On 4/9/18 4:05 PM, Kees Cook wrote: > On Mon, Apr 9, 2018 at 2:56 PM, Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 4/9/18 3:26 PM, Jens Axboe wrote: >>> On 4/9/18 1:32 PM, Jens Axboe wrote: >>>> On 4/9/18 12:38 PM, Mike Snitzer wrote: >>>>> On Mon, Apr 09 2018 at 11:51am -0400, >>>>> Mike Snitzer <snitzer@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> On Sun, Apr 08 2018 at 12:00am -0400, >>>>>> Ming Lei <ming.lei@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> The following kernel oops(divide error) is triggered when running >>>>>>> xfstest(generic/347) on ext4. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> [ 442.632954] run fstests generic/347 at 2018-04-07 18:06:44 >>>>>>> [ 443.839480] divide error: 0000 [#1] PREEMPT SMP PTI >>>>>>> [ 443.840201] Dumping ftrace buffer: >>>>>>> [ 443.840692] (ftrace buffer empty) >>>>> ... >>>>>>> [ 443.845756] CPU: 1 PID: 29607 Comm: dmsetup Not tainted 4.16.0_f605ba97fb80_master+ #1 >>>>>>> [ 443.846968] Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-2.fc27 04/01/2014 >>>>>>> [ 443.848147] RIP: 0010:pool_io_hints+0x77/0x153 [dm_thin_pool] >>>>> >>>>> ... >>>>> >>>>>> I was able to reproduce (in my case RIP was pool_io_hints+0x45) >>>>>> >>>>>> Which on my kernel, is: >>>>>> >>>>>> crash> dis -l pool_io_hints+0x45 >>>>>> /root/snitm/git/linux/drivers/md/dm-thin.c: 2748 >>>>>> 0xffffffffc0765165 <pool_io_hints+69>: div %rdi >>>>>> >>>>>> Which is drivers/md/dm-thin.c:is_factor()'s return >>>>>> !sector_div(block_size, n); >>>>>> >>>>>> SO looking at pool_io_hints() it would seem limits->max_sectors is 0 for >>>>>> this xfstests device... why would that be!? >>>>>> >>>>>> Clearly pool_io_hints() could stand to be more defensive with a >>>>>> !limits->max_sectors negative check but is it ever really valid for >>>>>> max_sectors to be 0? >>>>>> >>>>>> Pretty sure the ultimate bug is outside DM (but not seeing an obvious >>>>>> place where block core would set max_sectors to 0, all blk-settings.c >>>>>> uses min_not_zero(), etc). >>>>> >>>>> I successfully ran this test against the linux-dm.git >>>>> "for-4.17/dm-changes" tag that Linus merged after the block changes: >>>>> git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/device-mapper/linux-dm.git tags/for-4.17/dm-changes >>>>> >>>>> # ./check tests/generic/347 >>>>> FSTYP -- ext4 >>>>> PLATFORM -- Linux/x86_64 thegoat 4.16.0-rc5.snitm >>>>> MKFS_OPTIONS -- /dev/mapper/test-xfstests_scratch >>>>> MOUNT_OPTIONS -- -o acl,user_xattr /dev/mapper/test-xfstests_scratch /scratch >>>>> >>>>> generic/347 65s >>>>> Ran: generic/347 >>>>> Passed all 1 tests >>>>> >>>>> SO this would seem to implicate some regression in the 4.17 block layer >>>>> changes. >>>> >>>> No immediate ideas come to mind, we didn't have a lot of changes and I >>>> don't see anything that looks problematic. Maybe you can try and >>>> bisect it and see what you come up with? >>> >>> I ran it, problematic commit is: >>> >>> commit 3c8ba0d61d04ced9f8d9ff93977995a9e4e96e91 >>> Author: Kees Cook <keescook@xxxxxxxxxxxx> >>> Date: Fri Mar 30 18:52:36 2018 -0700 >>> >>> kernel.h: Retain constant expression output for max()/min() >>> >> >> The fun continues. Thinking I'd try a userspace repro and thinking it >> would be difficult to reproduce, try the attached min.c that just copies >> all the bits from include/linux/kernel.h >> >> axboe@x1:~ $ gcc -Wall -O2 -o min min.c >> axboe@x1:~ $ ./min 128 256 >> min_not_zero(128, 256) = 0 > > This should be fixed with e9092d0d9796 ("Fix subtle macro variable > shadowing in min_not_zero()"). Yep that works, which is a relief. Some basic unit testing would have been very appropriate in this case, given how fundamentally broken it was... It's amazing nothing catastrophic happened. -- Jens Axboe -- dm-devel mailing list dm-devel@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/dm-devel