Re: perf script: rwtop: SIGALRM and pipe read race

From: David Ahern
Date: Mon Sep 17 2012 - 10:55:40 EST


On 9/14/12 12:10 PM, Andrew Jones wrote:
On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 10:05:03AM -0600, David Ahern wrote:
On 9/14/12 9:39 AM, Andrew Jones wrote:

I recently tried 'perf script rwtop', and it immediately failed with
'failed to read event header'. Running it through strace I found that the
when rwtop.pl is reading from the pipe, and gets one of it's alarms, that
the ERESTARTSYS seems to confuse it - causing it to fail. It also appears
that the problem only happens early in execution, or not at all. If I get
lucky and don't hit the problem right away, then rwtop will run fine as
long as I want, without any ERESTARTSYS's in its trace. I also found that
I can avoid hitting the problem by throwing a 'pv -q' in front of the perf
command in tools/perf/scripts/perl/bin/rwtop-report. Which I guess slows
things down in the reader enough to always avoid the race.

Sorry I don't have a solution (patch). I'll look at it more as time
permits, but I thought I'd get it reported for starters though.


This fixes the run-time problem:

diff --git a/tools/perf/util/util.c b/tools/perf/util/util.c
index 1b8775c..a4371ae 100644
--- a/tools/perf/util/util.c
+++ b/tools/perf/util/util.c
@@ -142,6 +142,9 @@ int readn(int fd, void *buf, size_t n)
while (n) {
int ret = read(fd, buf, n);

+ if ((ret < 0) && (errno == EINTR))
+ continue;
+
if (ret <= 0)
return ret;



The only problem you will find with rwtop is that bytes_read will be
really whacky. I traced it to:

if ($ret > 0) {
printf("comm %s bytes_read %d\n", $common_comm, $ret);
$reads{$common_pid}{bytes_read} += $ret;

Somehow the $ret > 0 is passing when in fact it is negative. I do
not know much about perl to fix it.


This actually appears to be an issue with how perl sighandlers are
supposed to work.

http://perldoc.perl.org/perlipc.html#Restartable-system-calls

I tried the below patch though, and while it gets me past the read failure
it still doesn't solve the problem. With it the script stops processing
events after the first one.

Drew

diff --git a/tools/perf/scripts/perl/rwtop.pl
b/tools/perf/scripts/perl/rwtop.pl
index 4bb3ecd..8b20787 100644
--- a/tools/perf/scripts/perl/rwtop.pl
+++ b/tools/perf/scripts/perl/rwtop.pl
@@ -17,6 +17,7 @@ use lib
"$ENV{'PERF_EXEC_PATH'}/scripts/perl/Perf-Trace-Util/l
use lib "./Perf-Trace-Util/lib";
use Perf::Trace::Core;
use Perf::Trace::Util;
+use POSIX qw/SIGALRM SA_RESTART/;

my $default_interval = 3;
my $nlines = 20;
@@ -90,7 +91,10 @@ sub syscalls::sys_enter_write

sub trace_begin
{
- $SIG{ALRM} = \&set_print_pending;
+ my $sa = POSIX::SigAction->new(\&set_print_pending);
+ $sa->flags(SA_RESTART);
+ $sa->safe(1);
+ POSIX::sigaction(SIGALRM, $sa) or die "Can't set SIGALRM handler:
$!\n";
alarm 1;
}

Drew


Not sure why you want to change the signal handling. The display routine appears to be working.

Arnaldo had pinged me about rwtop a couple of weeks ago -- thinking one of my patches broke it. After looking into it I see 3 problems with the rwtop scripts:

1. readn can fail with EINTR and that needs to be handled. The earlier patch fixes that.

2. the rwtop.pl script is not handling negative return values ($ret < 0) properly -- the '$ret > 0' check is succeeding even though $ret is negative (e.g., -EAGAIN) leading to astronomical read values

3. record by default uses the watermark so it does not push records to the report script until the watermark is reached. This has 2 side effects:

a. for systems doing few reads and writes it can take a while for enough records to be generated causing an apparent hang when the command is launched. disabling delay (-D argument to perf-record in rwtop-record) handles that, but that's not the right answer for busy systems.

b. the display will not be accurate (up to date) given that there are buffered records that have not been processed.

Really we need a periodic mode for record that would push all records every N timer interval. This way everything is pushed to the processing script in a timely manner.

Arnaldo: I believe 3 explains the hang you saw.

David
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