Re: [PATCH 00/22] HWPOISON: Intro (v5)

From: Wu Fengguang
Date: Mon Jun 15 2009 - 10:23:05 EST


On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 08:25:28PM +0800, Nick Piggin wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 08:10:01PM +0800, Wu Fengguang wrote:
> > On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 03:19:07PM +0800, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > > > For KVM you need early kill, for the others it remains to be seen.
> > >
> > > Right. It's almost like you need to do a per-process thing, and
> > > those that can handle things (such as the new SIGBUS or the new
> > > EIO) could get those, and others could be killed.
> >
> > To send early SIGBUS kills to processes who has called
> > sigaction(SIGBUS, ...)? KVM will sure do that. For other apps we
> > don't mind they can understand that signal at all.
>
> For apps that hook into SIGBUS for some other means and

Yes I was referring to the sigaction(SIGBUS) apps, others will
be late killed anyway.

> do not understand the new type of SIGBUS signal? What about
> those?

We introduced two new SIGBUS codes:
BUS_MCEERR_AO=5 for early kill
BUS_MCEERR_AR=4 for late kill
I'd assume a legacy application will handle them in the same way (both
are unexpected code to the application).

We don't care whether the application can be killed by BUS_MCEERR_AO
or BUS_MCEERR_AR depending on its SIGBUS handler implementation.
But (in the rare case) if the handler
- refused to die on BUS_MCEERR_AR, it may create a busy loop and
flooding of SIGBUS signals, which is a bug of the application.
BUS_MCEERR_AO is one time and won't lead to busy loops.
- does something that hurts itself (ie. data safety) on BUS_MCEERR_AO,
it may well hurt the same way on BUS_MCEERR_AR. The latter one is
unavoidable, so the application must be fixed anyway.

>
> > > Early-kill for KVM does seem like reasonable justification on the
> > > surface, but when I think more about it, I wonder does the guest
> > > actually stand any better chance to correct the error if it is
> > > reported at time T rather than T+delta? (who knows what the page
> > > will be used for at any given time).
> >
> > Early kill makes a lot difference for KVM. Think about the vast
> > amount of clean page cache pages. With early kill the page can be
> > trivially isolated. With late kill the whole virtual machine dies
> > hard.
>
> Why? In both cases it will enter the exception handler and
> attempt to do something about it... in both cases I would
> have thought there is some chance that the page error is not
> recoverable and some chance it is recoverable. Or am I
> missing something?

The early kill / late kill to KVM from the POV of host kernel matches
the MCE AO/AR events inside the KVM guest kernel. The key difference
between AO/AR is, whether the page is _being_ consumed.

It's a lot harder (if possible) to try to stop an active consumer.
For example, the clean cache pages can be consumed in many ways:
- be accessed by read()/write() or mapped read/write
- be reclaimed and then allocated for whatever new usage, for example,
be zeroed by __GFP_ZERO, or be insert into another file and start
read/write IO and be accessed by disk driver via DMA, or even be
allocated for kernel slabs..
Frankly speaking I don't know how to stop all the above consumers.
We now simply die on AR events.

> Anyway, I would like to see a basic analysis of those probabilities
> to justify early kill. Not saying there is no justification, but
> it would be helpful to see why.

That's fine. I'd be glad if the above explanation paves way to
solutions for AR events :)

Thanks,
Fengguang
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