When execute the dirty_log_test on some aarch64 machine, it sometimes trigger the ASSERT:
==== Test Assertion Failure ==== dirty_log_test.c:384: dirty_ring_vcpu_ring_full pid=14854 tid=14854 errno=22 - Invalid argument 1 0x00000000004033eb: dirty_ring_collect_dirty_pages at dirty_log_test.c:384 2 0x0000000000402d27: log_mode_collect_dirty_pages at dirty_log_test.c:505 3 (inlined by) run_test at dirty_log_test.c:802 4 0x0000000000403dc7: for_each_guest_mode at guest_modes.c:100 5 0x0000000000401dff: main at dirty_log_test.c:941 (discriminator 3) 6 0x0000ffff9be173c7: ?? ??:0 7 0x0000ffff9be1749f: ?? ??:0 8 0x000000000040206f: _start at ??:? Didn't continue vcpu even without ring full
The dirty_log_test fails when execute the dirty-ring test, this is because the sem_vcpu_cont and the sem_vcpu_stop is non-zero value when execute the dirty_ring_collect_dirty_pages() function. When those two sem_t variables are non-zero, the dirty_ring_wait_vcpu() at the beginning of the dirty_ring_collect_dirty_pages() will not wait for the vcpu to stop, but continue to execute the following code. In this case, before vcpu stop, if the dirty_ring_vcpu_ring_full is true, and the dirty_ring_collect_dirty_pages() has passed the check for the dirty_ring_vcpu_ring_full but hasn't execute the check for the continued_vcpu, the vcpu stop, and set the dirty_ring_vcpu_ring_full to false. Then dirty_ring_collect_dirty_pages() will trigger the ASSERT.
Why sem_vcpu_cont and sem_vcpu_stop can be non-zero value? It's because the dirty_ring_before_vcpu_join() execute the sem_post(&sem_vcpu_cont) at the end of each dirty-ring test. It can cause two cases:
1. sem_vcpu_cont be non-zero. When we set the host_quit to be true, the vcpu_worker directly see the host_quit to be true, it quit. So the log_mode_before_vcpu_join() function will set the sem_vcpu_cont to 1, since the vcpu_worker has quit, it won't consume it. 2. sem_vcpu_stop be non-zero. When we set the host_quit to be true, the vcpu_worker has entered the guest state, the next time it exit from guest state, it will set the sem_vcpu_stop to 1, and then see the host_quit, no one will consume the sem_vcpu_stop.
When execute more and more dirty-ring tests, the sem_vcpu_cont and sem_vcpu_stop can be larger and larger, which makes many code paths don't wait for the sem_t. Thus finally cause the problem.
Fix this problem is easy, simply initialize the sem_t before every test. Thus whatever the state previous test left, it won't interfere the next test.
Signed-off-by: Shaoqin Huang shahuang@redhat.com --- tools/testing/selftests/kvm/dirty_log_test.c | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
diff --git a/tools/testing/selftests/kvm/dirty_log_test.c b/tools/testing/selftests/kvm/dirty_log_test.c index 936f3a8d1b83..23b179534c0b 100644 --- a/tools/testing/selftests/kvm/dirty_log_test.c +++ b/tools/testing/selftests/kvm/dirty_log_test.c @@ -726,6 +726,9 @@ static void run_test(enum vm_guest_mode mode, void *arg) return; }
+ sem_init(&sem_vcpu_stop, 0, 0); + sem_init(&sem_vcpu_cont, 0, 0); + /* * We reserve page table for 2 times of extra dirty mem which * will definitely cover the original (1G+) test range. Here @@ -871,9 +874,6 @@ int main(int argc, char *argv[]) int opt, i; sigset_t sigset;
- sem_init(&sem_vcpu_stop, 0, 0); - sem_init(&sem_vcpu_cont, 0, 0); - guest_modes_append_default();
while ((opt = getopt(argc, argv, "c:hi:I:p:m:M:")) != -1) {