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Re: [PATCH] tests/qemu_iotests: Minimize usage of used ports
From: |
Max Reitz |
Subject: |
Re: [PATCH] tests/qemu_iotests: Minimize usage of used ports |
Date: |
Thu, 6 Feb 2020 17:37:45 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:68.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/68.4.1 |
On 06.02.20 17:27, Lukáš Doktor wrote:
> Dne 06. 02. 20 v 16:03 Max Reitz napsal(a):
>> On 03.02.20 08:59, Lukáš Doktor wrote:
>>> Using a range of ports from 32768 to 65538 is dangerous as some
>>> application might already be listening there and interfere with the
>>> testing. There is no way to reserve ports, but let's decrease the chance
>>> of interactions by only using ports that were free at the time of
>>> importing this module.
>>>
>>> Without this patch CI occasionally fails with used ports. Additionally I
>>> tried listening on the first port to be tried via "nc -l localhost
>>> $port" and no matter how many other ports were available it always
>>> hanged for infinity.
>>
>> I’m afraid I don’t quite understand. The new functions check whether
>> the ports are available for use by creating a server on them (i.e.,
>> binding a socket there). The current code just lets qemu create a
>> server there, and see if that works or not.
>>
>> So the only difference I can see is that instead of trying out random
>> ports during the test and see whether they’re free to use we do this
>> check only once when the test is started.
>>
>> And the only problem I can imagine from your description is that there
>> is some other tool on the system that tries to set up a server but
>> cannot because we already have an NBD server there (by accident).
>>
>> But I don’t see how checking for free ports once at startup solves that
>> problem reliably.
>>
>> If what I guessed above is right, the only reliable solution I can
>> imagine would be to allow users to specify the port range through
>> environment variables, and then you’d have to specify a range that you
>> know is free for use.
>>
>> Max
>>
>
> Hello Max,
>
> thank you and I am sorry for not digging deep enough. This week my CI failed
> with:
>
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] +ERROR: test_inet (__main__.QemuNBD)
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout]
> +----------------------------------------------------------------------
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] +Traceback (most recent call last):
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] + File "147", line 85, in setUp
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] + self.vm.launch()
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] + File
> "/home/jenkins/ppc64le/qemu-master/tests/qemu-iotests/../../python/qemu/machine.py",
> line 302, in launch
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] + self._launch()
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] + File
> "/home/jenkins/ppc64le/qemu-master/tests/qemu-iotests/../../python/qemu/machine.py",
> line 319, in _launch
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] + self._pre_launch()
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] + File
> "/home/jenkins/ppc64le/qemu-master/tests/qemu-iotests/../../python/qemu/qtest.py",
> line 106, in _pre_launch
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] + super(QEMUQtestMachine, self)._pre_launch()
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] + File
> "/home/jenkins/ppc64le/qemu-master/tests/qemu-iotests/../../python/qemu/machine.py",
> line 270, in _pre_launch
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] + self._qmp =
> qmp.QEMUMonitorProtocol(self._vm_monitor, server=True)
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] + File
> "/home/jenkins/ppc64le/qemu-master/tests/qemu-iotests/../../python/qemu/qmp.py",
> line 60, in __init__
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] + self.__sock.bind(self.__address)
> 01:24:06 DEBUG| [stdout] +OSError: [Errno 98] Address already in use
>
> I made the mistake of reproducing this on my home system using the qemu
> revision that I had and assuming it's caused by a used port. So I limited the
> port range and used nc to occupy the port. It sort-of reproduced but instead
> of Address already in use it hanged until I kill the nc process. Then it
> failed with:
>
> +Traceback (most recent call last):
> + File "147", line 124, in test_inet
> + flatten_sock_addr(address))
> + File "147", line 59, in client_test
> + self.assert_qmp(result, 'return', {})
> + File "/home/medic/Work/Projekty/qemu/tests/qemu-iotests/iotests.py", line
> 821, in assert_qmp
> + result = self.dictpath(d, path)
> + File "/home/medic/Work/Projekty/qemu/tests/qemu-iotests/iotests.py", line
> 797, in dictpath
> + self.fail('failed path traversal for "%s" in "%s"' % (path, str(d)))
> +AssertionError: failed path traversal for "return" in "{'error': {'class':
> 'GenericError', 'desc': 'Failed to read initial magic: Unexpected end-of-file
> before all bytes were read'}}"
>
> After a brief study I thought qemu is not doing the job well enough and
> wanted to add a protection. Anyway after a more thorough overview I came to a
> different conclusion and that is that we are facing the same issue as with
> incoming migration about a year ago. What happened is that I started "nc -l
> localhost 32789" which results in:
>
> COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
> nc 26758 medic 3u IPv6 9579487 0t0 TCP localhost:32789 (LISTEN)
>
> Then we start the server by "_try_server_up" where qemu-nbd detects the port
> is occupied on IPv6 but available on IPv4, so it claims it:
> COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
> nc 26758 medic 3u IPv6 9579487 0t0 TCP localhost:32789
> (LISTEN)
> qemu-nbd 26927 medic 4u IPv4 9591857 0t0 TCP localhost:32789
> (LISTEN)
>
> and reports success. Then we try to connect but the hotplugged VM first
> attempts to connect on the IPv6 address and hangs for infinity.
>
> Now is this an expected behavior? If so then we need the find_free_address
> (but preferably directly in _try_server_up just before starting the qemu-nbd)
> to leave as little time-frame for collision as possible. Otherwise the test
> is alright and qemu-nbd needs a fix to bail out in case some address is
> already used (IIRC this is what incoming migration does).
Ah, OK.
Well, expected behavior... It’s a shame, that’s what it is.
> My second mistake was testing this on the old code-base and rebasing it only
> before sending the patch (without testing after the rebase). If I were to
> test it first, I would have found out that the real reproducer is simply
> running the test as the commit 8dff69b9415b4287e900358744b732195e1ab2e2 broke
> it.
>
>
> So basically there are 2 actions:
>
> 1. fix the test as on my system it fails in 100% of cases, bisect says the
> first bad commit is 8dff69b9415b4287e900358744b732195e1ab2e2. Would anyone
> have time in digging into this? I already spent way too much time on this and
> don't really know what that commit is trying to do.
Yep, I’ve sent a patch:
https://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/qemu-block/2020-02/msg00294.html
> 2. decide on the behavior when IPv4/6 is already in use (bail-out or start).
> 2a. In case it should bail-out than the test is correct and there is no need
> for my patch. On the other hand qemu-nbd has to be fixed
I don’t think it makes much sense to let qemu’s NBD server ensure that
it claims both IPv4 and IPv6 in case the user specifies a
non-descriptive hostname.
> 2b. Otherwise I can send a v2 that will check the port in the _try_server_up
> just before starting qemu-nbd to minimize the risk of using a utilized port
> (or should you decide it's not worth checking, I can simply forget about this)
Hm. It wouldn’t be fully reliable, but, well... The risk would be minimal.
OTOH, would it work if we just did a %s/localhost/127.0.0.1/ in the
test? We have specific cases for IPv6, so I think it makes sense to
force IPv4 in all other cases.
Max