Did you try running on an older release of Go, like 1.10? > On Jul 2, 2019, at 11:53 AM, 'Yunchi Luo' via golang-nuts > <golang-nuts@googlegroups.com> wrote: > > I'm not so much pointing my finger at GC as I am hoping GC logs could help > tell the story, and that someone with a strong understanding of GC in Go > could weigh in here. In the last 4 seconds before OOM, "TotalAlloc" increased > by only 80M, yet "HeapIdle" increased to 240M from 50M, RSS increased by > 810M. The numbers don't add up for me. A running sum of 80M of heap objects > were allocated in the time RSS increased by 10X that. If GC was completely > off, I still wouldn't expect this to happen, which makes me want to rule out > GC being blocked as a problem. Maybe there was runaway heap reservation > because something in my code caused a ton of fragmentation? Is that sane? The > heap profile lacking clues is also strange. > > Regarding the possibility of a race, I forgot I do have goroutine profiles > captured along with the heap profiles at the time memory exploded. There are > only 10 goroutines running on the serving path, which rules out too many > concurrent requests being served (please correct me if I'm wrong). Those fan > out to 13 goroutines talking to the db, all of which are in > http.Transport.roundTrip (which is blocked on runtime.gopark so I assume they > are waiting on the TCP connection). All other goroutines that don't originate > in the stdlib are also blocked on `select` or sleeping. Our CI does run with > go test -race, but I'll try doing some load testing with a race detector > enabled binary. > > Bakul, that is sound advice. I've actually been debugging this on and off for > a couple months now, with the help of several people, a few of which have > peer reviewed the code. I agree it's most likely to be some runaway code that > I caused in my logic, but we haven't been able to pin-point the cause and > I've run out of hypothesis to test at the moment. This is why I've started > asking on go-nuts@. The circuit breaker code was one of the first things I > checked, has been unit tested and verified working with load tests. Now that > you mention it, I actually did uncover a Go stdlib bug in http2 while doing > the load tests... but that's unrelated. > > >> On Tue, Jul 2, 2019 at 2:24 AM Bakul Shah <ba...@bitblocks.com> wrote: >> Before assuming it is the GC or something system related, you may wish to >> verify it is *not your own logic*. Larger RSS could also be due to your own >> logic touching more and more memory due to some runaway effect. The >> probability this has to do with GC is very low given the very widespread use >> of Go and the probability of a bug in new code is very high given it is used >> on a much much smaller scale. >> >> This has the "smell" of a concurrency bug. If I were you I'd test the code >> for any races, I'd review the code thoroughly with someone who doesn't know >> the code so that I'm forced to explain it, and I'd add plenty of assertions. >> I'd probably first look at the circuit breaker code -- things like how does >> it know how many concurrent connections exist? >> >> In general, any hypothesis you come up with, you should have a test that >> *catches* the bug given the hypothesis. Elusive bugs tend to become more >> elusive as you are on the hunt and as you may fix other problems you >> discover on the way. >> >> I even suspect you're looking at GC logs a bit too early. Instrument your >> own code and look at what patterns emerge. [Not to mention any time you >> spend on understanding your code will help improve your service; but better >> understanding of and debugging the GC won't necessarily help you!] >> >>> On Jul 1, 2019, at 12:14 PM, 'Yunchi Luo' via golang-nuts >>> <golang-nuts@googlegroups.com> wrote: >>> >>> Hello, I'd like to solicit some help with a weird GC issue we are seeing. >>> >>> I'm trying to debug OOM on a service we are running in k8s. The service is >>> just a CRUD server hitting a database (DynamoDB). Each replica serves about >>> 300 qps of traffic. There are no memory leaks. On occasion (seemingly >>> correlated to small latency spikes on the backend), the service would OOM. >>> This is surprising because it has a circuit breaker that drops requests >>> after 200 concurrent connections that has never trips, and goroutine >>> profiles confirm that there are nowhere 200 active goroutines. >>> >>> GC logs are pasted below. It's interlaced with dumps of runtime.Memstats >>> (the RSS number is coming from /proc/<pid>/stats). Go version is 1.12.5, >>> running an Alpine 3.10 container in an Amazon kernel >>> 4.14.123-111.109.amzn2.x86_64. >>> >>> The service happily serves requests using ~50MB of RSS for hours, until the >>> last 2 seconds, where GC mark&sweep time starts to 2-4X per cycle >>> (43+489/158/0.60+0.021 ms cpu => 43+489/158/0.60+0.021 ms cpu), and RSS and >>> Sys blow up. It’s also interesting that in the last log line: `Sys=995MB >>> RSS=861MB HeapSys=199MB`. If I’m reading this correctly, there’s at least >>> `662MB` of memory in RSS that is not assigned to the heap. Though this >>> might be due to the change in 1.125 to use MADV_FREE, so the pages are >>> freeable not yet reclaimed by the kernel. >>> >>> I don’t understand how heap can be so small across gc cycles (28->42->30MB >>> on the last line means heap doesn't grow past 42MB?), yet RSS keeps >>> growing. I'm assuming the increased RSS is causing the kernel to OOM the >>> service, but that should only happen if the RSS is not freeable as marked >>> by MADV_FREE. There doesn't seem to be any indication of that from the GC >>> logs. I guess this all comes down to me not having a good understanding of >>> how the GC algorithm works and how to read these logs. I'd really >>> appreciate it if anyone can explain what's happening and why. >>> >>> gc 41833 @19135.227s 0%: 0.019+2.3+0.005 ms clock, 0.079+0.29/2.2/5.6+0.020 >>> ms cpu, 11->11->5 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> INFO 2019-06-30T08:46:04.886 [Memory]: Alloc=7MB TotalAlloc=230172MB >>> Sys=69MB RSS=51MB HeapSys=62MB HeapIdle=51MB HeapInUse=11MB HeapReleased=5MB >>> gc 41834 @19135.869s 0%: 0.005+2.9+0.003 ms clock, 0.023+0.32/2.5/6.6+0.012 >>> ms cpu, 11->11->5 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> INFO 2019-06-30T08:46:05.886 [Memory]: Alloc=9MB TotalAlloc=230179MB >>> Sys=69MB RSS=51MB HeapSys=62MB HeapIdle=50MB HeapInUse=12MB HeapReleased=5MB >>> gc 41835 @19136.704s 0%: 0.038+2.1+0.004 ms clock, 0.15+0.35/2.1/5.3+0.016 >>> ms cpu, 11->11->5 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> INFO 2019-06-30T08:46:06.886 [Memory]: Alloc=9MB TotalAlloc=230184MB >>> Sys=69MB RSS=51MB HeapSys=62MB HeapIdle=50MB HeapInUse=12MB HeapReleased=5MB >>> gc 41836 @19137.611s 0%: 0.009+2.1+0.003 ms clock, 0.036+0.39/2.0/5.7+0.015 >>> ms cpu, 11->11->5 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> INFO 2019-06-30T08:46:07.887 [Memory]: Alloc=10MB TotalAlloc=230190MB >>> Sys=69MB RSS=51MB HeapSys=62MB HeapIdle=49MB HeapInUse=12MB HeapReleased=5MB >>> gc 41837 @19138.444s 0%: 0.008+2.1+0.004 ms clock, 0.035+0.51/2.1/5.7+0.017 >>> ms cpu, 11->11->5 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> INFO 2019-06-30T08:46:08.887 [Memory]: Alloc=10MB TotalAlloc=230195MB >>> Sys=69MB RSS=51MB HeapSys=62MB HeapIdle=49MB HeapInUse=12MB HeapReleased=5MB >>> gc 41838 @19139.474s 0%: 0.005+2.6+0.003 ms clock, 0.023+0.37/2.5/4.3+0.014 >>> ms cpu, 11->11->5 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> gc 41839 @19140.173s 0%: 0.011+2.4+0.003 ms clock, 0.046+0.20/2.3/5.8+0.015 >>> ms cpu, 11->11->5 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> INFO 2019-06-30T08:46:09.887 [Memory]: Alloc=7MB TotalAlloc=230202MB >>> Sys=69MB RSS=51MB HeapSys=62MB HeapIdle=50MB HeapInUse=11MB HeapReleased=5MB >>> gc 41840 @19140.831s 0%: 0.082+2.1+0.003 ms clock, 0.32+0.64/2.1/5.3+0.014 >>> ms cpu, 11->11->5 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> INFO 2019-06-30T08:46:10.887 [Memory]: Alloc=9MB TotalAlloc=230209MB >>> Sys=69MB RSS=51MB HeapSys=62MB HeapIdle=50MB HeapInUse=12MB HeapReleased=5MB >>> gc 41841 @19141.655s 0%: 0.014+2.1+0.003 ms clock, 0.056+0.28/2.0/5.7+0.013 >>> ms cpu, 11->11->5 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> gc 41842 @19142.316s 0%: 0.006+2.7+0.003 ms clock, 0.027+0.29/2.6/6.2+0.014 >>> ms cpu, 11->11->5 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> INFO 2019-06-30T08:46:11.888 [Memory]: Alloc=6MB TotalAlloc=230216MB >>> Sys=69MB RSS=51MB HeapSys=62MB HeapIdle=51MB HeapInUse=11MB HeapReleased=5MB >>> gc 41843 @19142.942s 0%: 0.010+2.1+0.005 ms clock, 0.040+0.29/2.0/5.7+0.023 >>> ms cpu, 11->11->5 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> INFO 2019-06-30T08:46:12.888 [Memory]: Alloc=9MB TotalAlloc=230223MB >>> Sys=69MB RSS=51MB HeapSys=62MB HeapIdle=50MB HeapInUse=11MB HeapReleased=5MB >>> gc 41844 @19143.724s 0%: 0.008+2.4+0.004 ms clock, 0.035+0.38/2.0/5.7+0.017 >>> ms cpu, 11->11->5 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> gc 41845 @19144.380s 0%: 10+9.3+0.044 ms clock, 43+6.1/9.2/4.4+0.17 ms cpu, >>> 11->11->6 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> INFO 2019-06-30T08:46:13.901 [Memory]: Alloc=6MB TotalAlloc=230230MB >>> Sys=136MB RSS=98MB HeapSys=94MB HeapIdle=83MB HeapInUse=11MB >>> HeapReleased=35MB >>> gc 41846 @19144.447s 0%: 0.008+26+0.005 ms clock, 0.033+0.46/7.8/26+0.020 >>> ms cpu, 11->12->9 MB, 12 MB goal, 4 P >>> gc 41847 @19144.672s 0%: 0.013+76+0.006 ms clock, 0.053+0.20/6.4/80+0.024 >>> ms cpu, 17->18->8 MB, 18 MB goal, 4 P >>> gc 41848 @19145.014s 0%: 0.008+172+0.005 ms clock, 0.035+0.13/8.5/177+0.022 >>> ms cpu, 15->17->10 MB, 16 MB goal, 4 P >>> gc 41849 @19145.298s 0%: 0.007+285+0.006 ms clock, 0.030+10/285/7.6+0.024 >>> ms cpu, 19->23->15 MB, 20 MB goal, 4 P >>> INFO 2019-06-30T08:46:15.052 [Memory]: Alloc=22MB TotalAlloc=230264MB >>> Sys=598MB RSS=531MB HeapSys=265MB HeapIdle=240MB HeapInUse=25MB >>> HeapReleased=164MB >>> gc 41850 @19145.665s 0%: 10+419+0.005 ms clock, 43+489/158/0.60+0.021 ms >>> cpu, 26->30->17 MB, 30 MB goal, 4 P >>> gc 41851 @19146.325s 0%: 21+798+0.036 ms clock, 86+990/401/0+0.14 ms cpu, >>> 28->42->30 MB, 34 MB goal, 4 P >>> INFO 2019-06-30T08:46:16.613 [Memory]: Alloc=41MB TotalAlloc=230303MB >>> Sys=995MB RSS=861MB HeapSys=199MB HeapIdle=155MB HeapInUse=44MB >>> HeapReleased=54MB >>> >>> I also captured the OOM log from dmesg here >>> https://gist.github.com/mightyguava/7ecc6fc55f5cd925062d6beede3783b3. >>> >>> -- >>> Yunchi >>> >>> -- >>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups >>> "golang-nuts" group. >>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an >>> email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. >>> To view this discussion on the web visit >>> https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/golang-nuts/CANnT9sj1_sZCKDkGbkzarwcn8DYEX9OS6Ack%2B71613eyLQ7y6w%40mail.gmail.com. >>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout. >> > > > -- > Yunchi > -- > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > "golang-nuts" group. > To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an > email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. > To view this discussion on the web visit > https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/golang-nuts/CANnT9sjNpE8wjqv6n%2BbHyZJ_cCvwN3O9rHKTT3%3DdSqZah0PfHA%40mail.gmail.com. > For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
-- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/golang-nuts/5A68A2C6-59BC-4193-B6F4-45F56127372B%40ix.netcom.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.