Thread
Commits
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Fix erroneous Valgrind markings in AllocSetRealloc.
- b3e184a5d4fd 16.0 landed
- dc44180f6e17 14.8 landed
- 99e74cd235a5 13.11 landed
- 463bef38332e 12.15 landed
- 21bd818d05fb 11.20 landed
- f6a55c1d5593 15.3 landed
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Possible false valgrind error reports
Karina Litskevich <litskevichkarina@gmail.com> — 2023-02-14T14:49:27Z
Hi hackers, In 82d0a46ea32 AllocSetRealloc() was changed to allow decreasing size of external chunks and give memory back to the malloc pool. Two VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED() calls were not changed to work properly in the case of decreasing size: they can mark memory behind the new allocated memory UNDEFINED. If this memory was already allocated and initialized, it's expected to be DEFINED. So it can cause false valgrind error reports. I fixed it in 0001 patch. Also, it took me a while to understand what's going on there, so in 0002 patch I tried to improve comments and renamed a variable. Its name "oldsize" confused me. I first thought "oldsize" and "size" represent the same parameters of the old and new chunk. But actually "size" is new "chunk->requested_size" and "oldsize" is old "chksize". So I believe it's better to rename "oldsize" into "oldchksize". Best regards, Karina Litskevich Postgres Professional: http://postgrespro.com/
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Re: Possible false valgrind error reports
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2023-02-14T20:21:45Z
Karina Litskevich <litskevichkarina@gmail.com> writes: > In 82d0a46ea32 AllocSetRealloc() was changed to allow decreasing size of > external chunks and give memory back to the malloc pool. Two > VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED() calls were not changed to work properly in the > case of decreasing size: they can mark memory behind the new allocated > memory > UNDEFINED. If this memory was already allocated and initialized, it's > expected > to be DEFINED. So it can cause false valgrind error reports. I fixed it in > 0001 patch. Hmm, I see the concern: adjusting the Valgrind marking of bytes beyond the newly-realloced block is wrong because it might tromp on memory allocated in another way. However, I'm not sure about the details of your patch. The first hunk in 0001 doesn't seem quite right yet: * old allocation. */ #ifdef USE_VALGRIND - if (oldsize > chunk->requested_size) + if (size > chunk->requested_size && oldsize > chunk->requested_size) VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED((char *) pointer + chunk->requested_size, oldsize - chunk->requested_size); #endif If size < oldsize, aren't we still doing the wrong thing? Seems like maybe it has to be like if (size > chunk->requested_size && oldsize > chunk->requested_size) VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED((char *) pointer + chunk->requested_size, Min(size, oldsize) - chunk->requested_size); * allocation; it could have been as small as one byte. We have to be * conservative and just mark the entire old portion DEFINED. */ - VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_DEFINED(pointer, oldsize); + if (size >= oldsize) + VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_DEFINED(pointer, oldsize); + else + VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_DEFINED(pointer, size); #endif This is OK, though I wonder if it'd read better as + VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_DEFINED(pointer, Min(size, oldsize)); I've not thought hard about whether I like the variable renaming proposed in 0002. I do suggest though that those comment changes are an integral part of the bug fix and hence belong in 0001. regards, tom lane -
Re: Possible false valgrind error reports
Karina Litskevich <litskevichkarina@gmail.com> — 2023-02-17T15:58:45Z
Thank you, I moved comment changes to 0001 and rewrote the fix through Min(). > The first hunk in 0001 doesn't seem quite right yet: > > * old allocation. > */ > #ifdef USE_VALGRIND > - if (oldsize > chunk->requested_size) > + if (size > chunk->requested_size && oldsize > chunk->requested_size) > VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED((char *) pointer + chunk->requested_size, > oldsize - chunk->requested_size); > #endif > > If size < oldsize, aren't we still doing the wrong thing? Seems like > maybe it has to be like If size > chunk->requested_size than chksize >= oldsize and so we can mark this memory without worries. Region from size to chksize will be marked NOACCESS later anyway: /* Ensure any padding bytes are marked NOACCESS. */ VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS((char *) pointer + size, chksize - size); I agree that it's not obvious, so I changed the first hunk like this: - if (oldsize > chunk->requested_size) + if (Min(size, oldsize) > chunk->requested_size) VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED((char *) pointer + chunk->requested_size, - oldsize - chunk->requested_size); + Min(size, oldsize) - chunk->requested_size); Any ideas on how to make this place easier to understand and comment above it concise and clear are welcome. There is another thing about this version. New line + Min(size, oldsize) - chunk->requested_size); is longer than 80 symbols and I don't know what's the best way to avoid this without making it look weird. I also noticed that if RANDOMIZE_ALLOCATED_MEMORY is defined then randomize_mem() have already marked this memory UNDEFINED. So we only "may need to adjust trailing bytes" if RANDOMIZE_ALLOCATED_MEMORY isn't defined. I reflected it in v2 of 0001 too.
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Re: Possible false valgrind error reports
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2023-02-21T23:50:06Z
Karina Litskevich <litskevichkarina@gmail.com> writes: > Thank you, I moved comment changes to 0001 and rewrote the fix through Min(). Looks good. I pushed it after a little more fiddling with the comments. Thanks for the report and patch! regards, tom lane