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In wdt_handler(), does not try to trigger the watchdog if the prev_cpu_time wasn't initialized. This prevents an unexpected trigger of the watchdog when it wasn't initialized yet. This case could happen in the master just after loading the configuration. This would show a trace where the <diff> value is equal to the <now> value in the trace, and the <poll> value would be 0. For example: Thread 1 is about to kill the process. *>Thread 1 : id=0x0 act=1 glob=1 wq=0 rq=0 tl=0 tlsz=0 rqsz=0 stuck=1 prof=0 harmless=0 wantrdv=0 cpu_ns: poll=0 now=6005541706 diff=6005541706 curr_task=0 Thanks to Christian Ruppert for repporting the problem. Could be backported in every stable versions.
190 lines
5.2 KiB
C
190 lines
5.2 KiB
C
/*
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* Thread lockup detection
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*
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* Copyright 2000-2019 Willy Tarreau <willy@haproxy.org>.
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*
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* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
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* modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
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* as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version
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* 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
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*/
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#include <signal.h>
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#include <time.h>
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#include <haproxy/api.h>
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#include <haproxy/clock.h>
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#include <haproxy/debug.h>
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#include <haproxy/errors.h>
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#include <haproxy/global.h>
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#include <haproxy/signal-t.h>
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#include <haproxy/thread.h>
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#include <haproxy/tools.h>
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/*
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* It relies on timer_create() and timer_settime() which are only available in
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* this case.
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*/
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#if defined(USE_RT) && defined(_POSIX_TIMERS) && (_POSIX_TIMERS > 0) && defined(_POSIX_THREAD_CPUTIME)
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/* define a dummy value to designate "no timer". Use only 32 bits. */
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#ifndef TIMER_INVALID
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#define TIMER_INVALID ((timer_t)(unsigned long)(0xfffffffful))
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#endif
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static timer_t per_thread_wd_timer[MAX_THREADS];
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/* Setup (or ping) the watchdog timer for thread <thr>. Returns non-zero on
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* success, zero on failure. It interrupts once per second of CPU time. It
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* happens that timers based on the CPU time are not automatically re-armed
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* so we only use the value and leave the interval unset.
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*/
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int wdt_ping(int thr)
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{
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struct itimerspec its;
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its.it_value.tv_sec = 1; its.it_value.tv_nsec = 0;
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its.it_interval.tv_sec = 0; its.it_interval.tv_nsec = 0;
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return timer_settime(per_thread_wd_timer[thr], 0, &its, NULL) == 0;
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}
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/* This is the WDTSIG signal handler */
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void wdt_handler(int sig, siginfo_t *si, void *arg)
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{
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unsigned long long n, p;
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int thr;
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switch (si->si_code) {
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case SI_TIMER:
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/* A thread's timer fired, the thread ID is in si_int. We have
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* no guarantee that the thread handling this signal is in any
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* way related to the one triggering it, so we need to retrieve
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* the thread number from there. Note: this thread might
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* continue to execute in parallel.
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*/
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thr = si->si_value.sival_int;
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/* cannot happen unless an unknown timer tries to play with our
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* nerves. Let's die for now if this happens.
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*/
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if (thr < 0 || thr >= global.nbthread)
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break;
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p = ha_thread_ctx[thr].prev_cpu_time;
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n = now_cpu_time_thread(thr);
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/* not yet reached the deadline of 1 sec,
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* or p wasn't initialized yet
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*/
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if (!p || n - p < 1000000000UL)
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goto update_and_leave;
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if ((threads_harmless_mask|sleeping_thread_mask|threads_to_dump) & (1UL << thr)) {
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/* This thread is currently doing exactly nothing
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* waiting in the poll loop (unlikely but possible),
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* waiting for all other threads to join the rendez-vous
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* point (common), or waiting for another thread to
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* finish an isolated operation (unlikely but possible).
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*/
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goto update_and_leave;
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}
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/* So the thread indeed appears locked up. In order to be
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* certain that we're not witnessing an exceptional spike of
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* CPU usage due to a configuration issue (like running tens
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* of thousands of tasks in a single loop), we'll check if the
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* scheduler is still alive by setting the TH_FL_STUCK flag
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* that the scheduler clears when switching to the next task.
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* If it's already set, then it's our second call with no
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* progress and the thread is dead.
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*/
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if (!(ha_thread_ctx[thr].flags & TH_FL_STUCK)) {
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_HA_ATOMIC_OR(&ha_thread_ctx[thr].flags, TH_FL_STUCK);
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goto update_and_leave;
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}
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/* No doubt now, there's no hop to recover, die loudly! */
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break;
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#if defined(USE_THREAD) && defined(SI_TKILL) /* Linux uses this */
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case SI_TKILL:
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/* we got a pthread_kill, stop on it */
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thr = tid;
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break;
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#elif defined(USE_THREAD) && defined(SI_LWP) /* FreeBSD uses this */
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case SI_LWP:
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/* we got a pthread_kill, stop on it */
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thr = tid;
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break;
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#endif
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default:
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/* unhandled other conditions */
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return;
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}
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/* By default we terminate. If we're not on the victim thread, better
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* bounce the signal there so that we produce a cleaner stack trace
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* with the other thread interrupted exactly where it was running and
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* the current one not involved in this.
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*/
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#ifdef USE_THREAD
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if (thr != tid)
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ha_tkill(thr, sig);
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else
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#endif
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ha_panic();
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return;
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update_and_leave:
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wdt_ping(thr);
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}
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int init_wdt_per_thread()
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{
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if (!clock_setup_signal_timer(&per_thread_wd_timer[tid], WDTSIG, tid))
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goto fail1;
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if (!wdt_ping(tid))
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goto fail2;
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return 1;
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fail2:
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timer_delete(per_thread_wd_timer[tid]);
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fail1:
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per_thread_wd_timer[tid] = TIMER_INVALID;
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ha_warning("Failed to setup watchdog timer for thread %u, disabling lockup detection.\n", tid);
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return 1;
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}
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void deinit_wdt_per_thread()
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{
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if (per_thread_wd_timer[tid] != TIMER_INVALID)
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timer_delete(per_thread_wd_timer[tid]);
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}
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/* registers the watchdog signal handler and returns 0. This sets up the signal
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* handler for WDTSIG, so it must be called once per process.
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*/
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int init_wdt()
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{
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struct sigaction sa;
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sa.sa_handler = NULL;
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sa.sa_sigaction = wdt_handler;
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sigemptyset(&sa.sa_mask);
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sa.sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO;
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sigaction(WDTSIG, &sa, NULL);
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return ERR_NONE;
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}
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REGISTER_POST_CHECK(init_wdt);
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REGISTER_PER_THREAD_INIT(init_wdt_per_thread);
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REGISTER_PER_THREAD_DEINIT(deinit_wdt_per_thread);
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#endif
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