KFAIL_POINT_CODE,
KFAIL_POINT_CODE_FLAGS,
KFAIL_POINT_CODE_COND,
KFAIL_POINT_RETURN,
KFAIL_POINT_RETURN_VOID,
KFAIL_POINT_ERROR,
KFAIL_POINT_GOTO,
KFAIL_POINT_SLEEP_CALLBACKS,
fail_point,
DEBUG_FP
—
fail points
#include
<sys/fail.h>
KFAIL_POINT_CODE(
parent,
name,
code);
KFAIL_POINT_CODE_FLAGS(
parent,
name,
flags,
code);
KFAIL_POINT_CODE_COND(
parent,
name,
cond,
flags,
code);
KFAIL_POINT_RETURN(
parent,
name);
KFAIL_POINT_RETURN_VOID(
parent,
name);
KFAIL_POINT_ERROR(
parent,
name,
error_var);
KFAIL_POINT_GOTO(
parent,
name,
error_var,
label);
KFAIL_POINT_SLEEP_CALLBACKS(
parent,
name,
pre_func,
pre_arg,
post_func,
post_arg,
code);
Fail points are used to add code points where errors may be injected in a user
controlled fashion. Fail points provide a convenient wrapper around
user-provided error injection code, providing a
sysctl(9) MIB, and a parser for that MIB that
describes how the error injection code should fire.
The base fail point macro is
KFAIL_POINT_CODE()
where
parent is a sysctl tree (frequently
DEBUG_FP for kernel fail points, but various
subsystems may wish to provide their own fail point trees), and
name is the name of the MIB in that tree, and
code is the error injection code. The
code argument does not require braces, but it
is considered good style to use braces for any multi-line code arguments.
Inside the
code argument, the evaluation of
RETURN_VALUE is derived from the
return() value set in the sysctl MIB.
Additionally,
KFAIL_POINT_CODE_FLAGS() provides a
flags argument which controls the fail
point's behaviour. This can be used to e.g., mark the fail point's context as
non-sleepable, which causes the
sleep action to
be coerced to a busy wait. The supported flags are:
- FAIL_POINT_USE_TIMEOUT_PATH
- Rather than sleeping on a
sleep() call, just fire the post-sleep
function after a timeout fires.
- FAIL_POINT_NONSLEEPABLE
- Mark the fail point as being in a non-sleepable context,
which coerces sleep() calls to
delay() calls.
Likewise,
KFAIL_POINT_CODE_COND() supplies a
cond argument, which allows you to set the
condition under which the fail point's code may fire. This is equivalent to:
if (cond)
KFAIL_POINT_CODE_FLAGS(...);
See
SYSCTL VARIABLES
below.
The remaining
KFAIL_POINT_*() macros are wrappers
around common error injection paths:
-
KFAIL_POINT_RETURN(parent,
name)
- is the equivalent of
KFAIL_POINT_CODE(..., return
RETURN_VALUE)
-
KFAIL_POINT_RETURN_VOID(parent,
name)
- is the equivalent of
KFAIL_POINT_CODE(..., return)
-
KFAIL_POINT_ERROR(parent,
name,
error_var)
- is the equivalent of
KFAIL_POINT_CODE(..., error_var =
RETURN_VALUE)
-
KFAIL_POINT_GOTO(parent,
name,
error_var,
label)
- is the equivalent of
KFAIL_POINT_CODE(..., { error_var = RETURN_VALUE;
goto label;})
The
KFAIL_POINT_*() macros add sysctl MIBs where
specified. Many base kernel MIBs can be found in the
debug.fail_point tree (referenced in code by
DEBUG_FP).
The sysctl variable may be set in a number of ways:
[<pct>%][<cnt>*]<type>[(args...)][-><more terms>]
The <type> argument specifies which action to take; it can be one of:
- off
- Take no action (does not trigger fail point code)
- return
- Trigger fail point code with specified argument
- sleep
- Sleep the specified number of milliseconds
- panic
- Panic
- break
- Break into the debugger, or trap if there is no debugger
support
- print
- Print that the fail point executed
- pause
- Threads sleep at the fail point until the fail point is set
to off
- yield
- Thread yields the cpu when the fail point is evaluated
- delay
- Similar to sleep, but busy waits the cpu. (Useful in
non-sleepable contexts.)
The <pct>% and <cnt>* modifiers prior to <type> control when
<type> is executed. The <pct>% form (e.g. "1.2%") can be
used to specify a probability that <type> will execute. This is a
decimal in the range (0, 100] which can specify up to 1/10,000% precision. The
<cnt>* form (e.g. "5*") can be used to specify the number of
times <type> should be executed before this <term> is disabled.
Only the last probability and the last count are used if multiple are
specified, i.e. "1.2%2%" is the same as "2%". When both a
probability and a count are specified, the probability is evaluated before the
count, i.e. "2%5*" means "2% of the time, but only 5 times
total".
The operator -> can be used to express cascading terms. If you specify
<term1>-><term2>, it means that if <term1> does not
‘
execute
’, <term2> is evaluated.
For the purpose of this operator, the return() and print() operators are the
only types that cascade. A return() term only cascades if the code executes,
and a print() term only cascades when passed a non-zero argument. A pid can
optionally be specified. The fail point term is only executed when invoked by
a process with a matching p_pid.
- sysctl
debug.fail_point.foobar="2.1%return(5)"
- 21/1000ths of the time, execute
code with RETURN_VALUE set to 5.
- sysctl
debug.fail_point.foobar="2%return(5)->5%return(22)"
- 2/100ths of the time, execute
code with RETURN_VALUE set to 5. If that
does not happen, 5% of the time execute
code with RETURN_VALUE set to 22.
- sysctl
debug.fail_point.foobar="5*return(5)->0.1%return(22)"
- For 5 times, return 5. After that, 1/1000th of the time,
return 22.
- sysctl
debug.fail_point.foobar="0.1%5*return(5)"
- Return 5 for 1 in 1000 executions, but only 5 times
total.
- sysctl
debug.fail_point.foobar="1%*sleep(50)"
- 1/100th of the time, sleep 50ms.
- sysctl
debug.fail_point.foobar="1*return(5)[pid 1234]"
- Return 5 once, when pid 1234 executes the fail point.
This manual page was written by
Matthew Bryan
<
[email protected]>
and
Zach Loafman
<
[email protected]>.
It is easy to shoot yourself in the foot by setting fail points too aggressively
or setting too many in combination. For example, forcing
malloc() to fail consistently is potentially
harmful to uptime.
The
sleep() sysctl setting may not be appropriate
in all situations. Currently,
fail_point_eval()
does not verify whether the context is appropriate for calling
msleep(). You can force it to evaluate a
sleep action as a
delay action by specifying the
FAIL_POINT_NONSLEEPABLE flag at the point the
fail point is declared.