On Tue, Dec 20, 2022 at 10:06:48AM +0100, Magnus Karlsson wrote: > On Tue, Dec 20, 2022 at 2:32 AM Shawn Bohrer <sbohrer@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Fri, Dec 16, 2022 at 11:05:19AM +0100, Magnus Karlsson wrote: > > > To summarize, we are expecting this ordering: > > > > > > CPU 0 __xsk_rcv_zc() > > > CPU 0 __xsk_map_flush() > > > CPU 2 __xsk_rcv_zc() > > > CPU 2 __xsk_map_flush() > > > > > > But we are seeing this order: > > > > > > CPU 0 __xsk_rcv_zc() > > > CPU 2 __xsk_rcv_zc() > > > CPU 0 __xsk_map_flush() > > > CPU 2 __xsk_map_flush() > > > > > > Here is the veth NAPI poll loop: > > > > > > static int veth_poll(struct napi_struct *napi, int budget) > > > { > > > struct veth_rq *rq = > > > container_of(napi, struct veth_rq, xdp_napi); > > > struct veth_stats stats = {}; > > > struct veth_xdp_tx_bq bq; > > > int done; > > > > > > bq.count = 0; > > > > > > xdp_set_return_frame_no_direct(); > > > done = veth_xdp_rcv(rq, budget, &bq, &stats); > > > > > > if (done < budget && napi_complete_done(napi, done)) { > > > /* Write rx_notify_masked before reading ptr_ring */ > > > smp_store_mb(rq->rx_notify_masked, false); > > > if (unlikely(!__ptr_ring_empty(&rq->xdp_ring))) { > > > if (napi_schedule_prep(&rq->xdp_napi)) { > > > WRITE_ONCE(rq->rx_notify_masked, true); > > > __napi_schedule(&rq->xdp_napi); > > > } > > > } > > > } > > > > > > if (stats.xdp_tx > 0) > > > veth_xdp_flush(rq, &bq); > > > if (stats.xdp_redirect > 0) > > > xdp_do_flush(); > > > xdp_clear_return_frame_no_direct(); > > > > > > return done; > > > } > > > > > > Something I have never seen before is that there is > > > napi_complete_done() and a __napi_schedule() before xdp_do_flush(). > > > Let us check if this has something to do with it. So two suggestions > > > to be executed separately: > > > > > > * Put a probe at the __napi_schedule() above and check if it gets > > > triggered before this problem > > > * Move the "if (stats.xdp_redirect > 0) xdp_do_flush();" to just > > > before "if (done < budget && napi_complete_done(napi, done)) {" > > > > > > This might provide us some hints on what is going on. > > > > After staring at this code for way too long I finally made a > > breakthrough! I could not understand how this race could occur when > > napi_poll() calls netpoll_poll_lock(). Here is netpoll_poll_lock(): > > > > ``` > > static inline void *netpoll_poll_lock(struct napi_struct *napi) > > { > > struct net_device *dev = napi->dev; > > > > if (dev && dev->npinfo) { > > int owner = smp_processor_id(); > > > > while (cmpxchg(&napi->poll_owner, -1, owner) != -1) > > cpu_relax(); > > > > return napi; > > } > > return NULL; > > } > > ``` > > If dev or dev->npinfo are NULL then it doesn't acquire a lock at all! > > Adding some more trace points I see: > > > > ``` > > iperf2-1325 [002] ..s1. 264246.626880: __napi_poll: (__napi_poll+0x0/0x150) n=0xffff91c885bff000 poll_owner=-1 dev=0xffff91c881d4e000 npinfo=0x0 > > iperf2-1325 [002] d.Z1. 264246.626882: __xsk_rcv_zc_L7: (__xsk_rcv_zc+0x3b/0xc0) addr=0x1503100 len=0x42 xs=0xffff91c8bfe77000 fq=0xffff91c8c1a43f80 dev=0xffff91c881d4e000 > > iperf2-1325 [002] d.Z1. 264246.626883: __xsk_rcv_zc_L7: (__xsk_rcv_zc+0x42/0xc0) addr=0x1503100 len=0x42 xs=0xffff91c8bfe77000 fq=0xffff91c8c1a43f80 dev=0xffff91c881d4e000 > > iperf2-1325 [002] d.Z1. 264246.626884: xsk_flush: (__xsk_map_flush+0x32/0xb0) xs=0xffff91c8bfe77000 > > ``` > > > > Here you can see that poll_owner=-1 meaning the lock was never > > acquired because npinfo is NULL. This means that the same veth rx > > queue can be napi_polled from multiple CPU and nothing stops it from > > running concurrently. They all look like this, just most of the time > > there aren't concurrent napi_polls running for the same queue. They > > do however move around CPUs as I explained earlier. > > > > I'll note that I've ran with your suggested change of moving > > xdp_do_flush() before napi_complete_done() all weekend and I have not > > reproduced the issue. I don't know if that truly means the issue is > > fixed by that change or not. I suspect it does fix the issue because > > it prevents the napi_struct from being scheduled again before the > > first poll has completed, and nap_schedule_prep() ensures that only > > one instance is ever running. > > Thanks Shawn! Good news that the patch seems to fix the problem. To > me, napi_schedule_prep() makes sure that only one NAPI instance is > running. Netpoll is an optional feature and I do not even have it > compiled into my kernel. At least I do not have it defined in my > .config and I cannot find any netpoll symbols with a readelf command. > If netpoll is not used, I would suspect that npinfo == NULL. So to me, > it is still a mystery why this is happening. Oh I don't think it is a mystery anymore. The napi_complete_done() signals that this instance of of the napi_poll is complete. As you said nap_schedule_prep() checks to ensure that only one instance of napi_poll is running at a time, but we just indicated it was done with napi_complete_done(). This allows this CPU or more importantly any other CPU to reschedule napi polling for this receive queue, but we haven't called xdp_do_flush() yet so the flush can race. I'll note that the napi_schedule_prep()/__napi_schedule() in veth_poll really isn't the problem since it will schedule itself back on the same CPU. The problem is simply that another CPU is free to call napi_scheulde_prep()/__napi_schedule() in that window after napi_complete_done() and before xdp_do_flush(). The veth driver can schedule a napi_poll from the transmit path which is what starts the poll on a second CPU. I was simply blinded by that stupid netpoll_poll_lock() but it is completely unnecessary. > To validate or disprove that there are two instances of the same napi > running, could you please put a probe in veth_poll() right after > veth_xdp_rcv() and one at xdp_do_flush() and dump the napi id in both > cases? And run the original code with the bug :-). It would be good to > know what exactly happens in the code between these points when this > bug occurs. Maybe we could do this by enabling the trace buffer and > dumping it when the bug occurs. The two instances that race are definitely different napi_polls, the second one is scheduled from the veth transmit path. > > If we think this is the correct fix I'll let it run for another day or > > two and prepare a patch. > > There is one more advantage to this bug fix and that is performance. > By calling __xdp_map_flush() immediately after the receive function, > user space can start to work on the packets quicker so performance > will improve. Yes definitely. Thanks, Shawn Bohrer