most likely to |
| result in RCU CPU stall warnings for CONFIG_NO_HZ_COMMON=n kernels. |
| |
| o A bug in the RCU implementation. |
| |
| o A hardware failure. This is quite unlikely, but has occurred |
| at least once in real life. A CPU failed in a running system, |
| becoming unresponsive, but not causing an immediate crash. |
| This resulted in a series of RCU CPU stall warnings, eventually |
| leading the realization that the CPU had failed. |
| |
| The RCU, RCU-sched, and RCU-tasks implementations have CPU stall warning. |
| Note that SRCU does -not- have CPU stall warnings. Please note that |
| RCU only detects CPU stalls when there is a grace period in progress. |
| No grace period, no CPU stall warnings. |
| |
| To diagnose the cause of the stall, inspect the stack traces. |
| The offending function will usually be near the top of the stack. |
| If you have a series of stall warnings from a single extended stall, |
| comparing the stack traces can often help determine where the stall |
| is occurring, which will usually be in the function nearest the top of |
| that portion of the stack which remains the same from trace to trace. |
| If you can reliably trigger the stall, ftrace can be quite helpful. |
| |
| RCU bugs can often be debugged with the help of CONFIG_RCU_TRACE |
| and with RCU's event tracing. For information on RCU's event tracing, |
| see include/trace/events/rcu.h. |
| |
| |
| Fine-Tuning the RCU CPU Stall Detector |
| |
| The rcuupdate.rcu_cpu_stall_suppress module parameter disables RCU's |
| CPU stall detector, which detects conditions that unduly delay RCU grace |
| periods. This module parameter enables CPU stall detection by default, |
| but may be overridden via boot-time parameter or at runtime via sysfs. |
| The stall detector's idea of what constitutes "unduly delayed" is |
| controlled by a set of kernel configuration variables and cpp macros: |
| |
| CONFIG_RCU_CPU_STALL_TIMEOUT |
| |
| This kernel configuration parameter defines the period of time |
| that RCU will wait from the beginning of a grace period until it |
| issues an RCU CPU stall warning. This time period is normally |
| 21 seconds. |
| |
| This configuration parameter may be changed at runtime via the |
| /sys/module/rcupdate/parameters/rcu_cpu_stall_timeout, however |
| this parameter is checked only at the beginning of a cycle. |
| So if you are 10 seconds into a 40-second stall, setting this |
| sysfs parameter to (say) five will shorten the timeout for the |
| -next- stall, or the following warning for the current stall |
| (assuming the stall lasts long enough). It will not affect the |
| timing of the next warning for the current stall. |
| |
| Stall-warning messages may be enabled and disabled completely via |
| /sys/module/rcupdate/parameters/rcu_cpu_stall_suppress. |
| |
| RCU_STALL_DELAY_DELTA |
| |
| Although the lockdep facility is extremely useful, it does add |
| some overhead. Therefore, under CONFIG_PROVE_RCU, the |
| RCU_STALL_DELAY_DELTA macro allows five extra seconds before |
| giving an RCU CPU stall warning message. (This is a cpp |
| macro, not a kernel configuration parameter.) |
| |
| RCU_STALL_RAT_DELAY |
| |
| The CPU stall detector tries to make the offending CPU print its |
| own warnings, as this often gives better-quality stack traces. |
| However, if the offending CPU does not detect its own stall in |
| the number of jiffies specified by RCU_STALL_RAT_DELAY, then |
| some other CPU will complain. This delay is normally set to |
| two jiffies. (This is a cpp macro, not a kernel configuration |
| parameter.) |
| |
| rcupdate.rcu_task_stall_timeout |
| |
| This boot/sysfs parameter controls the RCU-tasks stall warning |
| interval. A value of zero or less suppresses RCU-tasks stall |
| warnings. A positive value sets the stall-warning interval |
| in seconds. An RCU-tasks stall warning starts with the line: |
| |
| INFO: rcu_tasks detected stalls on tasks: |
| |
| And continues with the output of sched_show_task() for each |
| task stalling the current RCU-tasks grace period. |
| |
| |
| Interpreting RCU's CPU Stall-Detector "Splats" |
| |
| For non-RCU-tasks flavors of RCU, when a CPU detects that it is stalling, |
| it will print a message similar to the following: |
| |
| INFO: rcu_sched detected stalls on CPUs/tasks: |
| 2-...: (3 GPs behind) idle=06c/0/0 softirq=1453/1455 fqs=0 |
| 16-...: (0 ticks this GP) idle=81c/0/0 softirq=764/764 fqs=0 |
| (detected by 32, t=2603 jiffies, g=7075, q=625) |
| |
| This message indicates that CPU 32 detected that CPUs 2 and 16 were both |
| causing stalls, and that the stall was affecting RCU-sched. This message |
| will normally be followed by stack dumps for each CPU. Please note that |
| PREEMPT_RCU builds can be stalled by tasks as well as by CPUs, and that |
| the tasks will be indicated by PID, for example, "P3421". It is even |
| possible for an rcu_state stall to be caused by both CPUs -and- tasks, |
| in which case the offending CPUs and tasks will all be called out in the list. |
| |
| CPU 2's "(3 GPs behind)" indicates that this CPU has not interacted with |
| the RCU core for the past three grace periods. In contrast, CPU 16's "(0 |
| ticks this GP)" indicates that this CPU has not taken any scheduling-clock |
| interrupts during the current stalled grace period. |
| |
| The "idle=" portion of the message prints the dyntick-idle state. |
| The hex number before the first "/" is the low-order 12 bits of the |
| dynticks counter, which will have an even-numbered value if the CPU |
| is in dyntick-idle mode and an odd-numbered value otherwise. The hex |
| number between the two "/"s is the value of the nesting, which will be |
| a small non-negative number if in the idle loop (as shown above) and a |
| very large positive number otherwise. |
| |
| The "softirq=" portion of the message tracks the number of RCU softirq |
| handlers that the stalled CPU has executed. The number before the "/" |
| is the number that had executed since boot at the time that this CPU |
| last noted the beginning of a grace period, which might be the current |
| (stalled) grace period, or it might be some earlier grace period (for |
| example, if the CPU might have been in dyntick-idle mode for an extended |
| time period. The number after the "/" is the number that have executed |
| since boot until the current time. If this latter number stays constant |
| across repeated stall-warning messages, it is possible that RCU's softirq |
| handlers are no longer able to execute on this CPU. This can happen if |
| the stalled CPU is spinning with interrupts are disabled, or, in -rt |
| kernels, if a high-priority process is starving RCU's softirq handler. |
| |
| The "fqs=" shows the number of force-quiescent-state idle/offline |
| detection passes that the grace-period kthread has made across this |
| CPU since the last time that this CPU noted the beginning of a grace |
| period. |
| |
| The "detected by" line indicates which CPU detected the stall (in this |
| case, CPU 32), how many jiffies have elapsed since the start of the grace |
| period (in this case 2603), the grace-period sequence number (7075), and |
| an estimate of the total number of RCU callbacks queued across all CPUs |
| (625 in this case). |
| |
| In kernels with CONFIG_RCU_FAST_NO_HZ, more information is printed |
| for each CPU: |
| |
| 0: (64628 ticks this GP) idle=dd5/3fffffffffffffff/0 softirq=82/543 last_accelerate: a345/d342 Nonlazy posted: ..D |
| |
| The "last_accelerate:" prints the low-order 16 bits (in hex) of the |
| jiffies counter when this CPU last invoked rcu_try_advance_all_cbs() |
| from rcu_needs_cpu() or last invoked rcu_accelerate_cbs() from |
| rcu_prepare_for_idle(). The "Nonlazy posted:" indicates lazy-callback |
| status, so that an "l" indicates that all callbacks were lazy at the start |
| of the last idle period and an "L" indicates that there are currently |
| no non-lazy callbacks (in both cases, "." is printed otherwise, as |
| shown above) and "D" indicates that dyntick-idle processing is enabled |
| ("." is printed otherwise, for example, if disabled via the "nohz=" |
| kernel boot parameter). |
| |
| If the grace period ends just as the stall warning starts printing, |
| there will be a spurious stall-warning message, which will include |
| the following: |
| |
| INFO: Stall ended before state dump start |
| |
| This is rare, but does happen from time to time in real life. It is also |
| possible for a zero-jiffy stall to be flagged in this case, depending |
| on how the stall warning and the grace-period initialization happen to |
| interact. Please note that it is not possible to entirely eliminate this |
| sort of false positive without resorting to things like stop_machine(), |
| which is overkill for this sort of problem. |
| |
| If all CPUs and tasks have passed through quiescent states, but the |
| grace period has nevertheless failed to end, the stall-warning splat |
| will include something like the following: |
| |
| All QSes seen, last rcu_preempt kthread activity 23807 (4297905177-4297881370), jiffies_till_next_fqs=3, root ->qsmask 0x0 |
| |
| The "23807" indicates that it has been more than 23 thousand jiffies |
| since the grace-period kthread ran. The "jiffies_till_next_fqs" |
| indicates how frequently that kthread should run, giving the number |
| of jiffies between force-quiescent-state scans, in this case three, |
| which is way less than 23807. Finally, the root rcu_node structure's |
| ->qsmask field is printed, which will normally be zero. |
| |
| If the relevant grace-period kthread has been unable to run prior to |
| the stall warning, as was the case in the "All QSes seen" line above, |
| the following additional line is printed: |
| |
| kthread starved for 23807 jiffies! g7075 f0x0 RCU_GP_WAIT_FQS(3) ->state=0x1 ->cpu=5 |
| |
| Starving the grace-period kthreads of CPU time can of course result |
| in RCU CPU stall warnings even when all CPUs and tasks have passed |
| through the required quiescent states. The "g" number shows the current |
| grace-period sequence number, the "f" precedes the ->gp_flags command |
| to the grace-period kthread, the "RCU_GP_WAIT_FQS" indicates that the |
| kthread is waiting for a short timeout, the "state" precedes value of the |
| task_struct ->state field, and the "cpu" indicates that the grace-period |
| kthread last ran on CPU 5. |
| |
| |
| Multiple Warnings From One Stall |
| |
| If a stall lasts long enough, multiple stall-warning messages will be |
| printed for it. The second and subsequent messages are printed at |
| longer intervals, so that the time between (say) the first and second |
| message will be about three times the interval between the beginning |
| of the stall and the first message. |
| |
| |
| Stall Warnings for Expedited Grace Periods |
| |
| If an expedited grace period detects a stall, it will place a message |
| like the following in dmesg: |
| |
| INFO: rcu_sched detected expedited stalls on CPUs/tasks: { 7-... } 21119 jiffies s: 73 root: 0x2/. |
| |
| This indicates that CPU 7 has failed to respond to a reschedule IPI. |
| The three periods (".") following the CPU number indicate that the CPU |
| is online (otherwise the first period would instead have been "O"), |
| that the CPU was online at the beginning of the expedited grace period |
| (otherwise the second period would have instead been "o"), and that |
| the CPU has been online at least once since boot (otherwise, the third |
| period would instead have been "N"). The number before the "jiffies" |
| indicates that the expedited grace period has been going on for 21,119 |
| jiffies. The number following the "s:" indicates that the expedited |
| grace-period sequence counter is 73. The fact that this last value is |
| odd indicates that an expedited grace period is in flight. The number |
| following "root:" is a bitmask that indicates which children of the root |
| rcu_node structure correspond to CPUs and/or tasks that are blocking the |
| current expedited grace period. If the tree had more than one level, |
| additional hex numbers would be printed for the states of the other |
| rcu_node structures in the tree. |
| |
| As with normal grace periods, PREEMPT_RCU builds can be stalled by |
| tasks as well as by CPUs, and that the tasks will be indicated by PID, |
| for example, "P3421". |
| |
| It is entirely possible to see stall warnings from normal and from |
| expedited grace periods at about the same time during the same run. |