Re: PMEM error-handling forces SIGKILL causes kernel panic

From: Naoya Horiguchi
Date: Fri Jan 11 2019 - 03:15:33 EST


Hi Dan, Jane,

Thanks for the report.

On Wed, Jan 09, 2019 at 03:49:32PM -0800, Dan Williams wrote:
> [ switch to text mail, add lkml and Naoya ]
>
> On Wed, Jan 9, 2019 at 12:19 PM Jane Chu <jane.chu@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
...
> > 3. The hardware consists the latest revision CPU and Intel NVDIMM, we suspected
> > the CPU faulty because it generated MCE over PMEM UE in a unlikely high
> > rate for any reasonable NVDIMM (like a few per 24hours).
> >
> > After swapping the CPU, the problem stopped reproducing.
> >
> > But one could argue that perhaps the faulty CPU exposed a small race window
> > from collect_procs() to unmap_mapping_range() and to kill_procs(), hence
> > caught the kernel PMEM error handler off guard.
>
> There's definitely a race, and the implementation is buggy as can be
> seen in __exit_signal:
>
> sighand = rcu_dereference_check(tsk->sighand,
> lockdep_tasklist_lock_is_held());
> spin_lock(&sighand->siglock);
>
> ...the memory-failure path needs to hold the proper locks before it
> can assume that de-referencing tsk->sighand is valid.
>
> > Also note, the same workload on the same faulty CPU were run on Linux prior to
> > the 4.19 PMEM error handling and did not encounter kernel crash, probably because
> > the prior HWPOISON handler did not force SIGKILL?
>
> Before 4.19 this test should result in a machine-check reboot, not
> much better than a kernel crash.
>
> > Should we not to force the SIGKILL, or find a way to close the race window?
>
> The race should be closed by holding the proper tasklist and rcu read lock(s).

This reasoning and proposal sound right to me. I'm trying to reproduce
this race (for non-pmem case,) but no luck for now. I'll investigate more.

Thanks,
Naoya Horiguchi