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Re: [PATCH] monitor/qmp: resume monitor when clearing its queue


From: Wolfgang Bumiller
Subject: Re: [PATCH] monitor/qmp: resume monitor when clearing its queue
Date: Thu, 10 Oct 2019 10:12:59 +0200
User-agent: NeoMutt/20180716

On Wed, Oct 09, 2019 at 09:18:04PM +0200, Markus Armbruster wrote:
> Wolfgang Bumiller <address@hidden> writes:
> 
> > On Wed, Oct 09, 2019 at 10:39:44AM +0200, Markus Armbruster wrote:
> >> Cc: Marc-André for additional monitor and chardev expertise.
> >> 
> >> Wolfgang Bumiller <address@hidden> writes:
> >> 
> >> > When a monitor's queue is filled up in handle_qmp_command()
> >> > it gets suspended. It's the dispatcher bh's job currently to
> >> > resume the monitor, which it does after processing an event
> >> > from the queue. However, it is possible for a
> >> > CHR_EVENT_CLOSED event to be processed before before the bh
> >> > is scheduled, which will clear the queue without resuming
> >> > the monitor, thereby preventing the dispatcher from reaching
> >> > the resume() call.
> >> 
> >> Because with the request queue cleared, there's nothing for
> >> monitor_qmp_requests_pop_any_with_lock() to pop, so
> >> monitor_qmp_bh_dispatcher() won't look at this monitor.  It stays
> >> suspended forever.  Correct?
> >> 
> >> Observable effect for the monitor's user?
> >
> > Yes.
> 
> I was too terse, let me try again: what exactly breaks for the monitor's
> user?

Any new connections to qmp will be accept()ed and show the greeting
({"QMP":{"version"...}}), but not respond to any messages sent
afterwards (though in my tests sometimes (after a few more attempts to
reconnect/talk to the same qmp socket), not even the greeting would
appear anymore).

> >      More easily triggered now with oob. We ran into this a longer time
> > ago, but our only reliable trigger was a customized version of
> > -loadstate which loads the state from a separate file instead of the
> > vmstate region of a qcow2. Turns out that doing this on a slow storage
> > (~12s to load the data) caused our status daemon to try to poll the qmp
> > socket during the load-state and give up after a 3s timeout. And since
> > the BH runs in the main loop which is not even entered until after the
> > loadstate has finished, but iothread handling the qmp socket does fill &
> > clear the queue, the qmp socket always ended up unusable afterwards.
> >
> > Aside from that we have users reporting the same symptom (hanging qmp)
> > appearing randomly on busy systems.
> >
> >> > Fix this by resuming the monitor when clearing a queue which
> >> > was filled up.
> >> >
> >> > Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <address@hidden>
> >> > ---
> >> > @Michael, we ran into this with qemu 4.0, so if the logic in this patch
> >> > is correct it may make sense to include it in the 4.0.1 roundup.
> >> > A backport is at [1] as 4.0 was before the monitor/ dir split.
> >> >
> >> > [1] 
> >> > https://gitlab.com/wbumiller/qemu/commit/9d8bbb5294ed084f282174b0c91e1a614e0a0714
> >> >
> >> >  monitor/qmp.c | 10 ++++++++++
> >> >  1 file changed, 10 insertions(+)
> >> >
> >> > diff --git a/monitor/qmp.c b/monitor/qmp.c
> >> > index 9d9e5d8b27..c1db5bf940 100644
> >> > --- a/monitor/qmp.c
> >> > +++ b/monitor/qmp.c
> >> > @@ -70,9 +70,19 @@ static void qmp_request_free(QMPRequest *req)
> >> >  /* Caller must hold mon->qmp.qmp_queue_lock */
> >> >  static void monitor_qmp_cleanup_req_queue_locked(MonitorQMP *mon)
> >> >  {
> >> > +    bool need_resume = (!qmp_oob_enabled(mon) && 
> >> > mon->qmp_requests->length > 0)
> >> > +        || mon->qmp_requests->length == QMP_REQ_QUEUE_LEN_MAX;
> >> 
> >> Can you explain why this condition is correct?
> >
> > Sorry, I meant to add a comment pointing to monitor_qmp_bh_dispatcher(),
> > which does the following *after* popping 1 element off the queue:
> >
> >     need_resume = !qmp_oob_enabled(mon) ||
> >         mon->qmp_requests->length == QMP_REQ_QUEUE_LEN_MAX - 1;
> >     qemu_mutex_unlock(&mon->qmp_queue_lock);
> >
> > It's supposed to be the same condition, but _before_ popping off an
> > element (hence no `- 1`), but the queue shouldn't be empty as well
> > otherwise the `monitor_suspend()` in `handle_qmp_command()` hasn't
> > happened, though on second though we could probably just return early in
> > that case.).
> 
> I see.
> 
> Could we monitor_resume() unconditionally here?

We can't, because suspend()/resume() employ a counter, which would
become unbalanced and could easily become negative by queuing a command
without filling the queue up and quickly disconnecting.

> 
> >> >      while (!g_queue_is_empty(mon->qmp_requests)) {
> >> >          qmp_request_free(g_queue_pop_head(mon->qmp_requests));
> >> >      }
> >> > +    if (need_resume) {
> >> > +        /*
> >> > +         * Pairs with the monitor_suspend() in handle_qmp_command() in 
> >> > case the
> >> > +         * queue gets cleared from a CH_EVENT_CLOSED event before the 
> >> > dispatch
> >> > +         * bh got scheduled.
> >> > +         */
> >> > +        monitor_resume(&mon->common);
> >> > +    }
> >> >  }
> >> >  
> >> >  static void monitor_qmp_cleanup_queues(MonitorQMP *mon)
> >> 
> >> Is monitor_qmp_cleanup_req_queue_locked() the correct place?
> >> 
> >> It's called from
> >> 
> >> * monitor_qmp_event() case CHR_EVENT_CLOSED via
> >>   monitor_qmp_cleanup_queues(), as part of destroying the monitor's
> >>   session state.
> >> 
> >>   This is the case you're trying to fix.  Correct?
> >> 
> >>   I figure monitor_resume() is safe because we haven't really destroyed
> >>   anything, yet, we merely flushed the request queue.  Correct?
> >> 
> >> * monitor_data_destroy() via monitor_data_destroy_qmp() when destroying
> >>   the monitor.
> >> 
> >>   Can need_resume be true in this case?  If yes, is monitor_resume()
> >>   still safe?  We're in the middle of destroying the monitor...
> >
> > I thought so when first reading through it, but on second though, we
> > should probably avoid this for sanity's sake.
> > Maybe with a flag, or an extra parameter.
> > Or we could introduce a "bool queue_filled" we set in handle_qmp_command()
> > instead of "calculating" `need_resume` in 2 places and unset it in
> > `monitor_data_destroy()` before clearing the queue?
> 
> Could we simply call monitor_resume() in monitor_qmp_event() right after
> monitor_qmp_cleanup_queues()?

We'd still need to make sure the suspend counter is balanced out with
the corresponding suspend() calls.




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