| Kernel Lock Torture Test Operation |
| |
| CONFIG_LOCK_TORTURE_TEST |
| |
| The CONFIG LOCK_TORTURE_TEST config option provides a kernel module |
| that runs torture tests on core kernel locking primitives. The kernel |
| module, 'locktorture', may be built after the fact on the running |
| kernel to be tested, if desired. The tests periodically output status |
| messages via printk(), which can be examined via the dmesg (perhaps |
| grepping for "torture"). The test is started when the module is loaded, |
| and stops when the module is unloaded. This program is based on how RCU |
| is tortured, via rcutorture. |
| |
| This torture test consists of creating a number of kernel threads which |
| acquire the lock and hold it for specific amount of time, thus simulating |
| different critical region behaviors. The amount of contention on the lock |
| can be simulated by either enlarging this critical region hold time and/or |
| creating more kthreads. |
| |
| |
| MODULE PARAMETERS |
| |
| This module has the following parameters: |
| |
| |
| ** Locktorture-specific ** |
| |
| nwriters_stress Number of kernel threads that will stress exclusive lock |
| ownership (writers). The default value is twice the number |
| of online CPUs. |
| |
| nreaders_stress Number of kernel threads that will stress shared lock |
| ownership (readers). The default is the same amount of writer |
| locks. If the user did not specify nwriters_stress, then |
| both readers and writers be the amount of online CPUs. |
| |
| torture_type Type of lock to torture. By default, only spinlocks will |
| be tortured. This module can torture the following locks, |
| with string values as follows: |
| |
| o "lock_busted": Simulates a buggy lock implementation. |
| |
| o "spin_lock": spin_lock() and spin_unlock() pairs. |
| |
| o "spin_lock_irq": spin_lock_irq() and spin_unlock_irq() |
| pairs. |
| |
| o "rw_lock": read/write lock() and unlock() rwlock pairs. |
| |
| o "rw_lock_irq": read/write lock_irq() and unlock_irq() |
| rwlock pairs. |
| |
| o "mutex_lock": mutex_lock() and mutex_unlock() pairs. |
| |
| o "rwsem_lock": read/write down() and up() semaphore pairs. |
| |
| torture_runnable Start locktorture at boot time in the case where the |
| module is built into the kernel, otherwise wait for |
| torture_runnable to be set via sysfs before starting. |
| By default it will begin once the module is loaded. |
| |
| |
| ** Torture-framework (RCU + locking) ** |
| |
| shutdown_secs The number of seconds to run the test before terminating |
| the test and powering off the system. The default is |
| zero, which disables test termination and system shutdown. |
| This capability is useful for automated testing. |
| |
| onoff_interval The number of seconds between each attempt to execute a |
| randomly selected CPU-hotplug operation. Defaults |
| to zero, which disables CPU hotplugging. In |
| CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU=n kernels, locktorture will silently |
| refuse to do any CPU-hotplug operations regardless of |
| what value is specified for onoff_interval. |
| |
| onoff_holdoff The number of seconds to wait until starting CPU-hotplug |
| operations. This would normally only be used when |
| locktorture was built into the kernel and started |
| automatically at boot time, in which case it is useful |
| in order to avoid confusing boot-time code with CPUs |
| coming and going. This parameter is only useful if |
| CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU is enabled. |
| |
| stat_interval Number of seconds between statistics-related printk()s. |
| By default, locktorture will report stats every 60 seconds. |
| Setting the interval to zero causes the statistics to |
| be printed -only- when the module is unloaded, and this |
| is the default. |
| |
| stutter The length of time to run the test before pausing for this |
| same period of time. Defaults to "stutter=5", so as |
| to run and pause for (roughly) five-second intervals. |
| Specifying "stutter=0" causes the test to run continuously |
| without pausing, which is the old default behavior. |
| |
| shuffle_interval The number of seconds to keep the test threads affinitied |
| to a particular subset of the CPUs, defaults to 3 seconds. |
| Used in conjunction with test_no_idle_hz. |
| |
| verbose Enable verbose debugging printing, via printk(). Enabled |
| by default. This extra information is mostly related to |
| high-level errors and reports from the main 'torture' |
| framework. |
| |
| |
| STATISTICS |
| |
| Statistics are printed in the following format: |
| |
| spin_lock-torture: Writes: Total: 93746064 Max/Min: 0/0 Fail: 0 |
| (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) |
| |
| (A): Lock type that is being tortured -- torture_type parameter. |
| |
| (B): Number of writer lock acquisitions. If dealing with a read/write primitive |
| a second "Reads" statistics line is printed. |
| |
| (C): Number of times the lock was acquired. |
| |
| (D): Min and max number of times threads failed to acquire the lock. |
| |
| (E): true/false values if there were errors acquiring the lock. This should |
| -only- be positive if there is a bug in the locking primitive's |
| implementation. Otherwise a lock should never fail (i.e., spin_lock()). |
| Of course, the same applies for (C), above. A dummy example of this is |
| the "lock_busted" type. |
| |
| USAGE |
| |
| The following script may be used to torture locks: |
| |
| #!/bin/sh |
| |
| modprobe locktorture |
| sleep 3600 |
| rmmod locktorture |
| dmesg | grep torture: |
| |
| The output can be manually inspected for the error flag of "!!!". |
| One could of course create a more elaborate script that automatically |
| checked for such errors. The "rmmod" command forces a "SUCCESS", |
| "FAILURE", or "RCU_HOTPLUG" indication to be printk()ed. The first |
| two are self-explanatory, while the last indicates that while there |
| were no locking failures, CPU-hotplug problems were detected. |
| |
| Also see: Documentation/RCU/torture.txt |