Re: epair and vnet jail loose connection.
Date: Mon, 14 Mar 2022 15:09:49 UTC
On 14 Mar 2022, at 7:44, Michael Gmelin wrote: > On Sun, 13 Mar 2022 17:53:44 +0000 > "Bjoern A. Zeeb" <bzeeb-lists@lists.zabbadoz.net> wrote: > >> On 13 Mar 2022, at 17:45, Michael Gmelin wrote: >> >>>> On 13. Mar 2022, at 18:16, Bjoern A. Zeeb >>>> <bzeeb-lists@lists.zabbadoz.net> wrote: >>>> >>>> On 13 Mar 2022, at 16:33, Michael Gmelin wrote: >>>>> It's important to point out that this only happens with >>>>> kern.ncpu>1. With kern.ncpu==1 nothing gets stuck. >>>>> >>>>> This perfectly fits into the picture, since, as pointed out by >>>>> Johan, >>>>> the first commit that is affected[0] is about multicore support. >>>> >>>> Ignore my ignorance, what is the default of net.isr.maxthreads and >>>> net.isr.bindthreads (in stable/13) these days? >>>> >>> >>> My tests were on CURRENT and I’m afk, but according to cgit[0][1], >>> max is 1 and bind is 0. >>> >>> Would it make sense to repeat the test with max=-1? >> >> I’d say yes, I’d also bind, but that’s just me. >> >> I would almost assume Kristof running with -1 by default (but he can >> chime in on that). > > I tried various configuration permutations, all with ncpu=2: > > - 14.0-CURRENT #0 main-n253697-f1d450ddee6 > - 13.1-BETA1 #0 releng/13.1-n249974-ad329796bdb > - net.isr.maxthreads: -1 (which results in 2 threads), 1, 2 > - net.isr.bindthreads: -1, 0, 1, 2 > - net.isr.dispatch: direct, deferred > > All resulting in the same behavior (hang after a few seconds). They > all > work ok when running on a single core instance (threads=1 in this > case). > > I also ran the same test on 13.0-RELEASE-p7 for > comparison (unsurprisingly, it's ok). > > I placed the script to reproduce the issue on freefall for your > convenience, so running it is as simple as: > > fetch https://people.freebsd.org/~grembo/hang_epair.sh > # inspect content > sh hang_epair.sh > > or, if you feel lucky > > fetch -o - https://people.freebsd.org/~grembo/hang_epair.sh | sh > With that script I can also reproduce the problem. I’ve experimented with this hack: diff --git a/sys/net/if_epair.c b/sys/net/if_epair.c index c39434b31b9f..1e6bb07ccc4e 100644 --- a/sys/net/if_epair.c +++ b/sys/net/if_epair.c @@ -415,7 +415,10 @@ epair_ioctl(struct ifnet *ifp, u_long cmd, caddr_t data) case SIOCSIFMEDIA: case SIOCGIFMEDIA: + printf("KP: %s() SIOCGIFMEDIA\n", __func__); sc = ifp->if_softc; + taskqueue_enqueue(epair_tasks.tq[0], &sc->queues[0].tx_task); + error = ifmedia_ioctl(ifp, ifr, &sc->media, cmd); break; That kicks the receive code whenever I `ifconfig epair0a`, and I see a little more traffic every time I do so. That suggests pretty strongly that there’s an issue with how we dispatch work to the handler thread. So presumably there’s a race between epair_menq() and epair_tx_start_deferred(). epair_menq() tries to only enqueue the receive work if there’s nothing in the buf_ring, on the grounds that if there is the previous packet scheduled the work. Clearly there’s an issue there. I’ll try to dig into that in the next few days. Kristof