meiravgri 2e854bccc6
Fix async safety in signal handlers (#12658)
see discussion from after https://github.com/redis/redis/pull/12453 was
merged
----
This PR replaces signals that are not considered async-signal-safe
(AS-safe) with safe calls.

#### **1. serverLog() and serverLogFromHandler()**
`serverLog` uses unsafe calls. It was decided that we will **avoid**
`serverLog` calls by the signal handlers when:
* The signal is not fatal, such as SIGALRM. In these cases, we prefer
using `serverLogFromHandler` which is the safe version of `serverLog`.
Note they have different prompts:
`serverLog`: `62220:M 26 Oct 2023 14:39:04.526 # <msg>`
`serverLogFromHandler`: `62220:signal-handler (1698331136) <msg>`
* The code was added recently. Calls to `serverLog` by the signal
handler have been there ever since Redis exists and it hasn't caused
problems so far. To avoid regression, from now we should use
`serverLogFromHandler`

#### **2. `snprintf` `fgets` and `strtoul`(base = 16) -------->
`_safe_snprintf`, `fgets_async_signal_safe`, `string_to_hex`**
The safe version of `snprintf` was taken from
[here](8cfc4ca5e7/src/mc_util.c (L754))

#### **3. fopen(), fgets(), fclose() --------> open(), read(), close()**

#### **4. opendir(), readdir(), closedir() --------> open(),
syscall(SYS_getdents64), close()**

#### **5. Threads_mngr sync mechanisms**
* waiting for the thread to generate stack trace: semaphore -------->
busy-wait
* `globals_rw_lock` was removed: as we are not using malloc and the
semaphore anymore we don't need to protect `ThreadsManager_cleanups`.

#### **6. Stacktraces buffer**
The initial problem was that we were not able to safely call malloc
within the signal handler.
To solve that we created a buffer on the stack of `writeStacktraces` and
saved it in a global pointer, assuming that under normal circumstances,
the function `writeStacktraces` would complete before any thread
attempted to write to it. However, **if threads lag behind, they might
access this global pointer after it no longer belongs to the
`writeStacktraces` stack, potentially corrupting memory.**
To address this, various solutions were discussed
[here](https://github.com/redis/redis/pull/12658#discussion_r1390442896)
Eventually, we decided to **create a pipe** at server startup that will
remain valid as long as the process is alive.
We chose this solution due to its minimal memory usage, and since
`write()` and `read()` are atomic operations. It ensures that stack
traces from different threads won't mix.

**The stacktraces collection process is now as  follows:**
* Cleaning the pipe to eliminate writes of late threads from previous
runs.
* Each thread writes to the pipe its stacktrace
* Waiting for all the threads to mark completion or until a timeout (2
sec) is reached
* Reading from the pipe to print the stacktraces.

#### **7. Changes that were considered and eventually were dropped**
* replace watchdog timer with a POSIX timer: 
according to [settimer man](https://linux.die.net/man/2/setitimer)

> POSIX.1-2008 marks getitimer() and setitimer() obsolete, recommending
the use of the POSIX timers API
([timer_gettime](https://linux.die.net/man/2/timer_gettime)(2),
[timer_settime](https://linux.die.net/man/2/timer_settime)(2), etc.)
instead.

However, although it is supposed to conform to POSIX std, POSIX timers
API is not supported on Mac.
You can take a look here at the Linux implementation:

[here](c7562ee135)
To avoid messing up the code, and uncertainty regarding compatibility,
it was decided to drop it for now.

* avoid using sds (uses malloc) in logConfigDebugInfo
It was considered to print config info instead of using sds, however
apparently, `logConfigDebugInfo` does more than just print the sds, so
it was decided this fix is out of this issue scope.

#### **8. fix Signal mask check**
The check `signum & sig_mask` intended to indicate whether the signal is
blocked by the thread was incorrect. Actually, the bit position in the
signal mask corresponds to the signal number. We fixed this by changing
the condition to: `sig_mask & (1L << (sig_num - 1))`

#### **9. Unrelated changes**
both `fork.tcl `and `util.tcl` implemented a function called
`count_log_message` expecting different parameters. This caused
confusion when trying to run daily tests with additional test parameters
to run a specific test.
The `count_log_message` in `fork.tcl` was removed and the calls were
replaced with calls to `count_log_message` located in `util.tcl`

---------

Co-authored-by: Ozan Tezcan <ozantezcan@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-11-23 13:22:20 +02:00
..

Redis Test Suite

The normal execution mode of the test suite involves starting and manipulating local redis-server instances, inspecting process state, log files, etc.

The test suite also supports execution against an external server, which is enabled using the --host and --port parameters. When executing against an external server, tests tagged external:skip are skipped.

There are additional runtime options that can further adjust the test suite to match different external server configurations:

Option Impact
--singledb Only use database 0, don't assume others are supported.
--ignore-encoding Skip all checks for specific encoding.
--ignore-digest Skip key value digest validations.
--cluster-mode Run in strict Redis Cluster compatibility mode.
--large-memory Enables tests that consume more than 100mb

Tags

Tags are applied to tests to classify them according to the subsystem they test, but also to indicate compatibility with different run modes and required capabilities.

Tags can be applied in different context levels:

  • start_server context
  • tags context that bundles several tests together
  • A single test context.

The following compatibility and capability tags are currently used:

Tag Indicates
external:skip Not compatible with external servers.
cluster:skip Not compatible with --cluster-mode.
large-memory Test that requires more than 100mb
tls:skip Not compatible with --tls.
needs:repl Uses replication and needs to be able to SYNC from server.
needs:debug Uses the DEBUG command or other debugging focused commands (like OBJECT REFCOUNT).
needs:pfdebug Uses the PFDEBUG command.
needs:config-maxmemory Uses CONFIG SET to manipulate memory limit, eviction policies, etc.
needs:config-resetstat Uses CONFIG RESETSTAT to reset statistics.
needs:reset Uses RESET to reset client connections.
needs:save Uses SAVE or BGSAVE to create an RDB file.

When using an external server (--host and --port), filtering using the external:skip tags is done automatically.

When using --cluster-mode, filtering using the cluster:skip tag is done automatically.

When not using --large-memory, filtering using the largemem:skip tag is done automatically.

In addition, it is possible to specify additional configuration. For example, to run tests on a server that does not permit SYNC use:

./runtest --host <host> --port <port> --tags -needs:repl