Android 10 includes the Android Live-LocK Daemon (llkd
), which is designed to catch and mitigate kernel deadlocks. The llkd
component provides a default standalone implementation, but you can alternatively integrate the llkd
code into another service, either as part of the main loop or as a separate thread.
The llkd
has two detection scenarios: Persistent D or Z state, and persistent stack signature.
If a thread is in D (uninterruptible sleep) or Z (zombie) state with no forward progress for longer than ro.llk.timeout_ms or ro.llk.[D|Z].timeout_ms
, the llkd
kills the process (or parent process). If a subsequent scan shows the same process continues to exist, the llkd
confirms a live-lock condition and panics the kernel in a manner that provides the most detailed bug report for the condition.
The llkd
includes a self watchdog that alarms if llkd
locks up; watchdog is double the expected time to flow through the mainloop and sampling is every ro.llk_sample_ms
.
For userdebug releases, the llkd
can detect kernel live-locks using persistent stack signature checking. If a thread in any state except Z has a persistent listed ro.llk.stack
kernel symbol that is reported for longer than ro.llk.timeout_ms
or ro.llk.stack.timeout_ms
, the llkd
kills the process (even if there is forward scheduling progress). If a subsequent scan shows the same process continues to exist, the llkd
confirms a live-lock condition and panics the kernel in a manner that provides the most detailed bug report for the condition.
Note: Because forward scheduling progress is allowed, the llkd
does not perform ABA detection{:.external}.
The lldk
check persists continuously when the live lock condition exists and looks for the composed strings " symbol+0x"
or " symbol.cfi+0x"
in the /proc/pid/stack
file on Linux. The list of symbols is in ro.llk.stack
and defaults to the comma-separated list of "cma_alloc,__get_user_pages,bit_wait_io,wait_on_page_bit_killable
".
Symbols should be rare and short-lived enough that on a typical system the function is seen only once in a sample over the timeout period of ro.llk.stack.timeout_ms
(samples occur every ro.llk.check_ms
). Due to lack of ABA protection, this is the only way to prevent a false trigger. The symbol function must appear below the function calling the lock that could contend. If the lock is below or in the symbol function, the symbol appears in all affected processes, not just the one that caused the lockup.
The default implementation of llkd
does not monitor init
, [kthreadd]
, or [kthreadd]
spawns. For the llkd
to cover [kthreadd]
-spawned threads:
OR
wait_event_interruptible()
instead of wait_event()
.If one of the above conditions is met, the llkd
ignorelist can be adjusted to cover kernel components. Stack symbol checking involves an additional process ignore list to prevent sepolicy violations on services that block ptrace
operations.
The llkd
responds to several Android properties (listed below).
prop_ms
are in milliseconds.Device is configured with limited memory.
Device is configured for userdebug or eng build.
If property is "eng", the default is not ro.config.low_ram
or ro.debuggable
. If true, dump all threads (sysrq t
).
Allow live-lock daemon to be enabled. Default is false.
Evaluated for eng builds. Default is ro.llk.enable
.
Allow [khungtask]
daemon to be enabled. Default is false.
Evaluated for eng builds. Default is ro.khungtask.enable
.
Enable call to mlockall()
. Default is false.
[khungtask]
maximum time limit. Default is 12 minutes.
D or Z maximum time limit. Default is 10 minutes. Double this value to set the alarm watchdog for llkd
.
D maximum time limit. Default is ro.llk.timeout_ms
.
Z maximum time limit. Default is ro.llk.timeout_ms
.
Checks for persistent stack symbols maximum time limit. Default is ro.llk.timeout_ms
. Active only on userdebug or eng builds.
Samples of threads for D or Z. Default is two minutes.
Checks for kernel stack symbols that if persistently present can indicate a subsystem is locked up. Default is cma_alloc,__get_user_pages,bit_wait_io,wait_on_page_bit_killable
comma-separated list of kernel symbols. The check doesn't do forward scheduling ABA except by polling every ro.llk_check_ms
over the period ro.llk.stack.timeout_ms
, so stack symbols should be exceptionally rare and fleeting (it is highly unlikely for a symbol to show up persistently in all samples of the stack). Checks for a match for " symbol+0x"
or " symbol.cfi+0x"
in stack expansion. Available only on userdebug or eng builds; security concerns on user builds result in limited privileges that prevent this check.
The llkd
does not watch the specified processes. Default is 0,1,2
(kernel
, init
, and [kthreadd]
) plus process names init,[kthreadd],[khungtaskd],lmkd,llkd,watchdogd, [watchdogd],[watchdogd/0],...,[watchdogd/get_nprocs-1]
. A process can be a comm
, cmdline
, or pid
reference. An automated default can be larger than the current maximum property size of 92.
Note: false
is an extremely unlikely process to want to ignore.
The llkd
does not watch processes that have the specified parent(s). Default is 0,2,adbd&[setsid]
(kernel
, [kthreadd]
, and adbd
only for zombie setsid
). An ampersand (&) separator specifies that the parent is ignored only in combination with the target child process. Ampersand was selected because it is never part of a process name; however, a setprop
in the shell requires the ampersand to be escaped or quoted, although the init rc
file where this is normally specified does not have this issue. A parent or target process can be a comm
, cmdline
, or pid
reference.
The llkd
does not watch processes that match the specified uid(s). Comma-separated list of uid numbers or names. Default is empty or false.
The llkd
does not monitor the specified subset of processes for live lock stack signatures. Default is process names init,lmkd.llkd,llkd,keystore,ueventd,apexd,logd
. Prevents the sepolicy violation associated with processes that block ptrace
(as these can't be checked). Active only on userdebug and eng builds. For details on build types, refer to Building Android.
include/llkd.h
file in the sources.[khungtask]
daemon is too generic and trips on driver code that sits around in D state too much. Switching drivers to sleep, or S state, would make task(s) killable, and need to be resurrectable by drivers on an as-need basis.You can optionally incorporate the llkd
into another privileged daemon using the following C interface from the libllkd
component:
#include "llkd.h" bool llkInit(const char* threadname) /* return true if enabled */ unsigned llkCheckMillseconds(void) /* ms to sleep for next check */
If a threadname is provided, a thread automatically spawns, otherwise the caller must call llkCheckMilliseconds
in its main loop. The function returns the period of time before the next expected call to this handler.