Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Sun, 19 Mar 2023 03:08:02 +0700
From:      Eugene Grosbein <eugen@grosbein.net>
To:        Attila Nagy <nagy.attila@gmail.com>, freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Fwd: Kernel DHCP unpredictable/fails (PXE boot), userspace DHCP works just fine
Message-ID:  <ab14beaf-f41b-8f45-05f6-fad8a764eba3@grosbein.net>
In-Reply-To: <CAM2hQG-oDRsoccg3S1LykyUF=joWbdJz=GSPOnUroDRxjZ2_iQ@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <CAM2hQG-p=bfSh_nxuah9zcTBbz7HQ9pYyvOR2f6rC=CUGePKsg@mail.gmail.com> <CAM2hQG-oDRsoccg3S1LykyUF=joWbdJz=GSPOnUroDRxjZ2_iQ@mail.gmail.com>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
17.03.2023 3:44, Attila Nagy wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> As this is super annoying, I'm willing to pay a $500 bounty for solving this issue (whomever is first, however I don't anticipate a big competition :) Having an invoice would be best, but I'm willing to accept individuals as well).
> I can't give remote access, but can run debug builds with serial console. stable/13 branch.
> 
> I have a bunch of netbooted machines, one set in a cluster is older (HP DL80 G9, 2x8C, Intel I350 -igb- NICs), the other set is newer (HP XL225n G10, AMD EPYC2x16C, BCM57412 -bnxt- NICs).
> All of these boot from the network, which is basically:
> - get IP and options with DHCP with the help of the NIC's PXE stack
> - get the loader and kernel, start it
> - do another round of DHCP from the kernel (bootp_subr.c)
> - mount the root via NFS and let everything work as usual
> 
> The problem is that the newer machines take an indefinite time to boot. The older ones (with igb NIC) work reliably, they always boot fast.
> The process of getting an IP address via DHCP (bootpc_call from bootp_subr.c) either succeeds normally (in a few seconds), or takes a lot of time.
> Common (measured) times to boot range from 10s of minutes to anywhere between a few hours (1-6).
> Sometimes it just gets stuck and couldn't get past bootpc_call (getting the DHCP lease).
> 
> What I've already tried:
> - we have a redundant set of DHCP servers which offer static leases (so there are two DHCPOFFERs), so I tried to turn off one of them, nothing has changed
> - tried to disable SMP, the effect is the same
> - tried to see whether it's a network issue. The NIC's PXE stack always gets the lease quickly and booting FreeBSD from an ISO and issuing dhclient on the same interface is also fast. After the machines have booted, there are no network issues, they work reliably (since more than a year for 20+ machines, so not just a few hours)
> 
> This issue wasn't so bad previously (only a few mins to tens of minutes delay), but recently it got pretty unbearable, even making some machines unbootable for days...
> 
> First I thought it might be a packet loss (or more exactly packet delivery from the DHCP server to the receiving socket), either in the network or in the NIC/kernel itself, so I placed a few random printfs into bootp_subr.c and udp_usrreq.c.
> 
> After spending some time trying to understand the problem it feels like a race condition in
> bootpc_call, but I don't know the code well enough to effectively verify that.

For me, it looks like timekeeping problem. Please show output of:
sysctl kern.timecounter kern.eventtimer

After it booted to single- or multi-user mode.
Also, show verbose boot log (bootverbose).

Sometimes UEFI/BIOS SETUP has some settings for ACPI/HPET timers (enable/disable),
did you try "playing" with such options?

Note that there is loader tunnable kern.timecounter.hardware="HPET"
that can be used to force some timecounter source for kernel using loader.conf or device.hints,
any way that puts it to kenv; kenv/device.hints may be compiled into custom kernel binary even.





Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?ab14beaf-f41b-8f45-05f6-fad8a764eba3>