[reSIProcate] resiprocate stack memeory leak?????
Byron Campen
bcampen at estacado.net
Thu Sep 21 16:37:21 CDT 2006
There is not (at present) any way to detect if particular
transactions have been up for an unusually long time. We could add a
debug feature that would have the stack start a timer when it sends a
request to the TU, and if that timer fires and finds that the
transaction is still in its initial state (ie, it hasn't gotten
anything from the TU), log information about that transaction, and
maybe even poke the TU. Would this be useful?
Best regards,
Byron Campen
> Your input is very helpful.
>
> Are there ways for TU to detect TID leaks and free the lost TIDs?
>
> If yes, how? If no, it is tough to use this stateful stack.
>
> Could the stateless resip stack be used in order to get rid of TIDs
> issue and hughe memory holding (32 to 64 seconds holding time for
> each request)?
>
>
>
> Thanks
>
> Frank Yuan
> Emergent-Netsolutions.com
> 972-359-6600
>
>
> Byron Campen wrote:
>> I disagree with your first point. If the message gets to the TU,
>> it is the TU's responsibility to handle it. I have in the past
>> proposed something like a SipStack::defer(const resip::Data& tid,
>> MethodType method) that would tell the stack to clean up state for
>> that tid, but this idea did not take on.
>>
>> As for the call volume question, you can set your TU's fifo to
>> have size and/or time-depth limitations (by re-initializing your
>> TU's fifo in the c'tor). If the stack detects that your fifo is
>> overfull, it will not forward new requests to you, but will
>> instead statelessly respond with 503s. Responses and ACKs will
>> still make it through, but if your TU ignores these, it could end
>> up leaking memory itself (since it never saw the response for the
>> request it is holding onto state for).
>>
>> However, there comes a point when the stack's ability to send out
>> 503s fast enough is overwhelmed, and really bad stuff starts
>> happening then. Also, if we are statelessly sending 503s, any ACKs
>> to those 503s end up being indistinguishable from ACK/200 (since
>> we never remembered the tid), and therefore get sent up to the TU,
>> further compounding the problem.
>>
>> Best regards,
>> Byron Campen
>>
>>> Case 1: if the call volume is very high, some messages may get
>>> lost or dropped, and the sip stack should have self protection to
>>> prevent this problem.
>>> Other way: Are there mechanisms for the application
>>> to identify dangling TIDs and free them?
>>> Does RESIP stack have the func intefaces for
>>> application to use.
>>>
>>> Question: if the call volume is too high, is there any mechanism
>>> for resip stack to detect it and discard any new request messages
>>> if the computer cannot handle it?
>>>
>>> Thanks
>>>
>>> Frank Yuan
>>> Emergent-Netsolutions.com
>>> 972-359-6600
>>>
>>>
>>> Byron Campen wrote:
>>>>> TU summary: 0 TRANSPORT 0 TRANSACTION 0 CLIENTTX 1998 SERVERTX
>>>>> 10690 TIMERS 0
>>>>> Transaction summary: reqi 1225266 reqo 1200525 rspi 955555 rspo
>>>>> 1229993
>>>>> Details: INVi 383069/S322324/F36145 INVo 344348/S322414/F0 ACKi
>>>>> 312462 ACKo 3223
>>>>> 60 BYEi 507150/S507141/F0 BYEo 307875/S307111/F0 CANi 22517/
>>>>> S507141/F0 CANo 2223
>>>>> /S1550/F593 MSGi 0/S0/F0 MSGo 0/S0/F0 OPTi 0/S0/F0 OPTo 0/S0/F0
>>>>> REGi 68/S64/F0 R
>>>>> EGo 0/S0/F0 PUBi 0/S0/F0 PUBo 0/S0/F0 SUBi 0/S0/F0 SUBo 0/S0/F0
>>>>> NOTi 0/S0/F0 NOT
>>>>> o 0/S0/F0
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Ok, the CLIENTTX and SERVERTX fields in the above logging
>>>> statement indicate that there are lots and lots of
>>>> TransactionStates lying around. Further, there are no timers
>>>> left in the TimerQueue, so we aren't likely to clean any of
>>>> these up. Lets talk about the server transactions first. There
>>>> are a couple of likely possibilities:
>>>>
>>>> 1. The TU is failing to respond to some of the requests that the
>>>> stack passes it; the stack will wait indefinitely for a response
>>>> from the TU. It is the TU's responsibility to respond to EVERY
>>>> request that is passed to it, no matter how malformed the
>>>> request might be. The TU should never elect to "quietly" drop a
>>>> request. Doing so is guaranteed to leak exactly one server
>>>> TransactionState.
>>>>
>>>> 2. High load conditions (note the number of retransmissions)
>>>> have caused the stack to leak transactions (I will take a closer
>>>> look at this)
>>>>
>>>> As for the client TransactionStates, this worries me more. There
>>>> are fewer things that the TU can do wrong that will cause the
>>>> stack to leak client TransactionStates. I will try to figure out
>>>> what might be happening here.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> So, are you using your own TU? If so, try putting a simple
>>>> counter that gets incremented for each request that comes from
>>>> the stack (excepting ACKs), and decremented for every final
>>>> response sent to the stack. If this counter ends up being non-
>>>> zero, you have a bug in your TU.
>>>>
>>>> Best regards,
>>>> Byron Campen
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Sep 21, 2006, at 1:36 PM, FrankYuan wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> After call generator stopped for 10 minutes, I found that the
>>>>> resip statistics did not have any problem on these FIFO queues.
>>>>> So I created core file and print the size of Transaction map.
>>>>> There are still lot of TIDs in the transaction map. At least it
>>>>> is part of culprit to hold memory.
>>>>> Should there be a grarbage collection to free these lost TIDs?
>>>>>
>>>>> Here are the log files:
>>>>>
>>>>> 20060921-125408.091 | TuSelector.cxx:71 | Stats message
>>>>> 20060921-125408.091 | StatisticsMessage.cxx:153 |
>>>>> RESIP:TRANSACTION
>>>>> TU summary: 0 TRANSPORT 0 TRANSACTION 0 CLIENTTX 1998 SERVERTX
>>>>> 10690 TIMERS 0
>>>>> Transaction summary: reqi 1225266 reqo 1200525 rspi 955555 rspo
>>>>> 1229993
>>>>> Details: INVi 383069/S322324/F36145 INVo 344348/S322414/F0 ACKi
>>>>> 312462 ACKo 3223
>>>>> 60 BYEi 507150/S507141/F0 BYEo 307875/S307111/F0 CANi 22517/
>>>>> S507141/F0 CANo 2223
>>>>> /S1550/F593 MSGi 0/S0/F0 MSGo 0/S0/F0 OPTi 0/S0/F0 OPTo 0/S0/F0
>>>>> REGi 68/S64/F0 R
>>>>> EGo 0/S0/F0 PUBi 0/S0/F0 PUBo 0/S0/F0 SUBi 0/S0/F0 SUBo 0/S0/F0
>>>>> NOTi 0/S0/F0 NOT
>>>>> o 0/S0/F0
>>>>> Retransmissions: INVx 116463 BYEx 105757 CANx 1499 MSGx 0 OPTx
>>>>> 0 REGx 0 finx 0 n
>>>>> onx 0 PUBx 0 SUBx 0 NOTx 0
>>>>> 20060921-125708.084 | TuSelector.cxx:71 | Stats message
>>>>> 20060921-125708.084 | StatisticsMessage.cxx:153 |
>>>>> RESIP:TRANSACTION
>>>>> TU summary: 0 TRANSPORT 0 TRANSACTION 0 CLIENTTX 1998 SERVERTX
>>>>> 10690 TIMERS 0
>>>>> Transaction summary: reqi 1225268 reqo 1200525 rspi 955555 rspo
>>>>> 1229995
>>>>> Details: INVi 383069/S322324/F36145 INVo 344348/S322414/F0 ACKi
>>>>> 312462 ACKo 3223
>>>>> 60 BYEi 507150/S507141/F0 BYEo 307875/S307111/F0 CANi 22517/
>>>>> S507141/F0 CANo 2223
>>>>> /S1550/F593 MSGi 0/S0/F0 MSGo 0/S0/F0 OPTi 0/S0/F0 OPTo 0/S0/F0
>>>>> REGi 70/S66/F0 R
>>>>> EGo 0/S0/F0 PUBi 0/S0/F0 PUBo 0/S0/F0 SUBi 0/S0/F0 SUBo 0/S0/F0
>>>>> NOTi 0/S0/F0 NOT
>>>>> o 0/S0/F0
>>>>> Retransmissions: INVx 116463 BYEx 105757 CANx 1499 MSGx 0 OPTx
>>>>> 0 REGx 0 finx 0 n
>>>>> onx 0 PUBx 0 SUBx 0 NOTx 0
>>>>> 20060921-130008.078 | TuSelector.cxx:71 | Stats message
>>>>> 20060921-130008.085 | StatisticsMessage.cxx:153 |
>>>>> RESIP:TRANSACTION
>>>>> TU summary: 0 TRANSPORT 0 TRANSACTION 0 CLIENTTX 1998 SERVERTX
>>>>> 10690 TIMERS 0
>>>>> Transaction summary: reqi 1225270 reqo 1200525 rspi 955555 rspo
>>>>> 1229997
>>>>> Details: INVi 383069/S322324/F36145 INVo 344348/S322414/F0 ACKi
>>>>> 312462 ACKo 3223
>>>>> 60 BYEi 507150/S507141/F0 BYEo 307875/S307111/F0 CANi 22517/
>>>>> S507141/F0 CANo 2223
>>>>> /S1550/F593 MSGi 0/S0/F0 MSGo 0/S0/F0 OPTi 0/S0/F0 OPTo 0/S0/F0
>>>>> REGi 72/S68/F0 R
>>>>> EGo 0/S0/F0 PUBi 0/S0/F0 PUBo 0/S0/F0 SUBi 0/S0/F0 SUBo 0/S0/F0
>>>>> NOTi 0/S0/F0 NOT
>>>>> o 0/S0/F0
>>>>> Retransmissions: INVx 116463 BYEx 105757 CANx 1499 MSGx 0 OPTx
>>>>> 0 REGx 0 finx 0 n
>>>>> onx 0 PUBx 0 SUBx 0 NOTx 0
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> (gdb) p (EnSipStack->myStack->mTransactionController-
>>>>> >mClientTransactionMap)
>>>>> warning: can't find class named `resip::SipStack', as given by C
>>>>> ++ RTTI
>>>>> $1 = {mMap = {_M_ht = {_M_node_allocator = {<No data fields>},
>>>>> _M_hash = {<No data fields>},
>>>>> _M_equals =
>>>>> {<binary_function<resip::Data,resip::Data,bool>> = {<No data f
>>>>> ields>}, <No data fields>},
>>>>> _M_get_key = {<unary_function<std::pair<const
>>>>> resip::Data, resip::Transact
>>>>> ionState*>,const resip::Data>> = {<No data fields>}, <No data
>>>>> fields>},
>>>>> _M_buckets =
>>>>> {<_Vector_base<__gnu_cxx::_Hashtable_node<std::pair<const res
>>>>> ip::Data, resip::TransactionState*>
>>>>> >*,std::allocator<resip::TransactionState*>
>>>>> >> =
>>>>> {<_Vector_alloc_base<__gnu_cxx::_Hashtable_node<std::pair<const
>>>>> resip::Data
>>>>> , resip::TransactionState*>
>>>>> >*,std::allocator<resip::TransactionState*>,true>> =
>>>>> {_M_start = 0x920bdd10, _M_finish = 0x920c9d14,
>>>>> _M_end_of_storage = 0x920c9d14}, <No data fields>},
>>>>> <No data fields>
>>>>> }, _M_num_elements = 1998}}}
>>>>> (gdb) p (EnSipStack->myStack->mTransactionController-
>>>>> >mServerTransactionMap)
>>>>> warning: can't find class named `resip::SipStack', as given by C
>>>>> ++ RTTI
>>>>> $2 = {mMap = {_M_ht = {_M_node_allocator = {<No data fields>},
>>>>> _M_hash = {<No data fields>},
>>>>> _M_equals =
>>>>> {<binary_function<resip::Data,resip::Data,bool>> = {<No data f
>>>>> ields>}, <No data fields>},
>>>>> _M_get_key = {<unary_function<std::pair<const
>>>>> resip::Data, resip::Transact
>>>>> ionState*>,const resip::Data>> = {<No data fields>}, <No data
>>>>> fields>},
>>>>> _M_buckets =
>>>>> {<_Vector_base<__gnu_cxx::_Hashtable_node<std::pair<const res
>>>>> ip::Data, resip::TransactionState*>
>>>>> >*,std::allocator<resip::TransactionState*>
>>>>> >> =
>>>>> {<_Vector_alloc_base<__gnu_cxx::_Hashtable_node<std::pair<const
>>>>> resip::Data
>>>>> , resip::TransactionState*>
>>>>> >*,std::allocator<resip::TransactionState*>,true>> =
>>>>> {_M_start = 0x8cc3e790, _M_finish = 0x8cc567d4,
>>>>> _M_end_of_storage = 0x8cc567d4}, <No data fields>},
>>>>> <No data fields>
>>>>> }, _M_num_elements = 10691}}}
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
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>>>>>
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>>>>>
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>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks
>>>>>
>>>>> Frank Yuan
>>>>> Emergent-Netsolutions.com
>>>>> 972-359-6600
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> FrankYuan wrote:
>>>>>> I am still working on it and will let you know as soon as I find
>>>>>> anything related.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Thanks
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Frank Yuan
>>>>>> Emergent-Netsolutions.com
>>>>>> 972-359-6600
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Byron Campen wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> This code was written long before my time here at
>>>>>>> resiprocate, so
>>>>>>> I do not know. To those who are in the know, is this a relic
>>>>>>> that can
>>>>>>> be safely done away with?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Did you verify whether or not you had a genuine memory leak
>>>>>>> (this is
>>>>>>> something I am very interested to know)?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Best regards,
>>>>>>> Byron Campen
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> My question why NoSize(0U-1) is used for mSize when clear
>>>>>>>> func is
>>>>>>>> called.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> mStateMachineFifo.size() may return either 0 or NoSize if
>>>>>>>> the queue
>>>>>>>> is empty.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> It should alway return 0 if the queue is empty and NoSize
>>>>>>>> should not
>>>>>>>> be used.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> NoSize causes confusion and is error prone.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Thanks
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Frank Yuan
>>>>>>>> Emergent-Netsolutions.com
>>>>>>>> 972-359-6600
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Jason Fischl wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On 9/20/06, Byron Campen <bcampen at estacado.net> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> As for your questions about AbstractFifo, I am
>>>>>>>>>> unsure why
>>>>>>>>>> mSize is
>>>>>>>>>> needed. Can anyone answer this (or, answer why clear is a
>>>>>>>>>> no-op)?
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> The clear method is virtual and gets defined in the
>>>>>>>>> subclasses.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> I believe that mSize is there as an optimization.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>> resiprocate-devel mailing list
>>>>>> resiprocate-devel at list.sipfoundry.org
>>>>>> https://list.sipfoundry.org/mailman/listinfo/resiprocate-devel
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>
>>
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