[PATCH 0/3] makedumpfile: hugepage filtering for vmcore dump
Atsushi Kumagai
kumagai-atsushi at mxc.nes.nec.co.jp
Tue Dec 3 03:05:06 EST 2013
On 2013/11/29 13:57:21, kexec <kexec-bounces at lists.infradead.org> wrote:
> (2013/11/29 13:23), Atsushi Kumagai wrote:
> > On 2013/11/29 12:24:45, kexec <kexec-bounces at lists.infradead.org> wrote:
> >> (2013/11/29 12:02), Atsushi Kumagai wrote:
> >>> On 2013/11/28 16:50:21, kexec <kexec-bounces at lists.infradead.org> wrote:
> >>>>>> ping, in case you overlooked this...
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Sorry for the delayed response, I prioritize the release of v1.5.5 now.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Thanks for your advice, check_cyclic_buffer_overrun() should be fixed
> >>>>> as you said. In addition, I'm considering other way to address such case,
> >>>>> that is to bring the number of "overflowed pages" to the next cycle and
> >>>>> exclude them at the top of __exclude_unnecessary_pages() like below:
> >>>>>
> >>>>> /*
> >>>>> * The pages which should be excluded still remain.
> >>>>> */
> >>>>> if (remainder >= 1) {
> >>>>> int i;
> >>>>> unsigned long tmp;
> >>>>> for (i = 0; i < remainder; ++i) {
> >>>>> if (clear_bit_on_2nd_bitmap_for_kernel(pfn + i)) {
> >>>>> pfn_user++;
> >>>>> tmp++;
> >>>>> }
> >>>>> }
> >>>>> pfn += tmp;
> >>>>> remainder -= tmp;
> >>>>> mem_map += (tmp - 1) * SIZE(page);
> >>>>> continue;
> >>>>> }
> >>>>>
> >>>>> If this way works well, then aligning info->buf_size_cyclic will be
> >>>>> unnecessary.
> >>>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> I selected the current implementation of changing cyclic buffer size becuase
> >>>> I thought it was simpler than carrying over remaining filtered pages to next cycle
> >>>> in that there was no need to add extra code in filtering processing.
> >>>>
> >>>> I guess the reason why you think this is better now is how to detect maximum order of
> >>>> huge page is hard in some way, right?
> >>>
> >>> The maximum order will be gotten from HUGETLB_PAGE_ORDER or HPAGE_PMD_ORDER,
> >>> so I don't say it's hard. However, the carrying over method doesn't depend on
> >>> such kernel symbols, so I think it's robuster.
> >>>
> >>
> >> Then, it's better to remove check_cyclic_buffer_overrun() and rewrite part of free page
> >> filtering in __exclude_unnecessary_pages(). Could you do that too?
> >
> > Sure, I'll modify it too.
> >
>
> This is a suggestion from different point of view...
>
> In general, data on crash dump can be corrupted. Thus, order contained in a page
> descriptor can also be corrupted. For example, if the corrupted value were a huge
> number, wide range of pages after buddy page would be filtered falsely.
>
> So, actually we should sanity check data in crash dump before using them for application
> level feature. I've picked up order contained in page descriptor, so there would be other
> data used in makedumpfile that are not checked.
What you said is reasonable, but how will you do such sanity check ?
Certain standard values are necessary for sanity check, how will
you prepare such values ?
(Get them from kernel source and hard-code them in makedumpfile ?)
> Unlike diskdump, we no longer need to care about kernel/hardware level data integrity
> outside of user-land, but we still care about data its own integrity.
>
> On the other hand, if we do it, we might face some difficulty, for example, hardness of
> maintenance or performance bottleneck; it might be the reason why we don't see sanity
> check in makedumpfile now.
There are many values which should be checked, e.g. page.flags, page._count,
page.mapping, list_head.next and so on.
If we introduce sanity check for them, the issues you mentioned will be appear
distinctly.
So I think makedumpfile has to trust crash dump in practice.
Thanks
Atsushi Kumagai
> --
> Thanks.
> HATAYAMA, Daisuke
>
>
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