I wrote: > Noah Misch <n...@leadboat.com> writes: >> The odds are very high that you would not have gotten that error before that >> commit. But if the cause matches your guess, it's not something wrong with >> the commit ...
> Fair point. After more study and testing, I no longer believe my original thought about a bootstrap-to-standalone-backend race condition. The bootstrap process definitely kills its SysV shmem segment before exiting. However, I have a new theory, after noticing that c09850992 moved the check for shm_nattch == 0. Previously, if a shmem segment had zero attach count, it was unconditionally considered not-a-threat. Now, we'll try shmat() anyway, and if that fails for any reason other than EACCES, we say SHMSTATE_ANALYSIS_FAILURE which leads to the described error report. So I suspect that what we hit was a race condition whereby some other parallel test was using the same shmem ID and we managed to see its segment successfully in shmctl but then it was gone by the time we did shmat. This leads me to think that EINVAL and EIDRM failures from shmat had better be considered SHMSTATE_ENOENT not SHMSTATE_ANALYSIS_FAILURE. In principle this is a longstanding race condition, but I wonder whether we made it more probable by moving the shm_nattch check. regards, tom lane