[Intel-gfx] ✗ Fi.CI.BAT: failure for drm/i915: ttm for stolen (rev5)

Robert Beckett bob.beckett at collabora.com
Wed Jun 29 12:51:54 UTC 2022



On 28/06/2022 17:22, Robert Beckett wrote:
> 
> 
> On 28/06/2022 09:46, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
>>
>> On 27/06/2022 18:08, Robert Beckett wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> On 22/06/2022 10:05, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 21/06/2022 20:11, Robert Beckett wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On 21/06/2022 18:37, Patchwork wrote:
>>>>>> *Patch Details*
>>>>>> *Series:*    drm/i915: ttm for stolen (rev5)
>>>>>> *URL:*    https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/series/101396/ 
>>>>>> <https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/series/101396/>
>>>>>> *State:*    failure
>>>>>> *Details:* 
>>>>>> https://intel-gfx-ci.01.org/tree/drm-tip/Patchwork_101396v5/index.html 
>>>>>> <https://intel-gfx-ci.01.org/tree/drm-tip/Patchwork_101396v5/index.html> 
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>   CI Bug Log - changes from CI_DRM_11790 -> Patchwork_101396v5
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>     Summary
>>>>>>
>>>>>> *FAILURE*
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Serious unknown changes coming with Patchwork_101396v5 absolutely 
>>>>>> need to be
>>>>>> verified manually.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> If you think the reported changes have nothing to do with the changes
>>>>>> introduced in Patchwork_101396v5, please notify your bug team to 
>>>>>> allow them
>>>>>> to document this new failure mode, which will reduce false 
>>>>>> positives in CI.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> External URL: 
>>>>>> https://intel-gfx-ci.01.org/tree/drm-tip/Patchwork_101396v5/index.html 
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>     Participating hosts (40 -> 41)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Additional (2): fi-icl-u2 bat-dg2-9
>>>>>> Missing (1): fi-bdw-samus
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>     Possible new issues
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Here are the unknown changes that may have been introduced in 
>>>>>> Patchwork_101396v5:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>       IGT changes
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>         Possible regressions
>>>>>>
>>>>>>   * igt at i915_selftest@live at reset:
>>>>>>       o bat-adlp-4: PASS
>>>>>> <https://intel-gfx-ci.01.org/tree/drm-tip/CI_DRM_11790/bat-adlp-4/igt@i915_selftest@live@reset.html> 
>>>>>>
>>>>>>         -> DMESG-FAIL
>>>>>> <https://intel-gfx-ci.01.org/tree/drm-tip/Patchwork_101396v5/bat-adlp-4/igt@i915_selftest@live@reset.html> 
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> I keep hitting clobbered pages during engine resets on bat-adlp-4.
>>>>> It seems to happen most of the time on that machine and 
>>>>> occasionally on bat-adlp-6.
>>>>>
>>>>> Should bat-adlp-4 be considered an unreliable machine like 
>>>>> bat-adlp-6 is for now?
>>>>>
>>>>> Alternatively, seeing the history of this in
>>>>>
>>>>> commit 3da3c5c1c9825c24168f27b021339e90af37e969 "drm/i915: Exclude 
>>>>> low pages (128KiB) of stolen from use"
>>>>>
>>>>> could this be an indication that maybe the original issue is worse 
>>>>> on adlp machines?
>>>>> I have only ever seen page page 135 or 136 clobbered across many 
>>>>> runs via trybot, so it looks fairly consistent.
>>>>> Though excluding the use of over 540K of stolen might be too severe.
>>>>
>>>> Don't know but I see that on the latest version you even hit pages 
>>>> 165/166.
>>>>
>>>> Any history of hitting this in CI without your series? If not, are 
>>>> there some other changes which could explain it? Are you touching 
>>>> the selftest itself?
>>>>
>>>> Hexdump of the clobbered page looks quite complex. Especially 
>>>> POISON_FREE. Any idea how that ends up there?
>>>
>>>
>>> (see 
>>> https://intel-gfx-ci.01.org/tree/drm-tip/Trybot_105517v4/fi-rkl-guc/igt@i915_selftest@live@reset.html#dmesg-warnings702) 
>>>
>>>
>>> after lots of slow debug via CI, it looks like the issue is that a 
>>> ring buffer was allocated and taking up that page during the initial 
>>> crc capture in the test, but by the time it came to check for 
>>> corruption, it had been freed from that page.
>>>
>>> The test has a number of weaknesses:
>>>
>>> 1. the busy check is done twice, without taking in to account any 
>>> change in between. I assume previously this could be relied on never 
>>> to occur, but now it can for some reason (more on that later)
>>
>> You mean the stolen page used/unused test? Probably the premise is 
>> that the test controls the driver completely ie. is the sole user and 
>> the two checks are run at the time where nothing else could have 
>> changed the state.
>>
>> With the nerfed request (as with GuC) this actually should hold. In 
>> the generic case I am less sure, my working knowledge faded a bit, but 
>> perhaps there was something guaranteeing the spinner couldn't have 
>> been retired yet at the time of the second check. Would need 
>> clarifying at least in comments.
>>>
>>> 2. the engine reset returns early with an error for guc submission 
>>> engines, but it is silently ignored in the test. Perhaps it should 
>>> ignore guc submission engines as it is a largely useless test for 
>>> those situations.
>>
>> Yes looks dodgy indeed. You will need to summon the owners of the GuC 
>> backend to comment on this.
>>
>> However even if the test should be skipped with GuC it is extremely 
>> interesting that you are hitting this so I suspect there is a more 
>> serious issue at play.
> 
> indeed. That's why I am keen to get to the root cause instead of just 
> slapping in a fix.
> 
>>
>>> A quick obvious fix is to have a busy bitmask that remembers each 
>>> page's busy state initially and only check for corruption if it was 
>>> busy during both checks.
>>>
>>> However, the main question is why this is occurring now with my changes.
>>> I have added more debug to check where the stolen memory is being 
>>> freed, but the first run last night didn't hit the issue for once.
>>> I am running again now, will report back if I figure out where it is 
>>> being freed.
>>>
>>> I am pretty sure the "corruption" (which isn't actually corruption) 
>>> is from a ring buffer.
>>> The POISON_FREE is the only difference between the captured before 
>>> and after dumps:
>>>
>>> [0040] 00000000 02800000 6b6b6b6b 6b6b6b6b 6b6b6b6b 6b6b6b6b 6b6b6b6b 
>>> 6b6b6b6b
>>>
>>> with the 2nd dword being the MI_ARB_CHECK used for the spinner.
>>> I think this is the request poisoning from i915_request_retire()
>>>
>>> The bit I don't know yet is why a ring buffer was freed between the 
>>> initial crc capture and the corruption check. The spinner should be 
>>> active across the entire test, maintaining a ref on the context and 
>>> it's ring.
>>>
>>> hopefully my latest debug will give more answers.
>>
>> Yeah if you can figure our whether the a) spinner is still active 
>> during the 2nd check (as I think it should be), and b) is the 
>> corruption detected in the same pages which were used in the 1st pass 
>> that would be interesting.
> 
> yep. The latest run is still stuck in the CI queue after 27 hours.
> I think I have enough debug in there to catch it now.
> Hopefully I can get a root cause once it gets chance to run.
> 

https://intel-gfx-ci.01.org/tree/drm-tip/Trybot_105517v7/fi-adl-ddr5/igt@i915_selftest@live@reset.html#dmesg-warnings496

well, the run finally happened.
And it shows that the freed resource happens from a workqueue. Not helpful.

I'll now add a saved stack traces to all objects that saves where it is 
allocated and freed/queued for free.


> 
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> Tvrtko
>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Btw what is the benefit of converting stolen to start with? It's not 
>>>> much of a backend since it just uses the drm range manager. So quite 
>>>> thin and uneventful. Diffstats for the series also do not look like 
>>>> you end up with much code reduction?
>>>>
>>>> Regards,
>>>>
>>>> Tvrtko


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