On 07/24/2018 08:45 AM, Yonghong Song wrote: > In one of our production machines, tools/testing/selftests/bpf > test_sockmap failed randomly like below: > > ... > [TEST 78]: (512, 1, 1, sendmsg, pass,apply 1,): rx thread exited with > err 1. FAILED > ... > > ... > [TEST 80]: (2, 1024, 256, sendmsg, pass,apply 1,): rx thread exited with > err 1. FAILED > ... > > ... > [TEST 83]: (100, 1, 5, sendpage, pass,apply 1,): rx thread exited with > err 1. FAILED > ... > > ... > [TEST 79]: (512, 1, 1, sendpage, pass,apply 1,): rx thread exited with > err 1. FAILED > ... > > The command line is just `test_sockmap`. The machine has 80 cpus, 256G > memory. The kernel is based on 4.16 but backported with latest bpf-next > bpf changes. > > The failed test number (78, 79, 80, or 83) is random. But they all share > similar characteristics: > . the option rate is greater than one, i.e., more than one > sendmsg/sendpage in the sender forked process. > . The txmsg_apply is not 0 > > I debugged a little bit. It happens in msg_loop() function below > "unexpected timeout" path. > > ... > slct = select(max_fd + 1, &w, NULL, NULL, > &timeout); > if (slct == -1) { > perror("select()"); > clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &s->end); > goto out_errno; > } else if (!slct) { > if (opt->verbose) > fprintf(stderr, "unexpected > timeout\n"); > errno = -EIO; > clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &s->end); > goto out_errno; > } > ... > > It appears that when the error happens, the receive process does not > receive all bytes sent from the send process and eventually times out. > > Has anybody seen this issue as well? > John, any comments on this failure?
Can you run the test with verbose enabled so we can determine if the tx side is even sending the message? Sample patch below. This will allow us to see the tx bytes and rx bytes, although it will be a bit noisy. I notice that the test program is not smart enough to (re)send bytes if the sendmsg call doesn't consume all bytes. This is a valid error if we get a enomem or other normal error on the tx side. With apply this is more likely because every byte (in apply = 1 case) is being sent through BPF prog. If this is not the case I can do some more digging but I've not seen this before. Thanks! John --- a/tools/testing/selftests/bpf/test_sockmap.c +++ b/tools/testing/selftests/bpf/test_sockmap.c @@ -1031,6 +1031,7 @@ static int test_exec(int cgrp, struct sockmap_options *opt) if (err) goto out; + opt->verbose = true; err = __test_exec(cgrp, SENDPAGE, opt); out: return err; > > Thanks, > > Yonghong