On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 8:50 AM, KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki <kamezawa.hiroyu@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, 29 Mar 2011 01:21:37 +0900 > Minchan Kim <minchan.kim@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On Sat, Mar 26, 2011 at 05:48:45PM +0900, Hiroyuki Kamezawa wrote: >> > 2011/3/26 Michel Lespinasse <walken@xxxxxxxxxx>: >> > > On Fri, Mar 25, 2011 at 01:05:50PM +0900, Minchan Kim wrote: >> > >> Okay. Each approach has a pros and cons and at least, now anyone >> > >> doesn't provide any method and comments but I agree it is needed(ex, >> > >> careless and lazy admin could need it strongly). Let us wait a little >> > >> bit more. Maybe google guys or redhat/suse guys would have a opinion. >> > > >> > > I haven't heard of fork bombs being an issue for us (and it's not been >> > > for me on my desktop, either). >> > > >> > > Also, I want to point out that there is a classical userspace solution >> > > for this, as implemented by killall5 for example. One can do >> > > kill(-1, SIGSTOP) to stop all processes that they can send >> > > signals to (except for init and itself). Target processes >> > > can never catch or ignore the SIGSTOP. This stops the fork bomb >> > > from causing further damage. Then, one can look at the process >> > > tree and do whatever is appropriate - including killing by uid, >> > > by cgroup or whatever policies one wants to implement in userspace. >> > > Finally, the remaining processes can be restarted using SIGCONT. >> > > >> > >> > Can that solution work even under OOM situation without new login/commands ? >> > Please show us your solution, how to avoid Andrey's Bomb Âwith your way. >> > Then, we can add Documentation, at least. Or you can show us your tool. >> > >> > Maybe it is.... >> > - running as a daemon. (because it has to lock its work memory before OOM.) >> > - mlockall its own memory to work under OOM. >> > - It can show process tree of users/admin or do all in automatic way >> > with user's policy. >> > - tell us which process is guilty. >> > - wakes up automatically when OOM happens.....IOW, OOM should have some notifier >> >  to userland. >> > - never allocate any memory at running. (maybe it can't use libc.) >> > - never be blocked by any locks, for example, some other task's mmap_sem. >> >  One of typical mistakes of admins at OOM is typing 'ps' to see what >> > happens..... >> > - Can be used even with GUI system, which can't show console. >> >> Hi Kame, >> >> I am worried about run-time cost. >> Should we care of mistake of users for robustness of OS? >> Mostly right but we can't handle all mistakes of user so we need admin. >> For exampe, what happens if admin execute "rm -rf /"? >> For avoiding it, we get a solution "backup" about critical data. >> > > Then, my patch is configurable and has control knobs....never invasive for > people who don't want it. And simple and very low cost. It will have > no visible performance/resource usage impact for usual guys. > > > >> In the same manner, if the system is very critical of forkbomb, >> admin should consider it using memcg, virtualization, ulimit and so on. >> If he don't want it, he should become a hard worker who have to >> cross over other building to reboot it. Although he is a diligent man, >> Reboot isn't good. So I suggest following patch which is just RFC. >> For making formal patch, I have to add more comment and modify sysrq.txt. >> > > For me, sysrq is of-no-use as I explained. Go to other building and new login? I think if server is important on such problem, it should have a solution. The solution can be careful admin step or console with serial for sysrq step or your forkbomb killer. We have been used sysrq with local solution of last resort. In such context, sysrq solution ins't bad, I think. If you can't provide 1 and 2, your forkbomb killer would be a last resort. But someone can solve the problem in just careful admin or sysrq. In that case, the user can disable forkbomb killer then it doesn't affect system performance at all. So maybe It could be separate topic. > >> From 51bec44086a6b6c0e56ea978a2eb47e995236b47 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 >> From: Minchan Kim <minchan.kim@xxxxxxxxx> >> Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2011 00:52:20 +0900 >> Subject: [PATCH] [RFC] Prevent livelock by forkbomb >> >> Recently, We discussed how to prevent forkbomb. >> The thing is a trade-off between cost VS effect. >> >> Forkbomb is a _race_ case which happes by someone's mistake >> so if we have to pay cost in fast path(ex, fork, exec, exit), >> It's a not good. >> >> Now, sysrq + I kills all processes. When I tested it, I still >> need rebooting to work my system really well(ex, x start) >> although console works. I don't know why we need such sysrq(kill >> all processes and then what we can do?) >> >> So I decide to change sysrq + I to meet our goal which prevent >> forkbomb. The rationale is following as. >> >> Forkbomb means somethings makes repeately tasks in a short time so >> system don't have a free page then it become almost livelock state. >> This patch uses the characteristc of forkbomb. >> >> When you push sysrq + I, it kills recent created tasks. >> (In this version, 1 minutes). Maybe all processes included >> forkbomb tasks are killed. If you can't get normal state of system >> after you push sysrq + I, you can try one more. It can kill futher >> recent tasks(ex, 2 minutes). >> >> You can continue to do it until your system becomes normal state. >> >> Signed-off-by: Minchan Kim <minchan.kim@xxxxxxxxx> >> --- >> Âdrivers/tty/sysrq.c  |  45 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- >> Âinclude/linux/sched.h |  Â6 ++++++ >> Â2 files changed, 48 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) >> >> diff --git a/drivers/tty/sysrq.c b/drivers/tty/sysrq.c >> index 81f1395..6fb7e18 100644 >> --- a/drivers/tty/sysrq.c >> +++ b/drivers/tty/sysrq.c >> @@ -329,6 +329,45 @@ static void send_sig_all(int sig) >>    } >> Â} >> >> +static void send_sig_recent(int sig) >> +{ >> +   struct task_struct *p; >> +   unsigned long task_jiffies, last_jiffies = 0; >> +   bool kill = false; >> + >> +retry: > > you need tasklist lock for scanning reverse. Okay. I will look at it. > >> +   for_each_process_reverse(p) { >> +       if (p->mm && !is_global_init(p) && !fatal_signal_pending(p)) { >> +           /* recent created task */ >> +           last_jiffies = timeval_to_jiffies(p->real_start_time); >> +           force_sig(sig, p); >> +           break; > > why break ? you need to kill all youngers. And what is the relationship with below ? It's for selecting recent _youngest_ task which are not kthread, not init, not handled by below loop. In below loop, it start to send KILL signal processes which are created within 1 minutes from _youngest_ process creation time. > > >> +       } >> +   } >> + >> +   for_each_process_reverse(p) { >> +       if (p->mm && !is_global_init(p)) { >> +           task_jiffies = timeval_to_jiffies(p->real_start_time); >> +           /* >> +           Â* Kill all processes which are created recenlty >> +           Â* (ex, 1 minutes) >> +           Â*/ >> +           if (task_jiffies > (last_jiffies - 60 * HZ)) { >> +               force_sig(sig, p); >> +               kill = true; >> +           } >> +           else >> +               break; >> +       } >> +   } >> + >> +   /* >> +   Â* If we can't kill anything, restart with next group. >> +   Â*/ >> +   if (!kill) >> +       goto retry; >> +} > > This is not useful under OOM situation, we cannot use 'jiffies' to find younger tasks > because "memory reclaim-> livelock" can take some amount of minutes very easily. > So, I used other metrics. I think you do the same mistake I made before, > this doesn't work. As far as I understand right, p->real_start_time is create time, not jiffies. What I want is that kill all processes created recently, not all process like old sysrq + I. Am I miss something? > > Thanks, > -Kame > > > -- Kind regards, Minchan Kim -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxx For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Fight unfair telecom internet charges in Canada: sign http://stopthemeter.ca/ Don't email: <a href