RFR: 8197408: Bad pointer comparison and small cleanup in os_linux.cpp

Robbin Ehn robbin.ehn at oracle.com
Thu Feb 15 09:59:00 UTC 2018


Hi,

I notice there is something strange about container test.
They are not in any test group and mach5 don't run them when specified via path.

*sigh*

So I have only manually verified this.

Bob, can you have a look at changeset?

/Robbin

On 2018-02-15 10:37, Robbin Ehn wrote:
> Hi Thomas, thanks for having a look.
> 
> On 2018-02-14 15:06, Thomas Stüfe wrote:
>> Hi Robin,
>>
>> Had a short look. Note that I cannot open the issue. Link is wrong, and the link in the source.patch is wrong too. So, I just looked at the webrev.
>>
> 
> Sorry bug is:
> https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8197408
> 
> Inc here:
> http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~rehn/8197408/v2/inc/webrev/
> Full here:
> http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~rehn/8197408/v2/full/webrev/
> 
> Comments on remarks below:
> 
>> Remarks:
>>
>> -> This is a matter of taste but I prefer pointers to references for output variables. Makes the intent clearer at the calling site, and that way you could get rid of the /* output */ comment.
> 
> We had a debate about this, my opinion was that avoiding the NULL check makes it worth using a ref, but I see I'm pretty lonely in this camp so fixed.
> 
>>
>> -> in available_memory_container():
>> Could we also add "using host value" to the logging in error case as you do in physical_memory_container()?
> 
> Fixed, and tried to improve the logs.
> 
>>
>> -> (Not part of your patch) Can OSContainer::memory_limit_in_bytes() actually ever return "OSCONTAINER_ERROR"? I may be wrong here but:
>>
>> OSCONTAINER_ERROR = -2. /memory.limit_in_bytes gets returned as julong, so we have (julong)(-2). That gets compared with julong _unlimited_memory which is basically LONG_MAX, so signed long max, which should be smaller than (julong)(-2), or? So OSContainer::memory_limit_in_bytes() should always return -1 for both errors and the unlimited case.
>>
> 
> Manually tested this, it seems to work. The -2 gets promoted to unsigned in comparison.
> We go from (jlong)-2 to (julong)ULONG_MAX-1 back to (jlong)-2.
> Not obviously that it will always work. I will not touch that in this changeset.
> 
>> -> Can we:
>> -  st->print("container_type: %s\n", p != NULL ? p : "failed");
>> +  st->print_cr("container_type: %s", p != NULL ? p : "failed");
>> ?
> 
> All of these use print + \n, you want me to just change this one or ?
> I'll rather leave them alone.
> 
>>
>> -> char * OSContainer::container_type() - you free() that value but it is not strdup()ed.
> 
> Thanks for seeing this, copy-paste :)
> 
>>
>> (Btw I do not like that some functions return strduped values, some do not. If OSContainer::container_type() wants to return a static string, its return type should be at least const char*, not char*. They even added an explicit cast to nonconst char* .)
> 
> Changed to const.
> 
> Thanks, Robbin
> 
>>
>> Kind Regards, Thomas
>>
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Feb 14, 2018 at 2:18 PM, Robbin Ehn <robbin.ehn at oracle.com <mailto:robbin.ehn at oracle.com>> wrote:
>>
>>     Ping!
>>
>>     /Robbin
>>
>>
>>     On 2018-02-08 13:35, Robbin Ehn wrote:
>>
>>         Hi David,
>>
>>         On 02/08/2018 01:19 PM, David Holmes wrote:
>>
>>             On 8/02/2018 10:08 PM, Robbin Ehn wrote:
>>
>>                 Hi David,
>>
>>                 On 02/08/2018 12:43 PM, David Holmes wrote:
>>
>>                     Hi Robbin,
>>
>>                     On 8/02/2018 7:03 PM, Robbin Ehn wrote:
>>
>>                         Hi all,
>>
>>                         There is a bad pointer comparison in os_linux.cpp while looking at that
>>
>>
>>                     You seem to be missing the fact that OSContainer::cpu_cpuset_memory_nodes() can return a pointer or an error code.
>>
>>
>>                 This is not true for macro:
>>                 GET_CONTAINER_INFO_CPTR
>>
>>                 As far I can see?
>>
>>
>>             Sorry - you're right. I misread current code and misremembered what happened at the initial code review - where I'm sure this "pointer versus error code" issue was also flagged.
>>
>>                 It returns:
>>                 if (err != 0)
>>                     return (return_type) NULL;
>>                 or:
>>                 return os::strdup(mems);
>>
>>                 If you know a method that returns an integer in a char*, it's broken should be fixed.
>>
>>
>>                         I saw some if statement were missing bracket, a lot of extra scopes and complexity in the scoping.
>>
>>
>>                     You'd better check all this with Bob Vandette as its his container support code.
>>
>>
>>                 Not sure what you mean. It passes container tests.
>>
>>
>>             In what environment did you run the container tests? Most of the code you've been refactoring deals with various errors and misconfigurations that can occur.
>>
>>             I'm sure Bob will want a chance to check the refactoring still does as he intended.
>>
>>
>>         On mach5 all platforms with the container test (+ hotspot_tier1) and locally.
>>         I said before, regarding containers, all Linux have cgroups configured so this logic always thinks we are in a container and does this logging and calculation.
>>
>>         But no there is no tests for miss-configuration that I found.
>>
>>         Added Bob!
>>
>>         Thanks, Robbin
>>
>>
>>
>>             Cheers,
>>             David
>>             -----
>>
>>
>>                 Thanks, Robbin
>>
>>
>>                     Cheers,
>>                     David
>>
>>                         Webrev:
>>                         http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~rehn/8197408/webrev/ <http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~rehn/8197408/webrev/>
>>                         Bug:
>>                         http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~rehn/8197408/webrev/ <http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~rehn/8197408/webrev/>
>>
>>                         Thanks, Robbin
>>
>>


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