Re: PS hanging in 2.4.1 - HAPPENING NOW!!!

From: Shawn Starr (Shawn.Starr@Home.net)
Date: Sat Feb 03 2001 - 23:00:09 EST

  • Next message: Shawn Starr: "Re: PS hanging in 2.4.1 - HAPPENING NOW!!!"

    Adding now.. I just applied 2.4.1-ac2 and now i'll add this code snipet to the source. It might take 4 days or so for the bug to show itself. At least, unless it triggers eariler (?)

    Restarting...

    Shawn.

    Linus Torvalds wrote:

    > On Sat, 3 Feb 2001, Shawn.Starr@Home.net wrote:
    > >
    > >Feb 3 17:57:08 coredump kernel: gnomeicu S 0000CD17 0 9338 1 (NOTLB) 9340 9332
    > >Feb 3 17:57:08 coredump kernel: Call Trace: [search_by_key+203/3232] [search_for_position_by_key+170/916] [make_cpu_key+57/64] [_get_block_create_0+136/1072] [_get_block_create_0+162/1072] [remove_wait_queue+40/48] [__wait_on_buffer+128/140]
    > >Feb 3 17:57:08 coredump kernel: [<f0000000>] [reiserfs_get_block+158/3408] [search_for_position_by_key+170/916] [search_for_position_by_key+570/916] [make_cpu_key+57/64] [kmem_cache_alloc+75/116] [get_unused_buffer_head+52/144] [create_buffers+96/444]
    > >Feb 3 17:57:08 coredump kernel: [block_read_full_page+246/552] [add_to_page_cache_unique+202/212] [reiserfs_readpage+15/20] [reiserfs_get_block+0/3408] [read_cluster_nonblocking+258/324] [filemap_nopage+332/1032] [do_no_page+77/192] [handle_mm_fault+232/340]
    > >Feb 3 17:57:08 coredump kernel: [do_page_fault+312/1020] [do_page_fault+0/1020] [start_request+388/508] [intlat_local_irq_disable+16/20] [ide_do_request+685/752] [schedule+639/964] [remove_wait_queue+40/48] [error_code+52/64]
    > >Feb 3 17:57:09 coredump kernel: [__generic_copy_from_user+52/60] [opost_block+67/384] [handle_mm_fault+232/340] [add_wait_queue+59/68] [write_chan+365/516] [tty_write+341/448] [write_chan+0/516] [sys_write+143/196]
    > >Feb 3 17:57:09 coredump kernel: [system_call+62/80]
    >
    > Ok, the above seems to be the culprit here.
    >
    > Note how the thing is in TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE (S) sleep somewhere in the
    > reiserfs code..
    >
    > Debugging this is slightly harder than I'd like, because the "call trace"
    > is really not a trace, but actually just a dump of the stack of everything
    > that looks like a kernel address. And a lot of it is crap - stuff left
    > over by previous calls that hasn't gotten overwritten and is visible
    > because some function has a large stack footprint (lots of local variables
    > that end up not being very used and let things show through).
    >
    > Anyway, what I _think_ is the cleaned-up stacktrace is
    >
    > [reiserfs_get_block+158/3408]
    > [reiserfs_readpage+15/20]
    > [read_cluster_nonblocking+258/324]
    > [filemap_nopage+332/1032]
    > [do_no_page+77/192]
    > [handle_mm_fault+232/340]
    > [do_page_fault+312/1020]
    > [error_code+52/64]
    > [__generic_copy_from_user+52/60]
    > [opost_block+67/384]
    > [handle_mm_fault+232/340]
    > [add_wait_queue+59/68]
    > [write_chan+365/516]
    > [tty_write+341/448]
    > [write_chan+0/516]
    > [sys_write+143/196]
    > [system_call+62/80]
    >
    > and what is interesting is that you got a page fault while you were
    > copying stuff in to the tty layer. Which happens with TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE
    > sleep. Now, the page fault code never clears that, so we enter reiserfs
    > still "sleeping", and reiserfs will do a
    >
    > if (need_resched(current))
    > schedule();
    >
    > which won't do what reiserfs _wants_ it to do at all. Because if
    > task->state is TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE, the above will go to sleep, not just
    > cause a nice reschedule. And we'll be sleeping with the task MM semaphore
    > held - only to wake up if somebody were to signal us or something.
    >
    > If you can re-create this hang, could you please try to add this single
    > line to the top of "handle_mm_fault()" in mm/memory.c (after the variable
    > declarations, of course):
    >
    > current->state = TASK_RUNNING;
    >
    > which just means that if we get a page fault while we're half asleep, it
    > will be safe to do a schedule() without explicitly setting the process
    > running again.
    >
    > Linus
    >
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