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- ===============================================================
- Softlockup detector and hardlockup detector (aka nmi_watchdog)
- ===============================================================
- The Linux kernel can act as a watchdog to detect both soft and hard
- lockups.
- A 'softlockup' is defined as a bug that causes the kernel to loop in
- kernel mode for more than 20 seconds (see "Implementation" below for
- details), without giving other tasks a chance to run. The current
- stack trace is displayed upon detection and, by default, the system
- will stay locked up. Alternatively, the kernel can be configured to
- panic; a sysctl, "kernel.softlockup_panic", a kernel parameter,
- "softlockup_panic" (see "Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt" for
- details), and a compile option, "BOOTPARAM_SOFTLOCKUP_PANIC", are
- provided for this.
- A 'hardlockup' is defined as a bug that causes the CPU to loop in
- kernel mode for more than 10 seconds (see "Implementation" below for
- details), without letting other interrupts have a chance to run.
- Similarly to the softlockup case, the current stack trace is displayed
- upon detection and the system will stay locked up unless the default
- behavior is changed, which can be done through a sysctl,
- 'hardlockup_panic', a compile time knob, "BOOTPARAM_HARDLOCKUP_PANIC",
- and a kernel parameter, "nmi_watchdog"
- (see "Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt" for details).
- The panic option can be used in combination with panic_timeout (this
- timeout is set through the confusingly named "kernel.panic" sysctl),
- to cause the system to reboot automatically after a specified amount
- of time.
- === Implementation ===
- The soft and hard lockup detectors are built on top of the hrtimer and
- perf subsystems, respectively. A direct consequence of this is that,
- in principle, they should work in any architecture where these
- subsystems are present.
- A periodic hrtimer runs to generate interrupts and kick the watchdog
- task. An NMI perf event is generated every "watchdog_thresh"
- (compile-time initialized to 10 and configurable through sysctl of the
- same name) seconds to check for hardlockups. If any CPU in the system
- does not receive any hrtimer interrupt during that time the
- 'hardlockup detector' (the handler for the NMI perf event) will
- generate a kernel warning or call panic, depending on the
- configuration.
- The watchdog task is a high priority kernel thread that updates a
- timestamp every time it is scheduled. If that timestamp is not updated
- for 2*watchdog_thresh seconds (the softlockup threshold) the
- 'softlockup detector' (coded inside the hrtimer callback function)
- will dump useful debug information to the system log, after which it
- will call panic if it was instructed to do so or resume execution of
- other kernel code.
- The period of the hrtimer is 2*watchdog_thresh/5, which means it has
- two or three chances to generate an interrupt before the hardlockup
- detector kicks in.
- As explained above, a kernel knob is provided that allows
- administrators to configure the period of the hrtimer and the perf
- event. The right value for a particular environment is a trade-off
- between fast response to lockups and detection overhead.
- By default, the watchdog runs on all online cores. However, on a
- kernel configured with NO_HZ_FULL, by default the watchdog runs only
- on the housekeeping cores, not the cores specified in the "nohz_full"
- boot argument. If we allowed the watchdog to run by default on
- the "nohz_full" cores, we would have to run timer ticks to activate
- the scheduler, which would prevent the "nohz_full" functionality
- from protecting the user code on those cores from the kernel.
- Of course, disabling it by default on the nohz_full cores means that
- when those cores do enter the kernel, by default we will not be
- able to detect if they lock up. However, allowing the watchdog
- to continue to run on the housekeeping (non-tickless) cores means
- that we will continue to detect lockups properly on those cores.
- In either case, the set of cores excluded from running the watchdog
- may be adjusted via the kernel.watchdog_cpumask sysctl. For
- nohz_full cores, this may be useful for debugging a case where the
- kernel seems to be hanging on the nohz_full cores.
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