Hi Slawa, On 9/22/16 11:53 AM, Slawa Olhovchenkov wrote: > On Wed, Sep 21, 2016 at 11:25:18PM +0200, Julien Charbon wrote: >> On 9/21/16 9:51 PM, Slawa Olhovchenkov wrote: >>> On Wed, Sep 21, 2016 at 09:11:24AM +0200, Julien Charbon wrote: >>>> You can also use Dtrace and lockstat (especially with the lockstat -s >>>> option): >>>> >>>> https://wiki.freebsd.org/DTrace/One-Liners#Kernel_Locks >>>> https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=lockstat&manpath=FreeBSD+11.0-RELEASE >>>> >>>> But I am less familiar with Dtrace/lockstat tools. >>> >>> I am still use old kernel and got lockdown again. >>> Try using lockstat (I am save more output), interesting may be next: >>> >>> R/W writer spin on writer: 190019 events in 1.070 seconds (177571 >>> events/sec) >>> >>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >>> Count indv cuml rcnt nsec Lock Caller >>> >>> 140839 74% 74% 0.00 24659 tcpinp tcp_tw_2msl_scan+0xc6 >>> >>> >>> nsec ------ Time Distribution ------ count Stack >>> >>> 4096 | 913 tcp_twstart+0xa3 >>> >>> 8192 |@@@@@@@@@@@@ 58191 tcp_do_segment+0x201f >>> >>> 16384 |@@@@@@ 29594 tcp_input+0xe1c >>> >>> 32768 |@@@@ 23447 ip_input+0x15f >>> >>> 65536 |@@@ 16197 >>> 131072 |@ 8674 >>> 262144 | 3358 >>> 524288 | 456 >>> 1048576 | 9 >>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >>> Count indv cuml rcnt nsec Lock Caller >>> >>> 49180 26% 100% 0.00 15929 tcpinp tcp_tw_2msl_scan+0xc6 >>> >>> >>> nsec ------ Time Distribution ------ count Stack >>> >>> 4096 | 157 pfslowtimo+0x54 >>> >>> 8192 |@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ 24796 >>> softclock_call_cc+0x179 >>> 16384 |@@@@@@ 11223 softclock+0x44 >>> >>> 32768 |@@@@ 7426 >>> intr_event_execute_handlers+0x95 >>> 65536 |@@ 3918 >>> 131072 | 1363 >>> 262144 | 278 >>> 524288 | 19 >>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >> >> This is interesting, it seems that you have two call paths competing >> for INP locks here: >> >> - pfslowtimo()/tcp_tw_2msl_scan(reuse=0) and >> >> - tcp_input()/tcp_twstart()/tcp_tw_2msl_scan(reuse=1) > > I think same. > >> These paths can indeed compete for the same INP lock, as both >> tcp_tw_2msl_scan() calls always start with the first inp found in >> twq_2msl list. But in both cases, this first inp should be quickly used >> and its lock released anyway, thus that could explain your situation it >> that the TCP stack is doing that all the time, for example: >> >> - Let say that you are running out completely and constantly of tcptw, >> and then all connections transitioning to TIME_WAIT state are competing >> with the TIME_WAIT timeout scan that tries to free all the expired >> tcptw. If the stack is doing that all the time, it can appear like >> "live" locked. >> >> This is just an hypothesis and as usual might be a red herring. >> Anyway, could you run: >> >> $ vmstat -z | head -2; vmstat -z | grep -E 'tcp|sock' > > ITEM SIZE LIMIT USED FREE REQ FAIL SLEEP > > socket: 864, 4192664, 18604, 25348,49276158, 0, 0 > tcp_inpcb: 464, 4192664, 34226, 18702,49250593, 0, 0 > tcpcb: 1040, 4192665, 18424, 18953,49250593, 0, 0 > tcptw: 88, 16425, 15802, 623,14526919, 8, 0 > tcpreass: 40, 32800, 15, 2285, 632381, 0, 0 > > In normal case tcptw is about 16425/600/900 > > And after `sysctl -a | grep tcp` system stuck on serial console and I am > reset it. > >> Ideally, once when everything is ok, and once when you have the issue >> to see the differences (if any). >> >> If it appears your are quite low in tcptw, and if you have enough >> memory, could you try increase the tcptw limit using sysctl > > I think this is not eliminate stuck, just may do it less frequency
You are right, it would just be a big hint that the tcp_tw_2msl_scan() contention hypothesis is the right one. As I see you have plenty of memory on your server, thus could you try with: net.inet.tcp.maxtcptw=4192665 And see what happen. Just to validate this hypothesis. Thanks. -- Julien _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"