* Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? @ 2017-03-09 13:44 Dorau, Lukasz 2017-03-09 13:58 ` Mathieu Desnoyers 2017-03-09 17:00 ` Masami Hiramatsu 0 siblings, 2 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Dorau, Lukasz @ 2017-03-09 13:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli, Keshavamurthy, Anil S, David S. Miller, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-trace-users Cc: Slusarz, Marcin, Jelinek, Sarah, Chernookyi, Vitalii, Buella, Gabor Hi, Could someone explain me why return probes of some syscalls (for example: futex, poll, epoll_wait) sometimes are not called? It can be reproduced using the following bash script: https://gist.github.com/ldorau/c439d9ec7635409a5016c42e3a9121ec Here are results gathered from 60 seconds test run on kernel 4.9.12 (Fedora 24): futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) The whole log is attached below. Lukasz --- # ./test_kprobes.sh 60 Will trace using following kprobe_events: r:kprobes/r_futex sys_futex p:kprobes/p_futex sys_futex r:kprobes/r_poll sys_poll p:kprobes/p_poll sys_poll r:kprobes/r_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait p:kprobes/p_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait r:kprobes/r_select sys_select p:kprobes/p_select sys_select r:kprobes/r_fork sys_fork p:kprobes/p_fork sys_fork r:kprobes/r_vfork sys_vfork p:kprobes/p_vfork sys_vfork r:kprobes/r_mmap sys_mmap p:kprobes/p_mmap sys_mmap r:kprobes/r_open sys_open p:kprobes/p_open sys_open r:kprobes/r_close sys_close p:kprobes/p_close sys_close r:kprobes/r_write sys_write p:kprobes/p_write sys_write r:kprobes/r_read sys_read p:kprobes/p_read sys_read Results (60 sec): futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) select: p 13355 r 13351 (0% did not return (4)) fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) mmap: p 4328 r 4328 (OK) open: p 4579 r 4579 (OK) close: p 7163 r 7163 (OK) write: p 22769 r 22769 (OK) read: p 40014 r 40014 (OK) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? 2017-03-09 13:44 Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? Dorau, Lukasz @ 2017-03-09 13:58 ` Mathieu Desnoyers 2017-03-09 14:44 ` Steven Rostedt 2017-03-09 17:00 ` Masami Hiramatsu 1 sibling, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Mathieu Desnoyers @ 2017-03-09 13:58 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dorau, Lukasz Cc: Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli, Keshavamurthy, Anil S, David S. Miller, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-trace-users, Slusarz, Marcin, Jelinek, Sarah, Chernookyi, Vitalii, Buella, Gabor ----- On Mar 9, 2017, at 8:44 AM, Dorau, Lukasz lukasz.dorau@intel.com wrote: > Hi, > > Could someone explain me why return probes of some syscalls (for example: futex, > poll, epoll_wait) sometimes are not called? > > It can be reproduced using the following bash script: > https://gist.github.com/ldorau/c439d9ec7635409a5016c42e3a9121ec > > Here are results gathered from 60 seconds test run on kernel 4.9.12 (Fedora 24): > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) Most likely scenario: those processes are still blocked on those system calls when your tracing ends. AFAIU, another possible (less frequent) scenario: a process gets killed with SIGKILL while blocked on the signal. Thanks, Mathieu > > The whole log is attached below. > > Lukasz > > --- > # ./test_kprobes.sh 60 > > Will trace using following kprobe_events: > r:kprobes/r_futex sys_futex > p:kprobes/p_futex sys_futex > r:kprobes/r_poll sys_poll > p:kprobes/p_poll sys_poll > r:kprobes/r_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait > p:kprobes/p_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait > r:kprobes/r_select sys_select > p:kprobes/p_select sys_select > r:kprobes/r_fork sys_fork > p:kprobes/p_fork sys_fork > r:kprobes/r_vfork sys_vfork > p:kprobes/p_vfork sys_vfork > r:kprobes/r_mmap sys_mmap > p:kprobes/p_mmap sys_mmap > r:kprobes/r_open sys_open > p:kprobes/p_open sys_open > r:kprobes/r_close sys_close > p:kprobes/p_close sys_close > r:kprobes/r_write sys_write > p:kprobes/p_write sys_write > r:kprobes/r_read sys_read > p:kprobes/p_read sys_read > > Results (60 sec): > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > select: p 13355 r 13351 (0% did not return (4)) > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > mmap: p 4328 r 4328 (OK) > open: p 4579 r 4579 (OK) > close: p 7163 r 7163 (OK) > write: p 22769 r 22769 (OK) > read: p 40014 r 40014 (OK) > > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-trace-users" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html -- Mathieu Desnoyers EfficiOS Inc. http://www.efficios.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? 2017-03-09 13:58 ` Mathieu Desnoyers @ 2017-03-09 14:44 ` Steven Rostedt 2017-03-09 14:57 ` Steven Rostedt [not found] ` <1231722663.1343.1489071698914.JavaMail.zimbra@efficios.com> 0 siblings, 2 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Steven Rostedt @ 2017-03-09 14:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Mathieu Desnoyers Cc: Dorau, Lukasz, Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli, Keshavamurthy, Anil S, David S. Miller, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-trace-users, Slusarz, Marcin, Jelinek, Sarah, Chernookyi, Vitalii, Buella, Gabor On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 13:58:29 +0000 (UTC) Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com> wrote: > ----- On Mar 9, 2017, at 8:44 AM, Dorau, Lukasz lukasz.dorau@intel.com wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > Could someone explain me why return probes of some syscalls (for example: futex, > > poll, epoll_wait) sometimes are not called? > > > > It can be reproduced using the following bash script: > > https://gist.github.com/ldorau/c439d9ec7635409a5016c42e3a9121ec > > > > Here are results gathered from 60 seconds test run on kernel 4.9.12 (Fedora 24): > > > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > > Most likely scenario: those processes are still blocked on those > system calls when your tracing ends. This is very common but those numbers are very high. I doubt there's 51 thousand threads blocked on a futex when tracing ended. > > AFAIU, another possible (less frequent) scenario: a process gets > killed with SIGKILL while blocked on the signal. > This could be. > > > > Results (60 sec): > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > > select: p 13355 r 13351 (0% did not return (4)) All these are common system calls that tasks simply sleep on. But it would take a nasty kill to have them not return back to the program to clean up nicely. Another possibility is that these actually have another way out from the kernel that isn't caught by tracing. I'll take a look. -- Steve > > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > > vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > > mmap: p 4328 r 4328 (OK) > > open: p 4579 r 4579 (OK) > > close: p 7163 r 7163 (OK) > > write: p 22769 r 22769 (OK) > > read: p 40014 r 40014 (OK) > > > > -- > > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-trace-users" in > > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? 2017-03-09 14:44 ` Steven Rostedt @ 2017-03-09 14:57 ` Steven Rostedt [not found] ` <1231722663.1343.1489071698914.JavaMail.zimbra@efficios.com> 1 sibling, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Steven Rostedt @ 2017-03-09 14:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Mathieu Desnoyers Cc: Dorau, Lukasz, Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli, Keshavamurthy, Anil S, David S. Miller, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-trace-users, Slusarz, Marcin, Jelinek, Sarah, Chernookyi, Vitalii, Buella, Gabor On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 09:44:55 -0500 Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org> wrote: > On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 13:58:29 +0000 (UTC) > Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com> wrote: > > > ----- On Mar 9, 2017, at 8:44 AM, Dorau, Lukasz lukasz.dorau@intel.com wrote: > > > > > Hi, > > > > > > Could someone explain me why return probes of some syscalls (for example: futex, > > > poll, epoll_wait) sometimes are not called? > > > > > > It can be reproduced using the following bash script: > > > https://gist.github.com/ldorau/c439d9ec7635409a5016c42e3a9121ec > > > > > > Here are results gathered from 60 seconds test run on kernel 4.9.12 (Fedora 24): > > > > > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > > > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > > > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > > > > Most likely scenario: those processes are still blocked on those > > system calls when your tracing ends. > > This is very common but those numbers are very high. I doubt there's 51 > thousand threads blocked on a futex when tracing ended. > > > > > AFAIU, another possible (less frequent) scenario: a process gets > > killed with SIGKILL while blocked on the signal. > > > > This could be. > > > > > > > Results (60 sec): > > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > > > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > > > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > > > select: p 13355 r 13351 (0% did not return (4)) > > All these are common system calls that tasks simply sleep on. But it > would take a nasty kill to have them not return back to the program to > clean up nicely. Another possibility is that these actually have another > way out from the kernel that isn't caught by tracing. I'll take a look. > BTW, what happens if you change your script to use the syscall tracepoints instead? As syscalls have an entry and exit tracepoint. Do the results change? -- Steve ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <1231722663.1343.1489071698914.JavaMail.zimbra@efficios.com>]
* Re: Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? [not found] ` <1231722663.1343.1489071698914.JavaMail.zimbra@efficios.com> @ 2017-03-09 15:20 ` Steven Rostedt [not found] ` <D9FFE20C522965449E182ACE73889AEB486818F2@irsmsx105.ger.corp.intel.com> 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Steven Rostedt @ 2017-03-09 15:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Mathieu Desnoyers Cc: Lukasz Dorau, Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli, Anil S Keshavamurthy, David S. Miller, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-trace-users, Marcin Slusarz, Sarah Jelinek, Vitalii Chernookyi, Gabor Buella On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 15:01:38 +0000 (UTC) Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com> wrote: > Another more likely scenario is if a multithreaded process > has many threads blocked (e.g. on a futex), and one of the threads > exits cleanly or forks. I suspect the kernel will just tear down the > other threads without hitting syscall exit. Maybe, if this happens multiple times, it could cause those kinds of numbers. A fork was done zero times according to the numbers. Maybe exit should be measured too. -- Steve ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <D9FFE20C522965449E182ACE73889AEB486818F2@irsmsx105.ger.corp.intel.com>]
* Re: Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? [not found] ` <D9FFE20C522965449E182ACE73889AEB486818F2@irsmsx105.ger.corp.intel.com> @ 2017-03-09 15:38 ` Steven Rostedt 0 siblings, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Steven Rostedt @ 2017-03-09 15:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dorau, Lukasz Cc: Mathieu Desnoyers, Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli, Keshavamurthy, Anil S, David S. Miller, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-trace-users, Slusarz, Marcin, Jelinek, Sarah, Chernookyi, Vitalii, Buella, Gabor On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 15:30:42 +0000 "Dorau, Lukasz" <lukasz.dorau@intel.com> wrote: > On Thursday, March 9, 2017 4:21 PM Steven Rostedt wrote: > > On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 15:01:38 +0000 (UTC) > > Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com> wrote: > > > > > > > Another more likely scenario is if a multithreaded process > > > has many threads blocked (e.g. on a futex), and one of the threads > > > exits cleanly or forks. I suspect the kernel will just tear down the > > > other threads without hitting syscall exit. > > > > Maybe, if this happens multiple times, it could cause those kinds of > > numbers. A fork was done zero times according to the numbers. Maybe > > exit should be measured too. > > > > I have run the test again with exit: > > Results (60 sec): > futex: p 2968 r 401 (86% did not return (2567)) > poll: p 13251 r 3957 (70% did not return (9294)) > epoll_wait: p 1485 r 556 (62% did not return (929)) > select: p 8063 r 8066 (OK) > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > vfork: p 4 r 4 (OK) > clone: p 6962 r 6962 (OK) > exit: p 3 r 0 (100% did not return (3)) I expected exit not to have a return, that's the property of exit. But it shows that the above poll and friends is not because of exit and fork. Can you change your script to use syscall tracepoints instead of retprobes? -- Steve > mmap: p 71740 r 71740 (OK) > open: p 43822 r 43825 (OK) > close: p 79805 r 79806 (OK) > write: p 31080 r 31078 (0% did not return (2)) > read: p 108456 r 108449 (0% did not return (7)) > > Lukasz ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? 2017-03-09 13:44 Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? Dorau, Lukasz 2017-03-09 13:58 ` Mathieu Desnoyers @ 2017-03-09 17:00 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2017-03-09 18:19 ` Chernookyi, Vitalii 2017-03-10 10:51 ` Masami Hiramatsu 1 sibling, 2 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Masami Hiramatsu @ 2017-03-09 17:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dorau, Lukasz Cc: Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli, Keshavamurthy, Anil S, David S. Miller, linux-trace-users, Slusarz, Marcin, Jelinek, Sarah, Chernookyi, Vitalii, Buella, Gabor On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 13:44:38 +0000 "Dorau, Lukasz" <lukasz.dorau@intel.com> wrote: > Hi, > > Could someone explain me why return probes of some syscalls (for example: futex, poll, epoll_wait) sometimes are not called? > > It can be reproduced using the following bash script: > https://gist.github.com/ldorau/c439d9ec7635409a5016c42e3a9121ec > > Here are results gathered from 60 seconds test run on kernel 4.9.12 (Fedora 24): > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > > The whole log is attached below. > > Lukasz > > --- > # ./test_kprobes.sh 60 > > Will trace using following kprobe_events: > r:kprobes/r_futex sys_futex > p:kprobes/p_futex sys_futex > r:kprobes/r_poll sys_poll > p:kprobes/p_poll sys_poll > r:kprobes/r_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait > p:kprobes/p_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait > r:kprobes/r_select sys_select > p:kprobes/p_select sys_select > r:kprobes/r_fork sys_fork > p:kprobes/p_fork sys_fork > r:kprobes/r_vfork sys_vfork > p:kprobes/p_vfork sys_vfork > r:kprobes/r_mmap sys_mmap > p:kprobes/p_mmap sys_mmap > r:kprobes/r_open sys_open > p:kprobes/p_open sys_open > r:kprobes/r_close sys_close > p:kprobes/p_close sys_close > r:kprobes/r_write sys_write > p:kprobes/p_write sys_write > r:kprobes/r_read sys_read > p:kprobes/p_read sys_read > > Results (60 sec): > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > select: p 13355 r 13351 (0% did not return (4)) > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > mmap: p 4328 r 4328 (OK) > open: p 4579 r 4579 (OK) > close: p 7163 r 7163 (OK) > write: p 22769 r 22769 (OK) > read: p 40014 r 40014 (OK) > OK, I just dumped kprobe_profile after the test, futex: p 7775 r 698 (91% did not return (7077)) poll: p 18409 r 3523 (80% did not return (14886)) epoll_wait: p 5122 r 2389 (53% did not return (2733)) select: p 5411 r 5286 (2% did not return (125)) fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) mmap: p 179 r 179 (OK) open: p 921 r 921 (OK) close: p 1005 r 1005 (OK) write: p 5632 r 5631 (0% did not return (1)) read: p 10879 r 10878 (0% did not return (1)) r_futex 1091 0 p_futex 8986 0 r_poll 4276 0 p_poll 20610 0 r_epoll_wait 2849 0 p_epoll_wait 5905 0 r_select 10172 0 p_select 10312 0 r_fork 0 0 p_fork 0 0 r_vfork 0 0 p_vfork 0 0 r_mmap 2987 0 p_mmap 2884 0 r_open 4002 0 p_open 3855 0 r_close 4262 0 p_close 4122 0 r_write 14281 0 p_write 14276 0 r_read 41494 0 p_read 41363 0 OK, there are no miss-counted event. So at least kprobe and kretprobe working correctly. I also tried to use static tracepoints for that. https://gist.github.com/mhiramat/04d782deaf110a6b3391e2ecb923325e ---- $ sudo bash test_kprobes.sh 10 Disabling all current probes ... Removing old probe points ... Adding new probe points ... Enabling new probe points ... Clearing old trace log ... Tracing for 10 seconds ... done Saving trace log ... done Results (10 sec): futex: p 9856 r 1258 (87% did not return (8598)) poll: p 7531 r 4031 (46% did not return (3500)) epoll_wait: p 1996 r 1617 (18% did not return (379)) select: p 273 r 257 (5% did not return (16)) Results (10 sec): futex: p 9851 r 9851 (OK) poll: p 7531 r 7531 (OK) epoll_wait: p 1996 r 1996 (OK) select: p 273 r 273 (OK) ---- Of course these events are collected in "different places" so it could be different. But yeah, it seems sys_* function itself dosen't return but jumps into ret_from_syscall etc. Thank you, -- Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* RE: Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? 2017-03-09 17:00 ` Masami Hiramatsu @ 2017-03-09 18:19 ` Chernookyi, Vitalii 2017-03-10 10:51 ` Masami Hiramatsu 1 sibling, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Chernookyi, Vitalii @ 2017-03-09 18:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Masami Hiramatsu, Dorau, Lukasz Cc: Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli, Keshavamurthy, Anil S, David S. Miller, linux-trace-users, Slusarz, Marcin, Jelinek, Sarah, Buella, Gabor Dear, > Of course these events are collected in "different places" so > it could be different. But yeah, it seems sys_* function itself > dosen't return but jumps into ret_from_syscall etc. In case of sys_futex and sys_poll there should be different reason of this issue, because most likely next calls could not have different return path: /* test-futex.c */ Int main() { Return syscall(SYS_futex, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6); } /* test-poll.c */ Int main() { Return syscall(SYS_poll, 0x102, 0x103, 0x104, 0x105, 0x106, 0x107); } With best regards, Vitaly -----Original Message----- From: Masami Hiramatsu [mailto:mhiramat@kernel.org] Sent: Thursday, March 9, 2017 6:01 PM To: Dorau, Lukasz <lukasz.dorau@intel.com> Cc: Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli <ananth@linux.vnet.ibm.com>; Keshavamurthy, Anil S <anil.s.keshavamurthy@intel.com>; David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>; linux-trace-users@vger.kernel.org; Slusarz, Marcin <marcin.slusarz@intel.com>; Jelinek, Sarah <sarah.jelinek@intel.com>; Chernookyi, Vitalii <vitalii.chernookyi@intel.com>; Buella, Gabor <gabor.buella@intel.com> Subject: Re: Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 13:44:38 +0000 "Dorau, Lukasz" <lukasz.dorau@intel.com> wrote: > Hi, > > Could someone explain me why return probes of some syscalls (for example: futex, poll, epoll_wait) sometimes are not called? > > It can be reproduced using the following bash script: > https://gist.github.com/ldorau/c439d9ec7635409a5016c42e3a9121ec > > Here are results gathered from 60 seconds test run on kernel 4.9.12 (Fedora 24): > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > > The whole log is attached below. > > Lukasz > > --- > # ./test_kprobes.sh 60 > > Will trace using following kprobe_events: > r:kprobes/r_futex sys_futex > p:kprobes/p_futex sys_futex > r:kprobes/r_poll sys_poll > p:kprobes/p_poll sys_poll > r:kprobes/r_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait > p:kprobes/p_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait > r:kprobes/r_select sys_select > p:kprobes/p_select sys_select > r:kprobes/r_fork sys_fork > p:kprobes/p_fork sys_fork > r:kprobes/r_vfork sys_vfork > p:kprobes/p_vfork sys_vfork > r:kprobes/r_mmap sys_mmap > p:kprobes/p_mmap sys_mmap > r:kprobes/r_open sys_open > p:kprobes/p_open sys_open > r:kprobes/r_close sys_close > p:kprobes/p_close sys_close > r:kprobes/r_write sys_write > p:kprobes/p_write sys_write > r:kprobes/r_read sys_read > p:kprobes/p_read sys_read > > Results (60 sec): > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > select: p 13355 r 13351 (0% did not return (4)) > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > mmap: p 4328 r 4328 (OK) > open: p 4579 r 4579 (OK) > close: p 7163 r 7163 (OK) > write: p 22769 r 22769 (OK) > read: p 40014 r 40014 (OK) > OK, I just dumped kprobe_profile after the test, futex: p 7775 r 698 (91% did not return (7077)) poll: p 18409 r 3523 (80% did not return (14886)) epoll_wait: p 5122 r 2389 (53% did not return (2733)) select: p 5411 r 5286 (2% did not return (125)) fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) mmap: p 179 r 179 (OK) open: p 921 r 921 (OK) close: p 1005 r 1005 (OK) write: p 5632 r 5631 (0% did not return (1)) read: p 10879 r 10878 (0% did not return (1)) r_futex 1091 0 p_futex 8986 0 r_poll 4276 0 p_poll 20610 0 r_epoll_wait 2849 0 p_epoll_wait 5905 0 r_select 10172 0 p_select 10312 0 r_fork 0 0 p_fork 0 0 r_vfork 0 0 p_vfork 0 0 r_mmap 2987 0 p_mmap 2884 0 r_open 4002 0 p_open 3855 0 r_close 4262 0 p_close 4122 0 r_write 14281 0 p_write 14276 0 r_read 41494 0 p_read 41363 0 OK, there are no miss-counted event. So at least kprobe and kretprobe working correctly. I also tried to use static tracepoints for that. https://gist.github.com/mhiramat/04d782deaf110a6b3391e2ecb923325e ---- $ sudo bash test_kprobes.sh 10 Disabling all current probes ... Removing old probe points ... Adding new probe points ... Enabling new probe points ... Clearing old trace log ... Tracing for 10 seconds ... done Saving trace log ... done Results (10 sec): futex: p 9856 r 1258 (87% did not return (8598)) poll: p 7531 r 4031 (46% did not return (3500)) epoll_wait: p 1996 r 1617 (18% did not return (379)) select: p 273 r 257 (5% did not return (16)) Results (10 sec): futex: p 9851 r 9851 (OK) poll: p 7531 r 7531 (OK) epoll_wait: p 1996 r 1996 (OK) select: p 273 r 273 (OK) ---- Of course these events are collected in "different places" so it could be different. But yeah, it seems sys_* function itself dosen't return but jumps into ret_from_syscall etc. Thank you, -- Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> -------------------------------------------------------------------- Intel Technology Poland sp. z o.o. ul. Slowackiego 173 | 80-298 Gdansk | Sad Rejonowy Gdansk Polnoc | VII Wydzial Gospodarczy Krajowego Rejestru Sadowego - KRS 101882 | NIP 957-07-52-316 | Kapital zakladowy 200.000 PLN. Ta wiadomosc wraz z zalacznikami jest przeznaczona dla okreslonego adresata i moze zawierac informacje poufne. W razie przypadkowego otrzymania tej wiadomosci, prosimy o powiadomienie nadawcy oraz trwale jej usuniecie; jakiekolwiek przegladanie lub rozpowszechnianie jest zabronione. This e-mail and any attachments may contain confidential material for the sole use of the intended recipient(s). If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender and delete all copies; any review or distribution by others is strictly prohibited. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? 2017-03-09 17:00 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2017-03-09 18:19 ` Chernookyi, Vitalii @ 2017-03-10 10:51 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2017-03-13 9:09 ` Dorau, Lukasz 1 sibling, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Masami Hiramatsu @ 2017-03-10 10:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dorau, Lukasz Cc: Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli, Keshavamurthy, Anil S, David S. Miller, linux-trace-users, Slusarz, Marcin, Jelinek, Sarah, Chernookyi, Vitalii, Buella, Gabor [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 6801 bytes --] On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 18:00:54 +0100 Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> wrote: > On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 13:44:38 +0000 > "Dorau, Lukasz" <lukasz.dorau@intel.com> wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > Could someone explain me why return probes of some syscalls (for example: futex, poll, epoll_wait) sometimes are not called? > > > > It can be reproduced using the following bash script: > > https://gist.github.com/ldorau/c439d9ec7635409a5016c42e3a9121ec > > > > Here are results gathered from 60 seconds test run on kernel 4.9.12 (Fedora 24): > > > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > > > > The whole log is attached below. > > > > Lukasz > > > > --- > > # ./test_kprobes.sh 60 > > > > Will trace using following kprobe_events: > > r:kprobes/r_futex sys_futex > > p:kprobes/p_futex sys_futex > > r:kprobes/r_poll sys_poll > > p:kprobes/p_poll sys_poll > > r:kprobes/r_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait > > p:kprobes/p_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait > > r:kprobes/r_select sys_select > > p:kprobes/p_select sys_select > > r:kprobes/r_fork sys_fork > > p:kprobes/p_fork sys_fork > > r:kprobes/r_vfork sys_vfork > > p:kprobes/p_vfork sys_vfork > > r:kprobes/r_mmap sys_mmap > > p:kprobes/p_mmap sys_mmap > > r:kprobes/r_open sys_open > > p:kprobes/p_open sys_open > > r:kprobes/r_close sys_close > > p:kprobes/p_close sys_close > > r:kprobes/r_write sys_write > > p:kprobes/p_write sys_write > > r:kprobes/r_read sys_read > > p:kprobes/p_read sys_read > > > > Results (60 sec): > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > > select: p 13355 r 13351 (0% did not return (4)) > > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > > vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > > mmap: p 4328 r 4328 (OK) > > open: p 4579 r 4579 (OK) > > close: p 7163 r 7163 (OK) > > write: p 22769 r 22769 (OK) > > read: p 40014 r 40014 (OK) > > > > OK, I just dumped kprobe_profile after the test, > > futex: p 7775 r 698 (91% did not return (7077)) > poll: p 18409 r 3523 (80% did not return (14886)) > epoll_wait: p 5122 r 2389 (53% did not return (2733)) > select: p 5411 r 5286 (2% did not return (125)) > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > mmap: p 179 r 179 (OK) > open: p 921 r 921 (OK) > close: p 1005 r 1005 (OK) > write: p 5632 r 5631 (0% did not return (1)) > read: p 10879 r 10878 (0% did not return (1)) > r_futex 1091 0 > p_futex 8986 0 > r_poll 4276 0 > p_poll 20610 0 > r_epoll_wait 2849 0 > p_epoll_wait 5905 0 > r_select 10172 0 > p_select 10312 0 > r_fork 0 0 > p_fork 0 0 > r_vfork 0 0 > p_vfork 0 0 > r_mmap 2987 0 > p_mmap 2884 0 > r_open 4002 0 > p_open 3855 0 > r_close 4262 0 > p_close 4122 0 > r_write 14281 0 > p_write 14276 0 > r_read 41494 0 > p_read 41363 0 > > OK, there are no miss-counted event. So at least kprobe and kretprobe working correctly. > I also tried to use static tracepoints for that. > https://gist.github.com/mhiramat/04d782deaf110a6b3391e2ecb923325e > > ---- > $ sudo bash test_kprobes.sh 10 > Disabling all current probes ... > Removing old probe points ... > Adding new probe points ... > Enabling new probe points ... > Clearing old trace log ... > > Tracing for 10 seconds ... done > Saving trace log ... done > > Results (10 sec): > futex: p 9856 r 1258 (87% did not return (8598)) > poll: p 7531 r 4031 (46% did not return (3500)) > epoll_wait: p 1996 r 1617 (18% did not return (379)) > select: p 273 r 257 (5% did not return (16)) > Results (10 sec): > futex: p 9851 r 9851 (OK) > poll: p 7531 r 7531 (OK) > epoll_wait: p 1996 r 1996 (OK) > select: p 273 r 273 (OK) > ---- > Of course these events are collected in "different places" so > it could be different. But yeah, it seems sys_* function itself > dosen't return but jumps into ret_from_syscall etc. Please try attached patch (that is my miss that forgot to accumulate missed count of kretprobe). I've focused on futex and it showed there were some "misses" of kretprobe. ---- Disabling all current probes ... Removing old probe points ... Adding new probe points ... Enabling new probe points ... Clearing old trace log ... Tracing for 10 seconds ... done Saving trace log ... done Results (10 sec): futex: p 190 r 74 (61% did not return (116)) Results (10 sec): futex: p 190 r 190 (OK) $ cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/kprobe_profile r_futex 176 127 p_futex 298 0 ----- Actually, since the kretprobe is not well designed for the usecase probing on the sleep-able functions, it just fails if it invoked more than the number of CPUs in parallel. It is currently a limitation of kretprobe, but I'll solve it. Thanks, -- Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> [-- Attachment #2: trace-kprobes-show-sum-of --] [-- Type: application/octet-stream, Size: 696 bytes --] trace: kprobes: Show sum of probe/retprobe nmissed count From: Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> --- kernel/trace/trace_kprobe.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/kernel/trace/trace_kprobe.c b/kernel/trace/trace_kprobe.c index 12fb540..ee7c6db 100644 --- a/kernel/trace/trace_kprobe.c +++ b/kernel/trace/trace_kprobe.c @@ -896,7 +896,7 @@ static int probes_profile_seq_show(struct seq_file *m, void *v) seq_printf(m, " %-44s %15lu %15lu\n", trace_event_name(&tk->tp.call), trace_kprobe_nhit(tk), - tk->rp.kp.nmissed); + tk->rp.kp.nmissed + tk->rp.nmissed); return 0; } ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* RE: Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? 2017-03-10 10:51 ` Masami Hiramatsu @ 2017-03-13 9:09 ` Dorau, Lukasz 2017-03-16 10:01 ` Masami Hiramatsu 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Dorau, Lukasz @ 2017-03-13 9:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Masami Hiramatsu Cc: Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli, Keshavamurthy, Anil S, David S. Miller, linux-trace-users, Slusarz, Marcin, Jelinek, Sarah, Chernookyi, Vitalii, Buella, Gabor On Friday, March 10, 2017 11:51 AM Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> wrote: > On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 18:00:54 +0100 > Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> wrote: > > > On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 13:44:38 +0000 > > "Dorau, Lukasz" <lukasz.dorau@intel.com> wrote: > > > > > Hi, > > > > > > Could someone explain me why return probes of some syscalls (for example: > futex, poll, epoll_wait) sometimes are not called? > > > > > > It can be reproduced using the following bash script: > > > https://gist.github.com/ldorau/c439d9ec7635409a5016c42e3a9121ec > > > > > > Here are results gathered from 60 seconds test run on kernel 4.9.12 (Fedora > 24): > > > > > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > > > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > > > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > > > > > > The whole log is attached below. > > > > > > Lukasz > > > > > > --- > > > # ./test_kprobes.sh 60 > > > > > > Will trace using following kprobe_events: > > > r:kprobes/r_futex sys_futex > > > p:kprobes/p_futex sys_futex > > > r:kprobes/r_poll sys_poll > > > p:kprobes/p_poll sys_poll > > > r:kprobes/r_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait > > > p:kprobes/p_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait > > > r:kprobes/r_select sys_select > > > p:kprobes/p_select sys_select > > > r:kprobes/r_fork sys_fork > > > p:kprobes/p_fork sys_fork > > > r:kprobes/r_vfork sys_vfork > > > p:kprobes/p_vfork sys_vfork > > > r:kprobes/r_mmap sys_mmap > > > p:kprobes/p_mmap sys_mmap > > > r:kprobes/r_open sys_open > > > p:kprobes/p_open sys_open > > > r:kprobes/r_close sys_close > > > p:kprobes/p_close sys_close > > > r:kprobes/r_write sys_write > > > p:kprobes/p_write sys_write > > > r:kprobes/r_read sys_read > > > p:kprobes/p_read sys_read > > > > > > Results (60 sec): > > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > > > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > > > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > > > select: p 13355 r 13351 (0% did not return (4)) > > > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > > > vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > > > mmap: p 4328 r 4328 (OK) > > > open: p 4579 r 4579 (OK) > > > close: p 7163 r 7163 (OK) > > > write: p 22769 r 22769 (OK) > > > read: p 40014 r 40014 (OK) > > > > > > > OK, I just dumped kprobe_profile after the test, > > > > futex: p 7775 r 698 (91% did not return (7077)) > > poll: p 18409 r 3523 (80% did not return (14886)) > > epoll_wait: p 5122 r 2389 (53% did not return (2733)) > > select: p 5411 r 5286 (2% did not return (125)) > > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > > vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > > mmap: p 179 r 179 (OK) > > open: p 921 r 921 (OK) > > close: p 1005 r 1005 (OK) > > write: p 5632 r 5631 (0% did not return (1)) > > read: p 10879 r 10878 (0% did not return (1)) > > r_futex 1091 0 > > p_futex 8986 0 > > r_poll 4276 0 > > p_poll 20610 0 > > r_epoll_wait 2849 0 > > p_epoll_wait 5905 0 > > r_select 10172 0 > > p_select 10312 0 > > r_fork 0 0 > > p_fork 0 0 > > r_vfork 0 0 > > p_vfork 0 0 > > r_mmap 2987 0 > > p_mmap 2884 0 > > r_open 4002 0 > > p_open 3855 0 > > r_close 4262 0 > > p_close 4122 0 > > r_write 14281 0 > > p_write 14276 0 > > r_read 41494 0 > > p_read 41363 0 > > > > OK, there are no miss-counted event. So at least kprobe and kretprobe working > correctly. > > I also tried to use static tracepoints for that. > > https://gist.github.com/mhiramat/04d782deaf110a6b3391e2ecb923325e > > > > ---- > > $ sudo bash test_kprobes.sh 10 > > Disabling all current probes ... > > Removing old probe points ... > > Adding new probe points ... > > Enabling new probe points ... > > Clearing old trace log ... > > > > Tracing for 10 seconds ... done > > Saving trace log ... done > > > > Results (10 sec): > > futex: p 9856 r 1258 (87% did not return (8598)) > > poll: p 7531 r 4031 (46% did not return (3500)) > > epoll_wait: p 1996 r 1617 (18% did not return (379)) > > select: p 273 r 257 (5% did not return (16)) > > Results (10 sec): > > futex: p 9851 r 9851 (OK) > > poll: p 7531 r 7531 (OK) > > epoll_wait: p 1996 r 1996 (OK) > > select: p 273 r 273 (OK) > > ---- > > Of course these events are collected in "different places" so > > it could be different. But yeah, it seems sys_* function itself > > dosen't return but jumps into ret_from_syscall etc. > > Please try attached patch (that is my miss that forgot to accumulate missed > count of kretprobe). > Thanks for the patch. I ran two tests using the following script: https://gist.github.com/ldorau/36d87640ff0659a483342d490b66f034 The results are following: 1) The first test - during 60-seconds test the system was almost idle (I did not touch the keyboard or mouse) KProbes results (60 sec): futex: p 1373 r 422 (69% did not return (951)) poll: p 3304 r 1575 (52% did not return (1729)) epoll_wait: p 1062 r 943 (11% did not return (119)) select: p 5978 r 5977 (0% did not return (1)) mmap: p 264 r 264 (OK) open: p 1056 r 1056 (OK) close: p 1198 r 1198 (OK) write: p 4786 r 4786 (OK) read: p 8939 r 8939 (OK) exit: p 1 r 0 fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) clone: p 5 r 5 (OK) execve: p 4 r 4 (OK) Tracepoints results (60 sec): futex: p 1372 r 1372 (OK) poll: p 3304 r 3303 (0% did not return (1)) epoll_wait: p 1062 r 1062 (OK) select: p 5978 r 5978 (OK) mmap: p 264 r 264 (OK) open: p 1056 r 1056 (OK) close: p 1198 r 1198 (OK) write: p 4786 r 4786 (OK) read: p 8939 r 8940 (OK) exit: p 1 r 0 2) The second test - during 60-seconds test I was normally using the system - - I launched an internet browser, edited a file... KProbes results (60 sec): futex: p 35394 r 689 (98% did not return (34705)) poll: p 23449 r 896 (96% did not return (22553)) epoll_wait: p 43927 r 4973 (88% did not return (38954)) select: p 4874 r 4873 (0% did not return (1)) mmap: p 3165 r 3165 (OK) open: p 3680 r 3678 (0% did not return (2)) close: p 6704 r 6704 (OK) write: p 11769 r 11769 (OK) read: p 22645 r 22647 (OK) exit: p 30 r 0 fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) clone: p 170 r 170 (OK) execve: p 2 r 2 (OK) Tracepoints results (60 sec): futex: p 35359 r 35268 (0% did not return (91)) poll: p 23448 r 23444 (0% did not return (4)) epoll_wait: p 43926 r 43909 (0% did not return (17)) select: p 4874 r 4874 (OK) mmap: p 3165 r 3165 (OK) open: p 3680 r 3827 (OK) close: p 6704 r 6704 (OK) write: p 11769 r 11770 (OK) read: p 22645 r 22648 (OK) exit: p 30 r 0 Lukasz > I've focused on futex and it showed there were some "misses" of kretprobe. > > ---- > Disabling all current probes ... > Removing old probe points ... > Adding new probe points ... > Enabling new probe points ... > Clearing old trace log ... > > Tracing for 10 seconds ... done > Saving trace log ... done > > Results (10 sec): > futex: p 190 r 74 (61% did not return (116)) > Results (10 sec): > futex: p 190 r 190 (OK) > > $ cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/kprobe_profile > r_futex 176 127 > p_futex 298 0 > ----- > > Actually, since the kretprobe is not well designed for the usecase > probing on the sleep-able functions, it just fails if it invoked > more than the number of CPUs in parallel. > It is currently a limitation of kretprobe, but I'll solve it. > > Thanks, > > -- > Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? 2017-03-13 9:09 ` Dorau, Lukasz @ 2017-03-16 10:01 ` Masami Hiramatsu 0 siblings, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Masami Hiramatsu @ 2017-03-16 10:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dorau, Lukasz Cc: Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli, Keshavamurthy, Anil S, David S. Miller, linux-trace-users, Slusarz, Marcin, Jelinek, Sarah, Chernookyi, Vitalii, Buella, Gabor On Mon, 13 Mar 2017 09:09:47 +0000 "Dorau, Lukasz" <lukasz.dorau@intel.com> wrote: > On Friday, March 10, 2017 11:51 AM Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> wrote: > > On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 18:00:54 +0100 > > Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> wrote: > > > > > On Thu, 9 Mar 2017 13:44:38 +0000 > > > "Dorau, Lukasz" <lukasz.dorau@intel.com> wrote: > > > > > > > Hi, > > > > > > > > Could someone explain me why return probes of some syscalls (for example: > > futex, poll, epoll_wait) sometimes are not called? > > > > > > > > It can be reproduced using the following bash script: > > > > https://gist.github.com/ldorau/c439d9ec7635409a5016c42e3a9121ec > > > > > > > > Here are results gathered from 60 seconds test run on kernel 4.9.12 (Fedora > > 24): > > > > > > > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > > > > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > > > > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > > > > > > > > The whole log is attached below. > > > > > > > > Lukasz > > > > > > > > --- > > > > # ./test_kprobes.sh 60 > > > > > > > > Will trace using following kprobe_events: > > > > r:kprobes/r_futex sys_futex > > > > p:kprobes/p_futex sys_futex > > > > r:kprobes/r_poll sys_poll > > > > p:kprobes/p_poll sys_poll > > > > r:kprobes/r_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait > > > > p:kprobes/p_epoll_wait sys_epoll_wait > > > > r:kprobes/r_select sys_select > > > > p:kprobes/p_select sys_select > > > > r:kprobes/r_fork sys_fork > > > > p:kprobes/p_fork sys_fork > > > > r:kprobes/r_vfork sys_vfork > > > > p:kprobes/p_vfork sys_vfork > > > > r:kprobes/r_mmap sys_mmap > > > > p:kprobes/p_mmap sys_mmap > > > > r:kprobes/r_open sys_open > > > > p:kprobes/p_open sys_open > > > > r:kprobes/r_close sys_close > > > > p:kprobes/p_close sys_close > > > > r:kprobes/r_write sys_write > > > > p:kprobes/p_write sys_write > > > > r:kprobes/r_read sys_read > > > > p:kprobes/p_read sys_read > > > > > > > > Results (60 sec): > > > > futex: p 56904 r 5489 (90% did not return (51415)) > > > > poll: p 43466 r 7703 (82% did not return (35763)) > > > > epoll_wait: p 73366 r 23551 (67% did not return (49815)) > > > > select: p 13355 r 13351 (0% did not return (4)) > > > > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > > > > vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > > > > mmap: p 4328 r 4328 (OK) > > > > open: p 4579 r 4579 (OK) > > > > close: p 7163 r 7163 (OK) > > > > write: p 22769 r 22769 (OK) > > > > read: p 40014 r 40014 (OK) > > > > > > > > > > OK, I just dumped kprobe_profile after the test, > > > > > > futex: p 7775 r 698 (91% did not return (7077)) > > > poll: p 18409 r 3523 (80% did not return (14886)) > > > epoll_wait: p 5122 r 2389 (53% did not return (2733)) > > > select: p 5411 r 5286 (2% did not return (125)) > > > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > > > vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > > > mmap: p 179 r 179 (OK) > > > open: p 921 r 921 (OK) > > > close: p 1005 r 1005 (OK) > > > write: p 5632 r 5631 (0% did not return (1)) > > > read: p 10879 r 10878 (0% did not return (1)) > > > r_futex 1091 0 > > > p_futex 8986 0 > > > r_poll 4276 0 > > > p_poll 20610 0 > > > r_epoll_wait 2849 0 > > > p_epoll_wait 5905 0 > > > r_select 10172 0 > > > p_select 10312 0 > > > r_fork 0 0 > > > p_fork 0 0 > > > r_vfork 0 0 > > > p_vfork 0 0 > > > r_mmap 2987 0 > > > p_mmap 2884 0 > > > r_open 4002 0 > > > p_open 3855 0 > > > r_close 4262 0 > > > p_close 4122 0 > > > r_write 14281 0 > > > p_write 14276 0 > > > r_read 41494 0 > > > p_read 41363 0 > > > > > > OK, there are no miss-counted event. So at least kprobe and kretprobe working > > correctly. > > > I also tried to use static tracepoints for that. > > > https://gist.github.com/mhiramat/04d782deaf110a6b3391e2ecb923325e > > > > > > ---- > > > $ sudo bash test_kprobes.sh 10 > > > Disabling all current probes ... > > > Removing old probe points ... > > > Adding new probe points ... > > > Enabling new probe points ... > > > Clearing old trace log ... > > > > > > Tracing for 10 seconds ... done > > > Saving trace log ... done > > > > > > Results (10 sec): > > > futex: p 9856 r 1258 (87% did not return (8598)) > > > poll: p 7531 r 4031 (46% did not return (3500)) > > > epoll_wait: p 1996 r 1617 (18% did not return (379)) > > > select: p 273 r 257 (5% did not return (16)) > > > Results (10 sec): > > > futex: p 9851 r 9851 (OK) > > > poll: p 7531 r 7531 (OK) > > > epoll_wait: p 1996 r 1996 (OK) > > > select: p 273 r 273 (OK) > > > ---- > > > Of course these events are collected in "different places" so > > > it could be different. But yeah, it seems sys_* function itself > > > dosen't return but jumps into ret_from_syscall etc. > > > > Please try attached patch (that is my miss that forgot to accumulate missed > > count of kretprobe). > > > > Thanks for the patch. I ran two tests using the following script: > https://gist.github.com/ldorau/36d87640ff0659a483342d490b66f034 > The results are following: > > 1) The first test - during 60-seconds test the system was almost idle > (I did not touch the keyboard or mouse) > > KProbes results (60 sec): > futex: p 1373 r 422 (69% did not return (951)) > poll: p 3304 r 1575 (52% did not return (1729)) > epoll_wait: p 1062 r 943 (11% did not return (119)) > select: p 5978 r 5977 (0% did not return (1)) > mmap: p 264 r 264 (OK) > open: p 1056 r 1056 (OK) > close: p 1198 r 1198 (OK) > write: p 4786 r 4786 (OK) > read: p 8939 r 8939 (OK) > exit: p 1 r 0 > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > clone: p 5 r 5 (OK) > execve: p 4 r 4 (OK) > > Tracepoints results (60 sec): > futex: p 1372 r 1372 (OK) > poll: p 3304 r 3303 (0% did not return (1)) > epoll_wait: p 1062 r 1062 (OK) > select: p 5978 r 5978 (OK) > mmap: p 264 r 264 (OK) > open: p 1056 r 1056 (OK) > close: p 1198 r 1198 (OK) > write: p 4786 r 4786 (OK) > read: p 8939 r 8940 (OK) > exit: p 1 r 0 > > 2) The second test - during 60-seconds test I was normally using the system - > - I launched an internet browser, edited a file... > > KProbes results (60 sec): > futex: p 35394 r 689 (98% did not return (34705)) > poll: p 23449 r 896 (96% did not return (22553)) > epoll_wait: p 43927 r 4973 (88% did not return (38954)) > select: p 4874 r 4873 (0% did not return (1)) > mmap: p 3165 r 3165 (OK) > open: p 3680 r 3678 (0% did not return (2)) > close: p 6704 r 6704 (OK) > write: p 11769 r 11769 (OK) > read: p 22645 r 22647 (OK) > exit: p 30 r 0 > fork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > vfork: p 0 r 0 (OK) > clone: p 170 r 170 (OK) > execve: p 2 r 2 (OK) > > Tracepoints results (60 sec): > futex: p 35359 r 35268 (0% did not return (91)) > poll: p 23448 r 23444 (0% did not return (4)) > epoll_wait: p 43926 r 43909 (0% did not return (17)) > select: p 4874 r 4874 (OK) > mmap: p 3165 r 3165 (OK) > open: p 3680 r 3827 (OK) > close: p 6704 r 6704 (OK) > write: p 11769 r 11770 (OK) > read: p 22645 r 22648 (OK) > exit: p 30 r 0 > I see. The patch was to identify the reason why the return event was lost. Not for fixing the issue. To fix this issue, I need some more work. Thank you, > Lukasz > > > > > I've focused on futex and it showed there were some "misses" of kretprobe. > > > > ---- > > Disabling all current probes ... > > Removing old probe points ... > > Adding new probe points ... > > Enabling new probe points ... > > Clearing old trace log ... > > > > Tracing for 10 seconds ... done > > Saving trace log ... done > > > > Results (10 sec): > > futex: p 190 r 74 (61% did not return (116)) > > Results (10 sec): > > futex: p 190 r 190 (OK) > > > > $ cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/kprobe_profile > > r_futex 176 127 > > p_futex 298 0 > > ----- > > > > Actually, since the kretprobe is not well designed for the usecase > > probing on the sleep-able functions, it just fails if it invoked > > more than the number of CPUs in parallel. > > It is currently a limitation of kretprobe, but I'll solve it. > > > > Thanks, > > > > -- > > Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> -- Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2017-03-16 10:11 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 11+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2017-03-09 13:44 Why return probes of some syscalls sometimes are not called? Dorau, Lukasz 2017-03-09 13:58 ` Mathieu Desnoyers 2017-03-09 14:44 ` Steven Rostedt 2017-03-09 14:57 ` Steven Rostedt [not found] ` <1231722663.1343.1489071698914.JavaMail.zimbra@efficios.com> 2017-03-09 15:20 ` Steven Rostedt [not found] ` <D9FFE20C522965449E182ACE73889AEB486818F2@irsmsx105.ger.corp.intel.com> 2017-03-09 15:38 ` Steven Rostedt 2017-03-09 17:00 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2017-03-09 18:19 ` Chernookyi, Vitalii 2017-03-10 10:51 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2017-03-13 9:09 ` Dorau, Lukasz 2017-03-16 10:01 ` Masami Hiramatsu
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox; as well as URLs for NNTP newsgroup(s).