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--enable-thread-safety bug

This is a discussion on --enable-thread-safety bug within the Pgsql General forums, part of the PostgreSQL category; --> Hello List, I am running 8.3.1 on FreeBSD 6.2 patch-7. The ports for Freebsd turn on --enable-thread-safety during configure ...


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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 04-10-2008, 12:22 AM
Steve Clark
 
Posts: n/a
Default --enable-thread-safety bug

Hello List,

I am running 8.3.1 on FreeBSD 6.2 patch-7.

The ports for Freebsd turn on --enable-thread-safety during configure
of pg.

When running my app after some time I have been getting a core dump -
sig 11.

#0 0x28333b96 in memcpy () from /lib/libc.so.6
(gdb) bt
#0 0x28333b96 in memcpy () from /lib/libc.so.6
#1 0x280d0122 in ecpg_init_sqlca (sqlca=0x0) at misc.c:100
#2 0x280d0264 in ECPGget_sqlca () at misc.c:145
#3 0x280d056c in ecpg_log (
format=0x280d1d78 "free_params line %d: parameter %d = %s\n") at
misc.c:243
#4 0x280c9758 in free_params (paramValues=0x836fe00, nParams=104,
print=1 '\001',
lineno=3303) at execute.c:1045
#5 0x280c9f08 in ecpg_execute (stmt=0xa726f00) at execute.c:1298
#6 0x280ca978 in ECPGdo (lineno=3303, compat=0, force_indicator=1,
connection_name=0x0, questionmarks=0 '\0', st=0,
query=0x806023c "update T_UNIT_STATUS_LOG set ip_address = $1
:: inet , last_ip_address = $2 :: inet , unit_date = $3 ::
timestamp with time zone , unit_raw_time = $4 , status_date = now
() , unit_ac"...) at execute.c:1636
#7 0x08057a46 in UpdateTUSL (pCachedUnit=0x807b680, msg=0xbfbf8850 "",
p_threshold=80, p_actualIP=0xbfbfe880 "24.39.85.226")
at srm2_monitor_db.pgc:3303
#8 0x0804f174 in main (argc=3, argv=0xbfbf7fc0) at
srm2_monitor_server.c:3265
(gdb) f 2
#2 0x280d0264 in ECPGget_sqlca () at misc.c:145
145 ecpg_init_sqlca(sqlca);
(gdb) p sqlca
$1 = (struct sqlca_t *) 0x0

in looking in the code in misc.c

I see:

struct sqlca_t *
ECPGget_sqlca(void)
{
#ifdef ENABLE_THREAD_SAFETY
struct sqlca_t *sqlca;

pthread_once(&sqlca_key_once, ecpg_sqlca_key_init);

sqlca = pthread_getspecific(sqlca_key);
if (sqlca == NULL)
{
sqlca = malloc(sizeof(struct sqlca_t));
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
ecpg_init_sqlca(sqlca);
pthread_setspecific(sqlca_key, sqlca);
}
return (sqlca);
#else
return (&sqlca);
#endif
}

The return from malloc should be checked to make sure it succeeds -
right???

Steve

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  #2 (permalink)  
Old 04-10-2008, 12:22 AM
Tom Lane
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: --enable-thread-safety bug

Steve Clark <sclark@netwolves.com> writes:
> The return from malloc should be checked to make sure it succeeds -
> right???


Probably, but what do you expect the code to do if it doesn't succeed?
This function seems not to have any defined error-return convention.

regards, tom lane

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  #3 (permalink)  
Old 04-10-2008, 12:22 AM
Steve Clark
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: --enable-thread-safety bug

Tom Lane wrote:
> Steve Clark <sclark@netwolves.com> writes:
>
>>The return from malloc should be checked to make sure it succeeds -
>>right???

>
>
> Probably, but what do you expect the code to do if it doesn't succeed?
> This function seems not to have any defined error-return convention.
>
> regards, tom lane
>
>

Retry - the malloc - maybe there is a memory leak when
--enable-thread-saftey is enabled,
send an out of memory message to the postgres log, abort the
transaction - I don't know I am
not a postgres developer so I don't know all the issues. I all I know
as a user having a program
like postgres just sig 11 is unacceptable! As a commercial developer
of software for over 30 years
I would never just do nothing.

My $.02
Steve

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  #4 (permalink)  
Old 04-10-2008, 12:22 AM
Martijn van Oosterhout
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: --enable-thread-safety bug

On Sat, Mar 22, 2008 at 11:28:24AM -0400, Steve Clark wrote:
> Retry - the malloc - maybe there is a memory leak when
> --enable-thread-saftey is enabled,
> send an out of memory message to the postgres log, abort the
> transaction - I don't know I am
> not a postgres developer so I don't know all the issues. I all I know
> as a user having a program
> like postgres just sig 11 is unacceptable! As a commercial developer
> of software for over 30 years
> I would never just do nothing.


Note this is your in application, not the server. Only your program
died. Ofcourse the transaction got aborted, since the client (you)
disconnected. There is no way for this to write to the server log,
since it may be one another machine...

As to the issue at hand: it looks like your program ran out of memory.
Can you confirm the memory was running low? Even if it handled it by
returning NULL, the caller will die because it also needs memory.

Do you create and destroy a lot of threads since it seems this memory
won't be freed?

Have a nice day,
--
Martijn van Oosterhout <kleptog@svana.org> http://svana.org/kleptog/
> Please line up in a tree and maintain the heap invariant while
> boarding. Thank you for flying nlogn airlines.


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  #5 (permalink)  
Old 04-10-2008, 12:22 AM
Tom Lane
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: --enable-thread-safety bug

Martijn van Oosterhout <kleptog@svana.org> writes:
> Note this is your in application, not the server. Only your program
> died. Ofcourse the transaction got aborted, since the client (you)
> disconnected. There is no way for this to write to the server log,
> since it may be one another machine...


Right. And note that if we don't have enough memory for the struct
that was requested, we *certainly* don't have enough to do anything
interesting. We could try

fprintf(stderr, "out of memory\n");
exit(1);

but even that I would give only about 50-50 odds of success; and more
to the point, how is this any better for an application than a core
dump? It's still summary termination.

> Do you create and destroy a lot of threads since it seems this memory
> won't be freed?


The OP's program isn't threaded at all, since he was apparently running
with a non-threaded ecpg/libpq before. This means that the proposal of
looping till someone else frees memory is at least as silly as allowing
the core dump to happen.

regards, tom lane

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  #6 (permalink)  
Old 04-10-2008, 12:22 AM
Steve Clark
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: --enable-thread-safety bug

Tom Lane wrote:
> Martijn van Oosterhout <kleptog@svana.org> writes:
>
>>Note this is your in application, not the server. Only your program
>>died. Ofcourse the transaction got aborted, since the client (you)
>>disconnected. There is no way for this to write to the server log,
>>since it may be one another machine...

>
>
> Right. And note that if we don't have enough memory for the struct
> that was requested, we *certainly* don't have enough to do anything
> interesting. We could try
>
> fprintf(stderr, "out of memory\n");
> exit(1);
>
> but even that I would give only about 50-50 odds of success; and more
> to the point, how is this any better for an application than a core
> dump? It's still summary termination.
>
>
>>Do you create and destroy a lot of threads since it seems this memory
>>won't be freed?

>
>
> The OP's program isn't threaded at all, since he was apparently running
> with a non-threaded ecpg/libpq before. This means that the proposal of
> looping till someone else frees memory is at least as silly as allowing
> the core dump to happen.
>
> regards, tom lane
>
>

I guess the real question is why we are running out of memory when
this option is enabled.
Since my app doesn't use threads that points to a memory leak in the
ecpg library when enable thread
safety is turned on.


Steve

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  #7 (permalink)  
Old 04-10-2008, 12:22 AM
Steve Clark
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: --enable-thread-safety bug

Martijn van Oosterhout wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 22, 2008 at 11:28:24AM -0400, Steve Clark wrote:
>
>>Retry - the malloc - maybe there is a memory leak when
>>--enable-thread-saftey is enabled,
>>send an out of memory message to the postgres log, abort the
>>transaction - I don't know I am
>>not a postgres developer so I don't know all the issues. I all I know
>>as a user having a program
>>like postgres just sig 11 is unacceptable! As a commercial developer
>>of software for over 30 years
>>I would never just do nothing.

>
>
> Note this is your in application, not the server. Only your program
> died. Ofcourse the transaction got aborted, since the client (you)
> disconnected. There is no way for this to write to the server log,
> since it may be one another machine...
>
> As to the issue at hand: it looks like your program ran out of memory.
> Can you confirm the memory was running low? Even if it handled it by
> returning NULL, the caller will die because it also needs memory.
>
> Do you create and destroy a lot of threads since it seems this memory
> won't be freed?
>
> Have a nice day,

My program had no threads - as I pointed out if I change the default
Makefile in the FreeBSD ports
system to not enable thread safety my programs runs just fine for days
on end. It appears to me
without any kind of close examination that there is a memory leak in
the ecpg library when enable
thread safety is turned on.

I had an earlier problem in 8.2.6 where if enable-thread-safety was
turned on sqlca would always be zero
no matter if there was an error or not.

This appears to me to be a problem in the ecpg library when thread
safety is enabled.

Have a nice day.

Steve

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  #8 (permalink)  
Old 04-10-2008, 12:22 AM
Michael Meskes
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: --enable-thread-safety bug

On Sat, Mar 22, 2008 at 12:51:30PM -0400, Steve Clark wrote:
> My program had no threads - as I pointed out if I change the default
> Makefile in the FreeBSD ports
> system to not enable thread safety my programs runs just fine for days
> on end. It appears to me
> without any kind of close examination that there is a memory leak in the
> ecpg library when enable
> thread safety is turned on.


There are just a few variables covered by ENABLE_THREAD_SAFETY. I wonder
how the program manages to spend so much time allocating memory to eat
all of it. Could you give us some more info about your source code? Do
you use descriptors? Auto allocating?

Michael
--
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  #9 (permalink)  
Old 04-10-2008, 12:22 AM
Steve Clark
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: --enable-thread-safety bug

Michael Meskes wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 22, 2008 at 12:51:30PM -0400, Steve Clark wrote:
>
>>My program had no threads - as I pointed out if I change the default
>>Makefile in the FreeBSD ports
>>system to not enable thread safety my programs runs just fine for days
>>on end. It appears to me
>>without any kind of close examination that there is a memory leak in the
>>ecpg library when enable
>>thread safety is turned on.

>
>
> There are just a few variables covered by ENABLE_THREAD_SAFETY. I wonder
> how the program manages to spend so much time allocating memory to eat
> all of it. Could you give us some more info about your source code? Do
> you use descriptors? Auto allocating?
>
> Michael


Hi Michael,

Not exactly sure what you are asking about - descriptors and auto
allocating.

The program processes about 800000 packets a day, which can update
several tables.
It runs continously reading udp packets from systems at remote
locations coming in over the internet.

It has a global
exec sql include sqlca;

then a number of functions that get called with each function having
it own

xxx( args,... )
{
EXEC SQL BEGIN DECLARE SECTION;
a bunch of variable
EXEC SQL END DECLARE SECTION;

with various EXEC SQL inserts, updates and selects.
with checks of sqlca.sqlcode to determine if the sql statement succeeded.

}

Steve

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  #10 (permalink)  
Old 04-10-2008, 12:22 AM
Steve Clark
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: --enable-thread-safety bug

Steve Clark wrote:
> Michael Meskes wrote:
>
>>On Sat, Mar 22, 2008 at 12:51:30PM -0400, Steve Clark wrote:
>>
>>
>>>My program had no threads - as I pointed out if I change the default
>>>Makefile in the FreeBSD ports
>>>system to not enable thread safety my programs runs just fine for days
>>>on end. It appears to me
>>>without any kind of close examination that there is a memory leak in the
>>>ecpg library when enable
>>>thread safety is turned on.

>>
>>
>>There are just a few variables covered by ENABLE_THREAD_SAFETY. I wonder
>>how the program manages to spend so much time allocating memory to eat
>>all of it. Could you give us some more info about your source code? Do
>>you use descriptors? Auto allocating?
>>
>>Michael

>
>
> Hi Michael,
>
> Not exactly sure what you are asking about - descriptors and auto
> allocating.
>
> The program processes about 800000 packets a day, which can update
> several tables.
> It runs continously reading udp packets from systems at remote
> locations coming in over the internet.
>
> It has a global
> exec sql include sqlca;
>
> then a number of functions that get called with each function having
> it own
>
> xxx( args,... )
> {
> EXEC SQL BEGIN DECLARE SECTION;
> a bunch of variable
> EXEC SQL END DECLARE SECTION;
>
> with various EXEC SQL inserts, updates and selects.
> with checks of sqlca.sqlcode to determine if the sql statement succeeded.
>
> }
>
> Steve
>

to further illustrate our code below is a typical exec sql statement:
exec sql insert into t_unit_event_log
(event_log_no,
unit_serial_no,
event_type,
event_category,
event_mesg,
event_severity,
event_status,
event_ref_log_no,
event_logged_by,
event_date,
alarm,
last_updated_by,
last_updated_date)
values (nextval('seq_event_log_no'),
:h_serial_no,
'ALERT',
:h_category,
:h_mesg,
:h_sev,
3,
NULL,
current_user,
now(),
:h_alarm,
current_user,
now());

if (sqlca.sqlcode != 0)

{
VARLOG(INFO, LOG_LEVEL_DBG4, "could not insert into
T_UNIT_EVENT_LOG\n");
VARLOG(INFO, LOG_LEVEL_DBG4, "insertTUEL returns %d\n", ret);
return ret;
}


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