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Message-ID: <4DEE4538.1020404@trash.net>
Date: Tue, 07 Jun 2011 17:35:20 +0200
From: Patrick McHardy <kaber@...sh.net>
To: Brad Campbell <brad@...rfbargle.com>
CC: Bart De Schuymer <bdschuym@...dora.be>, kvm@...r.kernel.org,
linux-mm@...ck.org, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org,
netdev@...r.kernel.org, netfilter-devel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: KVM induced panic on 2.6.38[2367] & 2.6.39
On 07.06.2011 16:40, Brad Campbell wrote:
> On 07/06/11 21:30, Patrick McHardy wrote:
>> On 07.06.2011 05:33, Brad Campbell wrote:
>>> On 07/06/11 04:10, Bart De Schuymer wrote:
>>>> Hi Brad,
>>>>
>>>> This has probably nothing to do with ebtables, so please rmmod in case
>>>> it's loaded.
>>>> A few questions I didn't directly see an answer to in the threads I
>>>> scanned...
>>>> I'm assuming you actually use the bridging firewall functionality. So,
>>>> what iptables modules do you use? Can you reduce your iptables rules to
>>>> a core that triggers the bug?
>>>> Or does it get triggered even with an empty set of firewall rules?
>>>> Are you using a stock .35 kernel or is it patched?
>>>> Is this something I can trigger on a poor guy's laptop or does it
>>>> require specialized hardware (I'm catching up on qemu/kvm...)?
>>>
>>> Not specialised hardware as such, I've just not been able to reproduce
>>> it outside of this specific operating scenario.
>>
>> The last similar problem we've had was related to the 32/64 bit compat
>> code. Are you running 32 bit userspace on a 64 bit kernel?
>
> No, 32 bit Guest OS, but a completely 64 bit userspace on a 64 bit kernel.
>
> Userspace is current Debian Stable. Kernel is Vanilla and qemu-kvm is
> current git
>
>
>>> I can't trigger it with empty firewall rules as it relies on a DNAT to
>>> occur. If I try it directly to the internal IP address (as I have to
>>> without netfilter loaded) then of course nothing fails.
>>>
>>> It's a pain in the bum as a fault, but it's one I can easily reproduce
>>> as long as I use the same set of circumstances.
>>>
>>> I'll try using 3.0-rc2 (current git) tonight, and if I can reproduce it
>>> on that then I'll attempt to pare down the IPTABLES rules to a bare
>>> minimum.
>>>
>>> It is nothing to do with ebtables as I don't compile it. I'm not really
>>> sure about "bridging firewall" functionality. I just use a couple of
>>> hand coded bash scripts to set the tables up.
>>
>> From one of your previous mails:
>>
>>> # CONFIG_BRIDGE_NF_EBTABLES is not set
>>
>> How about CONFIG_BRIDGE_NETFILTER?
>>
>
> It was compiled in.
>
> With the following table set I was able to reproduce the problem on
> 3.0-rc2. Replaced my IP with xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx, but otherwise unmodified
Which kernel was the last version without this problem?
> root@srv:~# iptables-save
> # Generated by iptables-save v1.4.10 on Tue Jun 7 22:11:30 2011
> *filter
> :INPUT ACCEPT [978:107619]
> :FORWARD ACCEPT [142:7068]
> :OUTPUT ACCEPT [1659:291870]
> -A INPUT -i ppp0 -m state --state RELATED,ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT
> -A INPUT ! -i ppp0 -m state --state NEW -j ACCEPT
> -A INPUT -i ppp0 -j DROP
> COMMIT
> # Completed on Tue Jun 7 22:11:30 2011
> # Generated by iptables-save v1.4.10 on Tue Jun 7 22:11:30 2011
> *nat
> :PREROUTING ACCEPT [813:49170]
> :INPUT ACCEPT [91:7090]
> :OUTPUT ACCEPT [267:20731]
> :POSTROUTING ACCEPT [296:22281]
> -A PREROUTING -d xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx/32 ! -i ppp0 -p tcp -m tcp --dport 443
> -j DNAT --to-destination 192.168.253.198
> COMMIT
> # Completed on Tue Jun 7 22:11:30 2011
> # Generated by iptables-save v1.4.10 on Tue Jun 7 22:11:30 2011
> *mangle
> :PREROUTING ACCEPT [2729:274392]
> :INPUT ACCEPT [2508:262976]
> :FORWARD ACCEPT [142:7068]
> :OUTPUT ACCEPT [1674:293701]
> :POSTROUTING ACCEPT [2131:346411]
> -A FORWARD -o ppp0 -p tcp -m tcp --tcp-flags SYN,RST SYN -m tcpmss --mss
> 1400:1536 -j TCPMSS --clamp-mss-to-pmtu
> COMMIT
> # Completed on Tue Jun 7 22:11:30 2011
The main suspects would be NAT and TCPMSS. Did you also try whether
the crash occurs with only one of these these rules?
> I've just compiled out CONFIG_BRIDGE_NETFILTER and can no longer access
> the address the way I was doing it, so that's a no-go for me.
That's really weird since you're apparently not using any bridge
netfilter features. It shouldn't have any effect besides changing
at which point ip_tables is invoked. How are your network devices
configured (specifically any bridges)?
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