[dpdk-dev] [PATCH 1/2] drivers/mempool: add stack mempool handler as driver

Olivier Matz olivier.matz at 6wind.com
Thu Mar 30 14:35:08 CEST 2017


On Wed, 29 Mar 2017 18:25:31 +0530, Shreyansh Jain <shreyansh.jain at nxp.com> wrote:
> Hello Olivier,
> 
> On Wednesday 29 March 2017 01:48 PM, Olivier Matz wrote:
> > On Tue, 28 Mar 2017 17:12:47 +0530, Shreyansh Jain <shreyansh.jain at nxp.com> wrote:  
> >> Hello Olivier,
> >>
> >> On Friday 24 March 2017 09:52 PM, Olivier Matz wrote:
> >> [..]
> >>  
> >>> I tried to pass the mempool autotest, and it issues a segfault.
> >>> I think the libraries are missing in rte.app.mk, so no handler is
> >>> registered.  
> >>
> >> I have been trying to simulate the segfault that you are referring to
> >> above. But, I think it should not be the case. If a mempool handler is
> >> not registered (as librte_mempool_ring was not included in
> >> mk/rte.app.mk, so, no "ring_mp_mc"), the caller would get error.
> >>
> >> The mempool_autotest is reporting:
> >>  
> >> --->8--  
> >> RTE>>mempool_autotest  
> >> cannot allocate mp_nocache mempool
> >> Test Failed  
> >> --->8--  
> >
> > Here are the reproduction steps:
> >
> >
> > git clone http://dpdk.org/git/dpdk
> > cd dpdk/
> > wget -O - http://dpdk.org/dev/patchwork/patch/21986/mbox | git am -
> > wget -O - http://dpdk.org/dev/patchwork/patch/21985/mbox | git am -
> > make config T=x86_64-native-linuxapp-gcc
> > make -j32 test-build
> > echo 128 > /sys/devices/system/node/node0/hugepages/hugepages-2048kB/nr_hugepages
> > mkdir -p /mnt/huge
> > mount -t hugetlbfs none /mnt/huge
> > echo mempool_autotest | ./build/app/test --
> > # segfault  
> 
> Thanks for the steps. I was able to reproduce this.
> Don't know why it didn't work earlier.
> one more comment below...
> 
> >
> > # replay with debug
> > make -j32 test-build
> > make -j32 EXTRA_CFLAGS="-O0 -g" test-build
> > ulimit -c unlimited
> > echo mempool_autotest | ./build/app/test --
> > # segfault + core dump
> > gdb -c core ./build/app/test
> >
> > (gdb) bt
> > #1  0x000000000064dead in rte_mempool_ops_alloc (mp=0x7f8816abdb40)
> >     at /root/dpdk/lib/librte_mempool/rte_mempool_ops.c:101
> > #2  0x000000000064c1e7 in rte_mempool_populate_phys (mp=0x7f8816abdb40,
> >     vaddr=0x7f880987a800 <error: Cannot access memory at address 0x7f880987a800>,
> >     paddr=6958852096, len=26761152, free_cb=0x64c032 <rte_mempool_memchunk_mz_free>,
> >     opaque=0x7f8822334d4c) at /root/dpdk/lib/librte_mempool/rte_mempool.c:359
> > #3  0x000000000064c9db in rte_mempool_populate_default (mp=0x7f8816abdb40)
> >     at /root/dpdk/lib/librte_mempool/rte_mempool.c:572  
> 
> I think adding the code that you suggested is not the right place. The 
> problem is not in rte_mempool_ops_alloc, where you had suggested the 
> check for NULL.
> 
> The problem is in rte_mempool_create where return value for 
> rte_mempool_set_ops_byname is not being checked.
> 
> When the libraries are not statically compiled in, 
> rte_mempool_set_ops_byname is returning NULL, which rte_mempool_create 
> doesn't handle and goes on to call rte_mempool_ops_alloc - eventually 
> segfaulting.

Yes, you're right, it's better to check the return value of
rte_mempool_set_ops_byname() in rte_mempool_create().



> > #4  0x000000000064d3d4 in rte_mempool_create (name=0x9b1ff0 "test_nocache", n=12671,
> >     elt_size=2048, cache_size=0, private_data_size=0, mp_init=0x0, mp_init_arg=0x0,
> >     obj_init=0x49f309 <my_obj_init>, obj_init_arg=0x0, socket_id=-1, flags=0)
> >     at /root/dpdk/lib/librte_mempool/rte_mempool.c:895
> > #5  0x00000000004a20ed in test_mempool () at /root/dpdk/test/test/test_mempool.c:519
> > #6  0x0000000000435189 in cmd_autotest_parsed (parsed_result=0x7ffe55006420,
> >     cl=0x7c87090, data=0x0) at /root/dpdk/test/test/commands.c:103
> > #7  0x00000000006749df in cmdline_parse (cl=0x7c87090,
> >     buf=0x7c870d8 "mempool_autotest\n")
> >     at /root/dpdk/lib/librte_cmdline/cmdline_parse.c:359
> > (gdb) up
> > #1  0x000000000064dead in rte_mempool_ops_alloc (mp=0x7f8816abdb40)
> >     at /root/dpdk/lib/librte_mempool/rte_mempool_ops.c:101
> > 101             return ops->alloc(mp);
> > (gdb) print ops
> > $1 = (struct rte_mempool_ops *) 0x4e69c00 <rte_mempool_ops_table+64>
> > (gdb) print *ops
> > $2 = {name = '\000' <repeats 31 times>, alloc = 0x0, free = 0x0, enqueue = 0x0,
> >   dequeue = 0x0, get_count = 0x0}
> >
> >
> > Regards,
> > Olivier
> >
> >  
> >>  
> >>>
> >>> Adding the following code in lib/librte_mempool/rte_mempool_ops.c
> >>> fixes the crash.
> >>>
> >>>         ops = rte_mempool_get_ops(mp->ops_index);
> >>> +       if (ops == NULL || ops->alloc == NULL)
> >>> +               return -ENOTSUP;
> >>>         return ops->alloc(mp);  
> 
> If you think above explanation suffices, I will push a patch for error 
> handling in rte_mempool_create returned by rte_mempool_set_ops_byname 
> rather than above change originally suggested by you.

Yes, please. Thanks!

Olivier


> 
> >>
> >> Can you tell me for which case did your code reach
> >> rte_mempool_ops_alloc() and segfault?
> >>
> >> In my case, librte_mempool_ring and librte_mempool_stack are not added
> >> to mk/rte.app.mk and it is static compilation.
> >>  
> >>>
> >>> Now that drivers are not linked to the mempool library, it can
> >>> happen that there is no handler. Could you please add this patch in your
> >>> patchset?  
> >>
> >> Yes, once I can get this issue reproduced. Because I think there is one
> >> more place similar code should go (rte_mempool_ops_getcount).
> >> As per what I can see, this would only happen if rte_mempool_xmem_create
> >> is called and then directly alloc is called. That is not happening for
> >> mempool_autotest.
> >>
> >> -
> >> Shreyansh
> >>  
> >
> >  
> 



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