Problem with mmap/munmap - getting a bus error after the 783rd iteration?!? - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2010-03-22T08:10:20Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/question/1667909 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1667909/problem-with-mmap-munmap-getting-a-bus-error-after-the-783rd-iteration 3 Problem with mmap/munmap - getting a bus error after the 783rd iteration?!? Mike Heinz http://stackoverflow.com/users/1565 2009-11-03T15:07:51Z 2009-11-03T16:40:36Z <p>Okay, here's the setup: I work in HPC, and we're preparing for the need to scale up to tens of thousands of nodes. To deal with this, I've implemented a local process that caches information on each node to reduce the amount of network traffic. It then exposes this information via shared-memory. The basic logic is that there is one well-known shared memory block that contains the names of the currently cached tables. When an update occurs, the cache tool creates a new shared memory table, fills it, then updates the well-known block with the name of the new table.</p> <p>The code appears to be working find (valgrind says no memory leaks, for example) but when I deliberately stress test it, the first 783 updates work perfectly fine - but on the 784th, I get a SIGBUS error when I attempt to write to the mapped memory.</p> <p>If the problem is too many open files (because I'm leaking file descriptors) I'd expect shm_open() to fail. If the problem was that I was leaking mapped memory, I'd expect mmap() to fail or valgrind to report leaks.</p> <p>Here's the code fragment. Can anyone offer a suggestion?</p> <pre><code>int initialize_paths(writer_t *w, unsigned max_paths) { int err = 0; reader_t *r = &amp;(w-&gt;unpublished); close_table(r,PATH_TABLE); w-&gt;max_paths = max_paths; err = open_table(r, PATH_TABLE, O_RDWR | O_CREAT, max_paths, 0); return err; } static void close_table(reader_t *r, int table) { if (r-&gt;path_table &amp;&amp; r-&gt;path_table != MAP_FAILED) { munmap(r-&gt;path_table,r-&gt;path_table-&gt;size); r-&gt;path_table=NULL; } if (r-&gt;path_fd&gt;0) { close(r-&gt;path_fd); r-&gt;path_fd=0; } } static int open_table(op_ppath_reader_t *r, int table, int rw, unsigned c, unsigned c2) { // Code omitted for clarity if (rw &amp; O_CREAT) { prot = PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE; } else { // Note that this overrides the sizes set above. // We will get the real sizes from the header. prot = PROT_READ; size1 = sizeof(op_ppath_header_t); size2 = 0; } fd = shm_open(name, rw, 0644); if (fd &lt; 0) { _DBG_ERROR("Failed to open %s\n",name); goto error; } if (rw &amp; O_CREAT) { /* Create the file at the specified size. */ if (ftruncate(fd, size1 + size2)) { _DBG_ERROR("Unable to size %s\n",name); goto error; } } h = (op_ppath_header_t*)mmap(0, size1 + size2, prot, MAP_SHARED, fd, 0); if (h == MAP_FAILED) { _DBG_ERROR("Unable to map %s\n",name); goto error; } if (rw &amp; O_CREAT) { /* * clear the table &amp; set the maximum lengths. */ memset((char*)h,0,size1+size2); -- SIGBUS OCCURS HERE h-&gt;s1 = size1; h-&gt;s2 = size2; } else { // more code omitted for clarity. } </code></pre> <p><b>UPDATE:</b></p> <p>Here's some sample debugging output of a failure:</p> <pre><code>NOTICE: Pass 783: Inserting records. NOTICE: Creating the path table. TRC: initialize_paths[ TRC: close_table[ TRC: close_table] TRC: open_table[ DBG: h=0x0x2a956b2000, size1=2621536, size2=0 </code></pre> <p>Here's the same output from the previous iteration:</p> <pre><code>NOTICE: Pass 782: Inserting records. NOTICE: Creating the path table. TRC: initialize_paths[ TRC: close_table[ TRC: close_table] TRC: open_ppath_table[ DBG: h=0x0x2a956b2000, size1=2621536, size2=0 TRC: open_ppath_table] TRC: op_ppath_initialize_paths] </code></pre> <p>Note that the pointer address is valid, and so is the size.</p> <p>GDB reports the crash this way:</p> <pre><code>Program received signal SIGBUS, Bus error. [Switching to Thread 182895447776 (LWP 5328)] 0x00000034a9371d20 in memset () from /lib64/tls/libc.so.6 (gdb) where #0 0x00000034a9371d20 in memset () from /lib64/tls/libc.so.6 #1 0x0000002a955949d0 in open_table (r=0x7fbffff188, table=1, rw=66, c=32768, c2=0) at ofedplus_path_private.c:294 #2 0x0000002a95595280 in initialize_paths (w=0x7fbffff130, max_paths=32768) at path_private.c:567 #3 0x0000000000402050 in server (fname=0x7fbffff270 "gidtable", n=10000) at opp_cache_test.c:202 #4 0x0000000000403086 in main (argc=6, argv=0x7fbffff568) at opp_cache_test.c:542 </code></pre> <p>(gdb)</p> <p>Removing the memset still causes a SIGBUS when h->size1 is set on the following line - and size1 is the first 4 bytes of the mapped area.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1667909/problem-with-mmap-munmap-getting-a-bus-error-after-the-783rd-iteration/1668547#1668547 1 Answer by Shirkrin for Problem with mmap/munmap - getting a bus error after the 783rd iteration?!? Shirkrin http://stackoverflow.com/users/128661 2009-11-03T16:40:36Z 2009-11-03T16:40:36Z <p>It's possible that the SIGBUS is caused by to many references to your SHM object.<br /> Looking at your code above you use <strong>shm_open()</strong>, <strong>mmap()</strong>, <strong>munmap()</strong> but<br /> you're missing <strong>shm_unlink()</strong>.</p> <p>As the manpage for <strong>*shm_open</strong> / <strong>shm_close</strong> states these objects are reference counted. </p> <blockquote> <p>The operation of <strong>shm_unlink</strong> is analogous to <strong>unlink</strong>(2): it removes a shared memory object name, and, once all processes have unmapped the object, deallocates and destroys the contents of the associated memory region.<br /> After a successful <strong>shm_unlink</strong>, attempts to <strong>shm_open</strong> an object with the same name will fail (unless <strong>O_CREAT</strong> was specified, in which case a new, distinct object is created).</p> </blockquote> <p>Maybe this information will help solving your problem.</p>