Re: freebsd-head: suddenly NMI panics lead to ddb being unable to stop CPUs?

From: Scott Long <scottl_at_netflix.com>
Date: Fri, 21 Aug 2015 16:31:13 +0100
I might have a fix for this, I’ll check the netflix repo and see if it’s something that is ready to go upstream to freebsd.

Scott

> On Aug 21, 2015, at 4:19 PM, Eric van Gyzen <vangyzen_at_FreeBSD.org> wrote:
> 
> I mentioned this to Adrian, but I'll mention here for everyone else's benefit.
> 
> Ryan is exactly right.  There was a thread a while ago, with a proposed patch from Kostik:
> 
> https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2014-July/015584.html
> 
> As I recall, Scott Long also ran into this a few months ago.
> 
> It happens for any NMI:  entering the debugger, a PCI Parity or System Error, a hardware watchdog timeout, and probably other sources I'm not remembering.
> 
> Eric
> 
> On 08/21/2015 09:23, Ryan Stone wrote:
>> I have seen similar behaviour before.  The problem is that every CPU
>> receives an NMI concurrently.  As I recall, one of them gets some kind of
>> pseudo-spinlock and tries to stop the other CPUs with an NMI.  However,
>> because they are already in an NMI handler, they don't get the second NMI
>> and don't stop properly.
>> 
>> The case that I saw actually had to do with a panic triggered by an NMI,
>> not entering the debugger, but I believe that both cases use
>> stop_cpus_hard() under the hood and have a similar issue.
>> 
>> (I also recall seeing the exact situation that you describe while
>> originally developing SR-IOV on an alpha version of the Fortville hardware
>> and firmware with a very buggy SR-IOV implementation.  I've never seen it
>> on ixgbe before, although I haven't used SR-IOV there very much at all)
>> 
>> 
>> On Thu, Aug 20, 2015 at 6:15 PM, Adrian Chadd <adrian_at_freebsd.org> wrote:
>> 
>>> Hi!
>>> 
>>> This has started happening on -HEAD recently. No, I don't have any
>>> more details yet than "recently."
>>> 
>>> Whenever I get an NMI panic (and getting an NMI is a separate issue,
>>> sigh) I get a slew of "failed to stop cpu" messages, and all CPUs
>>> enter ddb. This is .. sub-optimal. Has anyone seen this? Does anyone
>>> have any ideas?
>>> 
>>> 
>>> -adrian
> 
Received on Fri Aug 21 2015 - 13:31:41 UTC

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.4.0 : Wed May 19 2021 - 11:40:59 UTC