Re: Bisected KVM hang on x86-32 between v3.12 and v3.13

From: Michele Ballabio
Date: Sun Apr 06 2014 - 13:39:59 EST


On 06/04/2014 17:52, Toralf FÃrster wrote:
>> > Reverting either one of them solves the problem reported with kvm,
>> > but revert is probably not the correct answer.
>> >
>> > I wonder if the solution is as simple as this:
>> >
>> > --->8---
>> > diff --git a/arch/x86/Kconfig b/arch/x86/Kconfig
>> > index 0af5250..f3b985d 100644
>> > --- a/arch/x86/Kconfig
>> > +++ b/arch/x86/Kconfig
>> > @@ -126,6 +126,7 @@ config X86
>> > select RTC_LIB
>> > select HAVE_DEBUG_STACKOVERFLOW
>> > select HAVE_IRQ_EXIT_ON_IRQ_STACK if X86_64
>> > + select HAVE_IRQ_EXIT_ON_IRQ_STACK if X86_32
>> > select HAVE_CC_STACKPROTECTOR
>> >
>> > config INSTRUCTION_DECODER
>> > ---8<---
>> >
> applied both to 3.13.9 and 3.14.0 - issue does not happened any longer
>
> Thanks !

You're welcome, but I'm not sure it's bug-free, I've only glanced at the
code. Let's hear what other people think.

> P.S.. 'By rebasing the "sched/core" branch on "master" before the
> merge and going on with the bisection'
>
> Probably off-topic but I'm really interested what did you do in
> detail ? I'm asking b/c using git for my own and to bisect a remote
> tree, but I'm not too familiar in bisecting bugs of this kind.

Let's say bisection blames the merge commit 'M' as the first bad
commit:

R---S---T---P---X---Y---Z---M
\ /
A---B---C---'

First, let's search for the merge base P:
git merge-base Z C

Now: we know there are at least 2 patches (one on both sides of the
merge) that are responsible for the regression.
One is either X, Y or Z; the other is either A, B or C.

To find the first one (between X, Y and Z), we can rebase Z on top of
C, either with

git rebase C Z

or with
git format-patch Z ^C
git am 00*
(It's almost the same thing, sometimes you might want to do this to
edit out some patches without using git bisect --interactive).

The result should be:

P---X---Y---Z---M
\ /
A---B---C---'
\
X'---Y'---Z'

At this point
git diff M Y'
should show nothing.

Now we can further our bisection:
git bisect start Z' C
... should give us the first patch to blame: let's say it's Y'.

Now we search for the other one: the sequence I used is

# We know the other guilty commit is A, B or C
git bisect start C P
# We will be brought on commit B.
# We know the regression triggers only with Y, so we merge with it
git merge --no-commit Y
# The result will be something like this:
P---X---Y---Z---M
\ \ /
A---B---N /
\ /
C---'
\
X'---Y'---Z'
# Where N is a merge, but it's not a commit.
# 1st compile, install, reboot, test
# We are about to search another commit to test, so let's remove the
# temporary changes of the previous test
git reset --hard
# What is the result of the 1st test?
git bisect good|bad
# Here is another iteration
git merge --no-commit Y
# 2nd compile, install, reboot, test

... and so on. Of course, there are some variations: if Y does not
depend on X, instead of a merge we could do:
git cherry-pick --no-commit Y

In this case I used a merge because it was easier, and actually I
didn't merge _exactly_ with the blamed commit, but with the last
commit before the merge M, i.e. Z (I assumed it would be better
this way).

> Furthermore probably worth an own section in one of the TODO's ?

I think this (a regression blamed on a merge) is quite unusual,
and as such it could be useful on the man page of git-bisect,
but it should be written better and shorter than what I did
here.
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