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Paul E. McKenneya241ec62005-10-30 15:03:12 -08001RCU Torture Test Operation
2
3
4CONFIG_RCU_TORTURE_TEST
5
6The CONFIG_RCU_TORTURE_TEST config option is available for all RCU
7implementations. It creates an rcutorture kernel module that can
8be loaded to run a torture test. The test periodically outputs
9status messages via printk(), which can be examined via the dmesg
Paul E. McKenney72e9bb52006-06-27 02:54:03 -070010command (perhaps grepping for "torture"). The test is started
Paul E. McKenneya241ec62005-10-30 15:03:12 -080011when the module is loaded, and stops when the module is unloaded.
12
Paul E. McKenney31a72bc2008-06-18 09:26:49 -070013CONFIG_RCU_TORTURE_TEST_RUNNABLE
14
15It is also possible to specify CONFIG_RCU_TORTURE_TEST=y, which will
16result in the tests being loaded into the base kernel. In this case,
17the CONFIG_RCU_TORTURE_TEST_RUNNABLE config option is used to specify
18whether the RCU torture tests are to be started immediately during
19boot or whether the /proc/sys/kernel/rcutorture_runnable file is used
20to enable them. This /proc file can be used to repeatedly pause and
21restart the tests, regardless of the initial state specified by the
22CONFIG_RCU_TORTURE_TEST_RUNNABLE config option.
23
24You will normally -not- want to start the RCU torture tests during boot
25(and thus the default is CONFIG_RCU_TORTURE_TEST_RUNNABLE=n), but doing
26this can sometimes be useful in finding boot-time bugs.
Paul E. McKenneya241ec62005-10-30 15:03:12 -080027
28
29MODULE PARAMETERS
30
31This module has the following parameters:
32
33nreaders This is the number of RCU reading threads supported.
34 The default is twice the number of CPUs. Why twice?
35 To properly exercise RCU implementations with preemptible
36 read-side critical sections.
37
Josh Triplettb772e1d2006-10-04 02:17:13 -070038nfakewriters This is the number of RCU fake writer threads to run. Fake
39 writer threads repeatedly use the synchronous "wait for
40 current readers" function of the interface selected by
41 torture_type, with a delay between calls to allow for various
42 different numbers of writers running in parallel.
43 nfakewriters defaults to 4, which provides enough parallelism
44 to trigger special cases caused by multiple writers, such as
45 the synchronize_srcu() early return optimization.
46
Paul E. McKenneya241ec62005-10-30 15:03:12 -080047stat_interval The number of seconds between output of torture
48 statistics (via printk()). Regardless of the interval,
49 statistics are printed when the module is unloaded.
50 Setting the interval to zero causes the statistics to
51 be printed -only- when the module is unloaded, and this
52 is the default.
53
Paul E. McKenney29766f12006-06-27 02:54:02 -070054shuffle_interval
55 The number of seconds to keep the test threads affinitied
Paul E. McKenneyd120f652008-06-18 05:21:44 -070056 to a particular subset of the CPUs, defaults to 3 seconds.
Paul E. McKenneyf85d6c72008-01-25 21:08:25 +010057 Used in conjunction with test_no_idle_hz.
Paul E. McKenney29766f12006-06-27 02:54:02 -070058
Paul E. McKenneyd120f652008-06-18 05:21:44 -070059stutter The length of time to run the test before pausing for this
60 same period of time. Defaults to "stutter=5", so as
61 to run and pause for (roughly) five-second intervals.
62 Specifying "stutter=0" causes the test to run continuously
63 without pausing, which is the old default behavior.
64
Paul E. McKenney29766f12006-06-27 02:54:02 -070065test_no_idle_hz Whether or not to test the ability of RCU to operate in
66 a kernel that disables the scheduling-clock interrupt to
67 idle CPUs. Boolean parameter, "1" to test, "0" otherwise.
Paul E. McKenneyf85d6c72008-01-25 21:08:25 +010068 Defaults to omitting this test.
Paul E. McKenney29766f12006-06-27 02:54:02 -070069
Josh Triplett20d2e422006-10-04 02:17:15 -070070torture_type The type of RCU to test: "rcu" for the rcu_read_lock() API,
71 "rcu_sync" for rcu_read_lock() with synchronous reclamation,
Josh Triplett11a14702006-10-04 02:17:16 -070072 "rcu_bh" for the rcu_read_lock_bh() API, "rcu_bh_sync" for
Josh Triplett4b6c2cc2006-10-04 02:17:16 -070073 rcu_read_lock_bh() with synchronous reclamation, "srcu" for
74 the "srcu_read_lock()" API, and "sched" for the use of
75 preempt_disable() together with synchronize_sched().
Paul E. McKenney72e9bb52006-06-27 02:54:03 -070076
Paul E. McKenneya241ec62005-10-30 15:03:12 -080077verbose Enable debug printk()s. Default is disabled.
78
79
80OUTPUT
81
82The statistics output is as follows:
83
Paul E. McKenney72e9bb52006-06-27 02:54:03 -070084 rcu-torture: --- Start of test: nreaders=16 stat_interval=0 verbose=0
85 rcu-torture: rtc: 0000000000000000 ver: 1916 tfle: 0 rta: 1916 rtaf: 0 rtf: 1915
86 rcu-torture: Reader Pipe: 1466408 9747 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
87 rcu-torture: Reader Batch: 1464477 11678 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
88 rcu-torture: Free-Block Circulation: 1915 1915 1915 1915 1915 1915 1915 1915 1915 1915 0
89 rcu-torture: --- End of test
Paul E. McKenneya241ec62005-10-30 15:03:12 -080090
Paul E. McKenney72e9bb52006-06-27 02:54:03 -070091The command "dmesg | grep torture:" will extract this information on
Paul E. McKenneya241ec62005-10-30 15:03:12 -080092most systems. On more esoteric configurations, it may be necessary to
93use other commands to access the output of the printk()s used by
94the RCU torture test. The printk()s use KERN_ALERT, so they should
95be evident. ;-)
96
97The entries are as follows:
98
Paul E. McKenneya241ec62005-10-30 15:03:12 -080099o "rtc": The hexadecimal address of the structure currently visible
100 to readers.
101
102o "ver": The number of times since boot that the rcutw writer task
103 has changed the structure visible to readers.
104
105o "tfle": If non-zero, indicates that the "torture freelist"
106 containing structure to be placed into the "rtc" area is empty.
107 This condition is important, since it can fool you into thinking
108 that RCU is working when it is not. :-/
109
110o "rta": Number of structures allocated from the torture freelist.
111
112o "rtaf": Number of allocations from the torture freelist that have
113 failed due to the list being empty.
114
115o "rtf": Number of frees into the torture freelist.
116
117o "Reader Pipe": Histogram of "ages" of structures seen by readers.
118 If any entries past the first two are non-zero, RCU is broken.
119 And rcutorture prints the error flag string "!!!" to make sure
120 you notice. The age of a newly allocated structure is zero,
121 it becomes one when removed from reader visibility, and is
122 incremented once per grace period subsequently -- and is freed
123 after passing through (RCU_TORTURE_PIPE_LEN-2) grace periods.
124
125 The output displayed above was taken from a correctly working
126 RCU. If you want to see what it looks like when broken, break
127 it yourself. ;-)
128
129o "Reader Batch": Another histogram of "ages" of structures seen
130 by readers, but in terms of counter flips (or batches) rather
131 than in terms of grace periods. The legal number of non-zero
Paul E. McKenneyf85d6c72008-01-25 21:08:25 +0100132 entries is again two. The reason for this separate view is that
133 it is sometimes easier to get the third entry to show up in the
Paul E. McKenneya241ec62005-10-30 15:03:12 -0800134 "Reader Batch" list than in the "Reader Pipe" list.
135
136o "Free-Block Circulation": Shows the number of torture structures
137 that have reached a given point in the pipeline. The first element
138 should closely correspond to the number of structures allocated,
139 the second to the number that have been removed from reader view,
140 and all but the last remaining to the corresponding number of
141 passes through a grace period. The last entry should be zero,
142 as it is only incremented if a torture structure's counter
143 somehow gets incremented farther than it should.
144
Paul E. McKenneyb2896d22006-10-04 02:17:03 -0700145Different implementations of RCU can provide implementation-specific
146additional information. For example, SRCU provides the following:
147
148 srcu-torture: rtc: f8cf46a8 ver: 355 tfle: 0 rta: 356 rtaf: 0 rtf: 346 rtmbe: 0
149 srcu-torture: Reader Pipe: 559738 939 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
150 srcu-torture: Reader Batch: 560434 243 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
151 srcu-torture: Free-Block Circulation: 355 354 353 352 351 350 349 348 347 346 0
152 srcu-torture: per-CPU(idx=1): 0(0,1) 1(0,1) 2(0,0) 3(0,1)
153
154The first four lines are similar to those for RCU. The last line shows
155the per-CPU counter state. The numbers in parentheses are the values
156of the "old" and "current" counters for the corresponding CPU. The
157"idx" value maps the "old" and "current" values to the underlying array,
158and is useful for debugging.
159
Paul E. McKenneya241ec62005-10-30 15:03:12 -0800160
161USAGE
162
163The following script may be used to torture RCU:
164
165 #!/bin/sh
166
167 modprobe rcutorture
168 sleep 100
169 rmmod rcutorture
Paul E. McKenney72e9bb52006-06-27 02:54:03 -0700170 dmesg | grep torture:
Paul E. McKenneya241ec62005-10-30 15:03:12 -0800171
172The output can be manually inspected for the error flag of "!!!".
173One could of course create a more elaborate script that automatically
Paul E. McKenney29766f12006-06-27 02:54:02 -0700174checked for such errors. The "rmmod" command forces a "SUCCESS" or
175"FAILURE" indication to be printk()ed.