Leroy van Logchem
2010-Sep-24 11:52 UTC
8.1-RELEASE: [zfs] [kmem] zfs destroy snapshot results in panic: kmem_map too small
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Problem : Kernel panic "kmem_malloc(114688): kmem_map too small Trigger : Destroy ZFS snapshots (each bigger >80GB) Version : FreeBSD 8.1-RELEASE (GENERIC AMD64 but with DDB) Workaround : kmem / zfs arc tuning in /boot/loader.conf System Info : Manufacturer: Supermicro Mainboard : X8DTN Cpu(s) Two : Intel(R) Xeon(R) E5520 @ 2.27GHz Memory : 10240 MB (speed: 1066 MHz) Storage : mpt0 Adapter: Board Name: SAS3081E Board Assembly: L3-00159-02D Chip Name: C1068E 24 drives are connected to mpt0: /dev/da[0 up to 23] Each drive : 512 # sectorsize 2000398934016 # mediasize in bytes (1.8T) 3907029168 # mediasize in sectors 243201 # Cylinders according to firmware. 255 # Heads according to firmware. 63 # Sectors according to firmware. JK1130YAHUSJMT # Disk ident. # zpool list NAME SIZE USED AVAIL CAP HEALTH ALTROOT tank 43.5T 31.0T 12.5T 71% ONLINE - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- This server has been running since dec 2009 without downtime. We keep 14 daily zfs snapshots. The problem of our nightly kernel panic started when the size of each snapshot exceeded about 80 GB. A cronjob first creates new snapshots just fine and destroys expired (older >14 days) snapshots. During the command "zfs destroy <snapname>" the memory free seen in top(1) drops very quickly and soon after that this panic is generated: panic: kmem_malloc(114688): kmem_map too small: 3307884544 total allocated cpuid = 2 KDB: stack backtrace: db_trace_self_wrapper() at db_trace_self_wrapper+0x2a panic() at panic+0x182 kmem_malloc() at kmem_malloc+0x5b5 uma_large_malloc() at uma_large_malloc+0x4a malloc() at malloc+0x14b zio_compress_data() at zio_compress_data+0xa2 zio_write_bp_init() at zio_write_bp_init+0xc2 zio_exectute() at zio_execute+0x77 taskq_run_safe() at taskq_run_safe+0x13 taskqueue_run() at taskqueue_run+0x91 taskqueue_thread_loop() at taskqueue_thread_loop+0x3f fork_exit() at fork_exit+0x12a fork_trampoline() at fork_trampoline+0xe --- trap 0, rip = 0, rsp = 0xffffff81261edd30, rbp = 0 --- panic: kmem_malloc(118784): kmem_map too small: 3307884544 total allocated cpuid = 2 During these panics no tuning or /boot/loader.conf values where present. Only after hitting this behaviour yesterday i created boot/loader.conf: vm.kmem_size=18G vfs.zfs.arc_max=6G After which the snapshots could be destroyed without panic. Questions: Are users required to tune? If so, are there reliable guidelines regarding memory and ZFS? Are the -quickly- chosen values any good? (service window was closing) --- Leroy
Jeremy Chadwick
2010-Sep-24 12:33 UTC
8.1-RELEASE: [zfs] [kmem] zfs destroy snapshot results in panic: kmem_map too small
On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 01:24:46PM +0200, Leroy van Logchem wrote:> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Problem : Kernel panic "kmem_malloc(114688): kmem_map too small > Trigger : Destroy ZFS snapshots (each bigger >80GB) > Version : FreeBSD 8.1-RELEASE (GENERIC AMD64 but with DDB) > ... > panic: kmem_malloc(114688): kmem_map too small: 3307884544 total allocated > cpuid = 2 > KDB: stack backtrace: > db_trace_self_wrapper() at db_trace_self_wrapper+0x2a > panic() at panic+0x182 > kmem_malloc() at kmem_malloc+0x5b5 > uma_large_malloc() at uma_large_malloc+0x4a > malloc() at malloc+0x14b > zio_compress_data() at zio_compress_data+0xa2 > zio_write_bp_init() at zio_write_bp_init+0xc2 > zio_exectute() at zio_execute+0x77 > taskq_run_safe() at taskq_run_safe+0x13 > taskqueue_run() at taskqueue_run+0x91 > taskqueue_thread_loop() at taskqueue_thread_loop+0x3f > fork_exit() at fork_exit+0x12a > fork_trampoline() at fork_trampoline+0xe > --- trap 0, rip = 0, rsp = 0xffffff81261edd30, rbp = 0 --- > panic: kmem_malloc(118784): kmem_map too small: 3307884544 total allocated > cpuid = 2Can you please provide uname -a output? The built date of your kernel matters in this case. The panic looks like uma(9) is in use, which was enabled by default and then later reverted/removed, so this is why the build date matters. If "sysctl vfs.zfs.zio.use_uma" shows a value of 1, then please put this in your /boot/loader.conf to disable uma use: # Disable UMA (uma(9)) for ZFS; amd64 was moved to exclusively use UMA # on 2010/05/24. # http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2010-June/057162.html vfs.zfs.zio.use_uma="0" If you upgrade to RELENG_8, you won't have to set this. As for your questions under "Questions" -- yes you have to tune, no there aren't really "reliable guidelines" and I've been asking for such since ZFS came out for FreeBSD, but your values look fine. -- | Jeremy Chadwick jdc@parodius.com | | Parodius Networking http://www.parodius.com/ | | UNIX Systems Administrator Mountain View, CA, USA | | Making life hard for others since 1977. PGP: 4BD6C0CB |
Andriy Gapon
2010-Sep-24 13:41 UTC
8.1-RELEASE: [zfs] [kmem] zfs destroy snapshot results in panic: kmem_map too small
on 24/09/2010 16:37 Leroy van Logchem said the following:> On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 3:04 PM, Andriy Gapon <avg@icyb.net.ua> wrote: >> On amd64 set your vm.kmem_size to at least the amount of available memory that you >> got, or even more (1.5x, 2x). >> An easy way to do that (1x) is to set vm.kmem_size_scale="1". >> In head this is already done automatically, MFC to stable/8 is expected. > > Thank you all for the swift answers and advice. The upcoming auto scaling sounds > promising. Just to be sure, does the kmem_size_scale apply when using 8.1-R?Yes. -- Andriy Gapon