Thread

Commits

  1. Remove race condition in 022_crash_temp_files.pl test.

  1. Race condition in server-crash testing

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2022-04-04T04:50:27Z

    My pet dinosaur gaur just failed [1] in
    src/test/recovery/t/022_crash_temp_files.pl, which does this:
    
    -----
    my $ret = PostgreSQL::Test::Utils::system_log('pg_ctl', 'kill', 'KILL', $pid);
    is($ret, 0, 'killed process with KILL');
    
    # Close psql session
    $killme->finish;
    $killme2->finish;
    
    # Wait till server restarts
    $node->poll_query_until('postgres', undef, '');
    -----
    
    It's hard to be totally sure, but I think what happened is that
    gaur hit the in-hindsight-obvious race condition in this code:
    we managed to execute a successful iteration of poll_query_until
    before the postmaster had noticed its dead child and commenced
    the restart.  The test lines after these are not prepared to see
    failure-to-connect.
    
    It's not obvious to me how to remove this race condition.
    Thoughts?
    
    			regards, tom lane
    
    [1] https://buildfarm.postgresql.org/cgi-bin/show_log.pl?nm=gaur&dt=2022-04-03%2021%3A14%3A41
    
    
    
    
  2. Re: Race condition in server-crash testing

    Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2022-04-04T05:07:21Z

    Hi,
    
    On 2022-04-04 00:50:27 -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
    > My pet dinosaur gaur just failed [1] in
    > src/test/recovery/t/022_crash_temp_files.pl, which does this:
    > 
    > -----
    > my $ret = PostgreSQL::Test::Utils::system_log('pg_ctl', 'kill', 'KILL', $pid);
    > is($ret, 0, 'killed process with KILL');
    > 
    > # Close psql session
    > $killme->finish;
    > $killme2->finish;
    > 
    > # Wait till server restarts
    > $node->poll_query_until('postgres', undef, '');
    > -----
    > 
    > It's hard to be totally sure, but I think what happened is that
    > gaur hit the in-hindsight-obvious race condition in this code:
    > we managed to execute a successful iteration of poll_query_until
    > before the postmaster had noticed its dead child and commenced
    > the restart.  The test lines after these are not prepared to see
    > failure-to-connect.
    > 
    > It's not obvious to me how to remove this race condition.
    > Thoughts?
    
    Maybe we can use pump_until() with the psql that's not getting killed? With a
    non-matching regex? That'd only return once the backend was killed by
    postmaster, afaics?
    
    Greetings,
    
    Andres Freund
    
    
    
    
  3. Re: Race condition in server-crash testing

    Noah Misch <noah@leadboat.com> — 2022-04-04T05:52:18Z

    On Sun, Apr 03, 2022 at 10:07:21PM -0700, Andres Freund wrote:
    > On 2022-04-04 00:50:27 -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
    > > My pet dinosaur gaur just failed [1] in
    > > src/test/recovery/t/022_crash_temp_files.pl, which does this:
    > > 
    > > -----
    > > my $ret = PostgreSQL::Test::Utils::system_log('pg_ctl', 'kill', 'KILL', $pid);
    > > is($ret, 0, 'killed process with KILL');
    > > 
    > > # Close psql session
    > > $killme->finish;
    > > $killme2->finish;
    > > 
    > > # Wait till server restarts
    > > $node->poll_query_until('postgres', undef, '');
    > > -----
    > > 
    > > It's hard to be totally sure, but I think what happened is that
    > > gaur hit the in-hindsight-obvious race condition in this code:
    > > we managed to execute a successful iteration of poll_query_until
    > > before the postmaster had noticed its dead child and commenced
    > > the restart.  The test lines after these are not prepared to see
    > > failure-to-connect.
    > > 
    > > It's not obvious to me how to remove this race condition.
    > > Thoughts?
    > 
    > Maybe we can use pump_until() with the psql that's not getting killed? With a
    > non-matching regex? That'd only return once the backend was killed by
    > postmaster, afaics?
    
    Sounds good; I suspect that will be better than any of the ideas I scratched
    down when
    https://buildfarm.postgresql.org/cgi-bin/show_log.pl?nm=hoverfly&dt=2021-08-31%2015%3A00%3A52
    failed the same way.  For what it's worth, those were:
    
    - Check that pg_postmaster_start_time() has changed.  But that runs into EPIPE
      trouble, requiring a write to a file or an eval{} to trap the EPIPE.
    - Likewise, but check "select checkpoint_lsn from pg_control_checkpoint();".
    - Poll pg_controldata until a new checkpoint happens.  Compare checkpoint LSN.
      Use checkpoint_timeout=1h to avoid non-end-of-recovery checkpoints.
    - Poll logfile until "all server processes terminated; reinitializing".  Can
      be fooled with certain log_min_messages settings, but so can our other
      log-scraping tests.
    - Grab the pid of e.g. the checkpointer and poll for that process to be gone.
      Can be fooled by PID reuse.
    
    
    
    
  4. Re: Race condition in server-crash testing

    Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2022-04-06T00:46:01Z

    Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> writes:
    > On 2022-04-04 00:50:27 -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
    >> It's hard to be totally sure, but I think what happened is that
    >> gaur hit the in-hindsight-obvious race condition in this code:
    >> we managed to execute a successful iteration of poll_query_until
    >> before the postmaster had noticed its dead child and commenced
    >> the restart.  The test lines after these are not prepared to see
    >> failure-to-connect.
    >> It's not obvious to me how to remove this race condition.
    >> Thoughts?
    
    > Maybe we can use pump_until() with the psql that's not getting killed? With a
    > non-matching regex? That'd only return once the backend was killed by
    > postmaster, afaics?
    
    Good idea.  What I actually did was to borrow the recently-fixed code
    in 013_crash_restart.pl that checks for psql's "connection lost"
    report.
    
    			regards, tom lane