| 1 | =========================================== |
| 2 | Fault injection capabilities infrastructure |
| 3 | =========================================== |
| 4 | |
| 5 | See also drivers/md/md-faulty.c and "every_nth" module option for scsi_debug. |
| 6 | |
| 7 | |
| 8 | Available fault injection capabilities |
| 9 | -------------------------------------- |
| 10 | |
| 11 | - failslab |
| 12 | |
| 13 | injects slab allocation failures. (kmalloc(), kmem_cache_alloc(), ...) |
| 14 | |
| 15 | - fail_page_alloc |
| 16 | |
| 17 | injects page allocation failures. (alloc_pages(), get_free_pages(), ...) |
| 18 | |
| 19 | - fail_usercopy |
| 20 | |
| 21 | injects failures in user memory access functions. (copy_from_user(), get_user(), ...) |
| 22 | |
| 23 | - fail_futex |
| 24 | |
| 25 | injects futex deadlock and uaddr fault errors. |
| 26 | |
| 27 | - fail_sunrpc |
| 28 | |
| 29 | injects kernel RPC client and server failures. |
| 30 | |
| 31 | - fail_make_request |
| 32 | |
| 33 | injects disk IO errors on devices permitted by setting |
| 34 | /sys/block/<device>/make-it-fail or |
| 35 | /sys/block/<device>/<partition>/make-it-fail. (submit_bio_noacct()) |
| 36 | |
| 37 | - fail_mmc_request |
| 38 | |
| 39 | injects MMC data errors on devices permitted by setting |
| 40 | debugfs entries under /sys/kernel/debug/mmc0/fail_mmc_request |
| 41 | |
| 42 | - fail_function |
| 43 | |
| 44 | injects error return on specific functions, which are marked by |
| 45 | ALLOW_ERROR_INJECTION() macro, by setting debugfs entries |
| 46 | under /sys/kernel/debug/fail_function. No boot option supported. |
| 47 | |
| 48 | - fail_skb_realloc |
| 49 | |
| 50 | inject skb (socket buffer) reallocation events into the network path. The |
| 51 | primary goal is to identify and prevent issues related to pointer |
| 52 | mismanagement in the network subsystem. By forcing skb reallocation at |
| 53 | strategic points, this feature creates scenarios where existing pointers to |
| 54 | skb headers become invalid. |
| 55 | |
| 56 | When the fault is injected and the reallocation is triggered, cached pointers |
| 57 | to skb headers and data no longer reference valid memory locations. This |
| 58 | deliberate invalidation helps expose code paths where proper pointer updating |
| 59 | is neglected after a reallocation event. |
| 60 | |
| 61 | By creating these controlled fault scenarios, the system can catch instances |
| 62 | where stale pointers are used, potentially leading to memory corruption or |
| 63 | system instability. |
| 64 | |
| 65 | To select the interface to act on, write the network name to |
| 66 | /sys/kernel/debug/fail_skb_realloc/devname. |
| 67 | If this field is left empty (which is the default value), skb reallocation |
| 68 | will be forced on all network interfaces. |
| 69 | |
| 70 | The effectiveness of this fault detection is enhanced when KASAN is |
| 71 | enabled, as it helps identify invalid memory references and use-after-free |
| 72 | (UAF) issues. |
| 73 | |
| 74 | - NVMe fault injection |
| 75 | |
| 76 | inject NVMe status code and retry flag on devices permitted by setting |
| 77 | debugfs entries under /sys/kernel/debug/nvme*/fault_inject. The default |
| 78 | status code is NVME_SC_INVALID_OPCODE with no retry. The status code and |
| 79 | retry flag can be set via the debugfs. |
| 80 | |
| 81 | - Null test block driver fault injection |
| 82 | |
| 83 | inject IO timeouts by setting config items under |
| 84 | /sys/kernel/config/nullb/<disk>/timeout_inject, |
| 85 | inject requeue requests by setting config items under |
| 86 | /sys/kernel/config/nullb/<disk>/requeue_inject, and |
| 87 | inject init_hctx() errors by setting config items under |
| 88 | /sys/kernel/config/nullb/<disk>/init_hctx_fault_inject. |
| 89 | |
| 90 | Configure fault-injection capabilities behavior |
| 91 | ----------------------------------------------- |
| 92 | |
| 93 | debugfs entries |
| 94 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 95 | |
| 96 | fault-inject-debugfs kernel module provides some debugfs entries for runtime |
| 97 | configuration of fault-injection capabilities. |
| 98 | |
| 99 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail*/probability: |
| 100 | |
| 101 | likelihood of failure injection, in percent. |
| 102 | |
| 103 | Format: <percent> |
| 104 | |
| 105 | Note that one-failure-per-hundred is a very high error rate |
| 106 | for some testcases. Consider setting probability=100 and configure |
| 107 | /sys/kernel/debug/fail*/interval for such testcases. |
| 108 | |
| 109 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail*/interval: |
| 110 | |
| 111 | specifies the interval between failures, for calls to |
| 112 | should_fail() that pass all the other tests. |
| 113 | |
| 114 | Note that if you enable this, by setting interval>1, you will |
| 115 | probably want to set probability=100. |
| 116 | |
| 117 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail*/times: |
| 118 | |
| 119 | specifies how many times failures may happen at most. A value of -1 |
| 120 | means "no limit". |
| 121 | |
| 122 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail*/space: |
| 123 | |
| 124 | specifies an initial resource "budget", decremented by "size" |
| 125 | on each call to should_fail(,size). Failure injection is |
| 126 | suppressed until "space" reaches zero. |
| 127 | |
| 128 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail*/verbose |
| 129 | |
| 130 | Format: { 0 | 1 | 2 } |
| 131 | |
| 132 | specifies the verbosity of the messages when failure is |
| 133 | injected. '0' means no messages; '1' will print only a single |
| 134 | log line per failure; '2' will print a call trace too -- useful |
| 135 | to debug the problems revealed by fault injection. |
| 136 | |
| 137 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail*/task-filter: |
| 138 | |
| 139 | Format: { 'Y' | 'N' } |
| 140 | |
| 141 | A value of 'N' disables filtering by process (default). |
| 142 | Any positive value limits failures to only processes indicated by |
| 143 | /proc/<pid>/make-it-fail==1. |
| 144 | |
| 145 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail*/require-start, |
| 146 | /sys/kernel/debug/fail*/require-end, |
| 147 | /sys/kernel/debug/fail*/reject-start, |
| 148 | /sys/kernel/debug/fail*/reject-end: |
| 149 | |
| 150 | specifies the range of virtual addresses tested during |
| 151 | stacktrace walking. Failure is injected only if some caller |
| 152 | in the walked stacktrace lies within the required range, and |
| 153 | none lies within the rejected range. |
| 154 | Default required range is [0,ULONG_MAX) (whole of virtual address space). |
| 155 | Default rejected range is [0,0). |
| 156 | |
| 157 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail*/stacktrace-depth: |
| 158 | |
| 159 | specifies the maximum stacktrace depth walked during search |
| 160 | for a caller within [require-start,require-end) OR |
| 161 | [reject-start,reject-end). |
| 162 | |
| 163 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail_page_alloc/ignore-gfp-highmem: |
| 164 | |
| 165 | Format: { 'Y' | 'N' } |
| 166 | |
| 167 | default is 'Y', setting it to 'N' will also inject failures into |
| 168 | highmem/user allocations (__GFP_HIGHMEM allocations). |
| 169 | |
| 170 | - /sys/kernel/debug/failslab/cache-filter |
| 171 | Format: { 'Y' | 'N' } |
| 172 | |
| 173 | default is 'N', setting it to 'Y' will only inject failures when |
| 174 | objects are requests from certain caches. |
| 175 | |
| 176 | Select the cache by writing '1' to /sys/kernel/slab/<cache>/failslab: |
| 177 | |
| 178 | - /sys/kernel/debug/failslab/ignore-gfp-wait: |
| 179 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail_page_alloc/ignore-gfp-wait: |
| 180 | |
| 181 | Format: { 'Y' | 'N' } |
| 182 | |
| 183 | default is 'Y', setting it to 'N' will also inject failures |
| 184 | into allocations that can sleep (__GFP_DIRECT_RECLAIM allocations). |
| 185 | |
| 186 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail_page_alloc/min-order: |
| 187 | |
| 188 | specifies the minimum page allocation order to be injected |
| 189 | failures. |
| 190 | |
| 191 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail_futex/ignore-private: |
| 192 | |
| 193 | Format: { 'Y' | 'N' } |
| 194 | |
| 195 | default is 'N', setting it to 'Y' will disable failure injections |
| 196 | when dealing with private (address space) futexes. |
| 197 | |
| 198 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail_sunrpc/ignore-client-disconnect: |
| 199 | |
| 200 | Format: { 'Y' | 'N' } |
| 201 | |
| 202 | default is 'N', setting it to 'Y' will disable disconnect |
| 203 | injection on the RPC client. |
| 204 | |
| 205 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail_sunrpc/ignore-server-disconnect: |
| 206 | |
| 207 | Format: { 'Y' | 'N' } |
| 208 | |
| 209 | default is 'N', setting it to 'Y' will disable disconnect |
| 210 | injection on the RPC server. |
| 211 | |
| 212 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail_sunrpc/ignore-cache-wait: |
| 213 | |
| 214 | Format: { 'Y' | 'N' } |
| 215 | |
| 216 | default is 'N', setting it to 'Y' will disable cache wait |
| 217 | injection on the RPC server. |
| 218 | |
| 219 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail_function/inject: |
| 220 | |
| 221 | Format: { 'function-name' | '!function-name' | '' } |
| 222 | |
| 223 | specifies the target function of error injection by name. |
| 224 | If the function name leads '!' prefix, given function is |
| 225 | removed from injection list. If nothing specified ('') |
| 226 | injection list is cleared. |
| 227 | |
| 228 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail_function/injectable: |
| 229 | |
| 230 | (read only) shows error injectable functions and what type of |
| 231 | error values can be specified. The error type will be one of |
| 232 | below; |
| 233 | - NULL: retval must be 0. |
| 234 | - ERRNO: retval must be -1 to -MAX_ERRNO (-4096). |
| 235 | - ERR_NULL: retval must be 0 or -1 to -MAX_ERRNO (-4096). |
| 236 | |
| 237 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail_function/<function-name>/retval: |
| 238 | |
| 239 | specifies the "error" return value to inject to the given function. |
| 240 | This will be created when the user specifies a new injection entry. |
| 241 | Note that this file only accepts unsigned values. So, if you want to |
| 242 | use a negative errno, you better use 'printf' instead of 'echo', e.g.: |
| 243 | $ printf %#x -12 > retval |
| 244 | |
| 245 | - /sys/kernel/debug/fail_skb_realloc/devname: |
| 246 | |
| 247 | Specifies the network interface on which to force SKB reallocation. If |
| 248 | left empty, SKB reallocation will be applied to all network interfaces. |
| 249 | |
| 250 | Example usage:: |
| 251 | |
| 252 | # Force skb reallocation on eth0 |
| 253 | echo "eth0" > /sys/kernel/debug/fail_skb_realloc/devname |
| 254 | |
| 255 | # Clear the selection and force skb reallocation on all interfaces |
| 256 | echo "" > /sys/kernel/debug/fail_skb_realloc/devname |
| 257 | |
| 258 | Boot option |
| 259 | ^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 260 | |
| 261 | In order to inject faults while debugfs is not available (early boot time), |
| 262 | use the boot option:: |
| 263 | |
| 264 | failslab= |
| 265 | fail_page_alloc= |
| 266 | fail_usercopy= |
| 267 | fail_make_request= |
| 268 | fail_futex= |
| 269 | fail_skb_realloc= |
| 270 | mmc_core.fail_request=<interval>,<probability>,<space>,<times> |
| 271 | |
| 272 | proc entries |
| 273 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 274 | |
| 275 | - /proc/<pid>/fail-nth, |
| 276 | /proc/self/task/<tid>/fail-nth: |
| 277 | |
| 278 | Write to this file of integer N makes N-th call in the task fail. |
| 279 | Read from this file returns a integer value. A value of '0' indicates |
| 280 | that the fault setup with a previous write to this file was injected. |
| 281 | A positive integer N indicates that the fault wasn't yet injected. |
| 282 | Note that this file enables all types of faults (slab, futex, etc). |
| 283 | This setting takes precedence over all other generic debugfs settings |
| 284 | like probability, interval, times, etc. But per-capability settings |
| 285 | (e.g. fail_futex/ignore-private) take precedence over it. |
| 286 | |
| 287 | This feature is intended for systematic testing of faults in a single |
| 288 | system call. See an example below. |
| 289 | |
| 290 | |
| 291 | Error Injectable Functions |
| 292 | -------------------------- |
| 293 | |
| 294 | This part is for the kernel developers considering to add a function to |
| 295 | ALLOW_ERROR_INJECTION() macro. |
| 296 | |
| 297 | Requirements for the Error Injectable Functions |
| 298 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 299 | |
| 300 | Since the function-level error injection forcibly changes the code path |
| 301 | and returns an error even if the input and conditions are proper, this can |
| 302 | cause unexpected kernel crash if you allow error injection on the function |
| 303 | which is NOT error injectable. Thus, you (and reviewers) must ensure; |
| 304 | |
| 305 | - The function returns an error code if it fails, and the callers must check |
| 306 | it correctly (need to recover from it). |
| 307 | |
| 308 | - The function does not execute any code which can change any state before |
| 309 | the first error return. The state includes global or local, or input |
| 310 | variable. For example, clear output address storage (e.g. `*ret = NULL`), |
| 311 | increments/decrements counter, set a flag, preempt/irq disable or get |
| 312 | a lock (if those are recovered before returning error, that will be OK.) |
| 313 | |
| 314 | The first requirement is important, and it will result in that the release |
| 315 | (free objects) functions are usually harder to inject errors than allocate |
| 316 | functions. If errors of such release functions are not correctly handled |
| 317 | it will cause a memory leak easily (the caller will confuse that the object |
| 318 | has been released or corrupted.) |
| 319 | |
| 320 | The second one is for the caller which expects the function should always |
| 321 | does something. Thus if the function error injection skips whole of the |
| 322 | function, the expectation is betrayed and causes an unexpected error. |
| 323 | |
| 324 | Type of the Error Injectable Functions |
| 325 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 326 | |
| 327 | Each error injectable functions will have the error type specified by the |
| 328 | ALLOW_ERROR_INJECTION() macro. You have to choose it carefully if you add |
| 329 | a new error injectable function. If the wrong error type is chosen, the |
| 330 | kernel may crash because it may not be able to handle the error. |
| 331 | There are 4 types of errors defined in include/asm-generic/error-injection.h |
| 332 | |
| 333 | EI_ETYPE_NULL |
| 334 | This function will return `NULL` if it fails. e.g. return an allocated |
| 335 | object address. |
| 336 | |
| 337 | EI_ETYPE_ERRNO |
| 338 | This function will return an `-errno` error code if it fails. e.g. return |
| 339 | -EINVAL if the input is wrong. This will include the functions which will |
| 340 | return an address which encodes `-errno` by ERR_PTR() macro. |
| 341 | |
| 342 | EI_ETYPE_ERRNO_NULL |
| 343 | This function will return an `-errno` or `NULL` if it fails. If the caller |
| 344 | of this function checks the return value with IS_ERR_OR_NULL() macro, this |
| 345 | type will be appropriate. |
| 346 | |
| 347 | EI_ETYPE_TRUE |
| 348 | This function will return `true` (non-zero positive value) if it fails. |
| 349 | |
| 350 | If you specifies a wrong type, for example, EI_TYPE_ERRNO for the function |
| 351 | which returns an allocated object, it may cause a problem because the returned |
| 352 | value is not an object address and the caller can not access to the address. |
| 353 | |
| 354 | |
| 355 | How to add new fault injection capability |
| 356 | ----------------------------------------- |
| 357 | |
| 358 | - #include <linux/fault-inject.h> |
| 359 | |
| 360 | - define the fault attributes |
| 361 | |
| 362 | DECLARE_FAULT_ATTR(name); |
| 363 | |
| 364 | Please see the definition of struct fault_attr in fault-inject.h |
| 365 | for details. |
| 366 | |
| 367 | - provide a way to configure fault attributes |
| 368 | |
| 369 | - boot option |
| 370 | |
| 371 | If you need to enable the fault injection capability from boot time, you can |
| 372 | provide boot option to configure it. There is a helper function for it: |
| 373 | |
| 374 | setup_fault_attr(attr, str); |
| 375 | |
| 376 | - debugfs entries |
| 377 | |
| 378 | failslab, fail_page_alloc, fail_usercopy, and fail_make_request use this way. |
| 379 | Helper functions: |
| 380 | |
| 381 | fault_create_debugfs_attr(name, parent, attr); |
| 382 | |
| 383 | - module parameters |
| 384 | |
| 385 | If the scope of the fault injection capability is limited to a |
| 386 | single kernel module, it is better to provide module parameters to |
| 387 | configure the fault attributes. |
| 388 | |
| 389 | - add a hook to insert failures |
| 390 | |
| 391 | Upon should_fail() returning true, client code should inject a failure: |
| 392 | |
| 393 | should_fail(attr, size); |
| 394 | |
| 395 | Application Examples |
| 396 | -------------------- |
| 397 | |
| 398 | - Inject slab allocation failures into module init/exit code:: |
| 399 | |
| 400 | #!/bin/bash |
| 401 | |
| 402 | FAILTYPE=failslab |
| 403 | echo Y > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/task-filter |
| 404 | echo 10 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/probability |
| 405 | echo 100 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/interval |
| 406 | echo -1 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/times |
| 407 | echo 0 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/space |
| 408 | echo 2 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/verbose |
| 409 | echo Y > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/ignore-gfp-wait |
| 410 | |
| 411 | faulty_system() |
| 412 | { |
| 413 | bash -c "echo 1 > /proc/self/make-it-fail && exec $*" |
| 414 | } |
| 415 | |
| 416 | if [ $# -eq 0 ] |
| 417 | then |
| 418 | echo "Usage: $0 modulename [ modulename ... ]" |
| 419 | exit 1 |
| 420 | fi |
| 421 | |
| 422 | for m in $* |
| 423 | do |
| 424 | echo inserting $m... |
| 425 | faulty_system modprobe $m |
| 426 | |
| 427 | echo removing $m... |
| 428 | faulty_system modprobe -r $m |
| 429 | done |
| 430 | |
| 431 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| 432 | |
| 433 | - Inject page allocation failures only for a specific module:: |
| 434 | |
| 435 | #!/bin/bash |
| 436 | |
| 437 | FAILTYPE=fail_page_alloc |
| 438 | module=$1 |
| 439 | |
| 440 | if [ -z $module ] |
| 441 | then |
| 442 | echo "Usage: $0 <modulename>" |
| 443 | exit 1 |
| 444 | fi |
| 445 | |
| 446 | modprobe $module |
| 447 | |
| 448 | if [ ! -d /sys/module/$module/sections ] |
| 449 | then |
| 450 | echo Module $module is not loaded |
| 451 | exit 1 |
| 452 | fi |
| 453 | |
| 454 | cat /sys/module/$module/sections/.text > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/require-start |
| 455 | cat /sys/module/$module/sections/.data > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/require-end |
| 456 | |
| 457 | echo N > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/task-filter |
| 458 | echo 10 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/probability |
| 459 | echo 100 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/interval |
| 460 | echo -1 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/times |
| 461 | echo 0 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/space |
| 462 | echo 2 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/verbose |
| 463 | echo Y > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/ignore-gfp-wait |
| 464 | echo Y > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/ignore-gfp-highmem |
| 465 | echo 10 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/stacktrace-depth |
| 466 | |
| 467 | trap "echo 0 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/probability" SIGINT SIGTERM EXIT |
| 468 | |
| 469 | echo "Injecting errors into the module $module... (interrupt to stop)" |
| 470 | sleep 1000000 |
| 471 | |
| 472 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| 473 | |
| 474 | - Inject open_ctree error while btrfs mount:: |
| 475 | |
| 476 | #!/bin/bash |
| 477 | |
| 478 | rm -f testfile.img |
| 479 | dd if=/dev/zero of=testfile.img bs=1M seek=1000 count=1 |
| 480 | DEVICE=$(losetup --show -f testfile.img) |
| 481 | mkfs.btrfs -f $DEVICE |
| 482 | mkdir -p tmpmnt |
| 483 | |
| 484 | FAILTYPE=fail_function |
| 485 | FAILFUNC=open_ctree |
| 486 | echo $FAILFUNC > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/inject |
| 487 | printf %#x -12 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/$FAILFUNC/retval |
| 488 | echo N > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/task-filter |
| 489 | echo 100 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/probability |
| 490 | echo 0 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/interval |
| 491 | echo -1 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/times |
| 492 | echo 0 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/space |
| 493 | echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/verbose |
| 494 | |
| 495 | mount -t btrfs $DEVICE tmpmnt |
| 496 | if [ $? -ne 0 ] |
| 497 | then |
| 498 | echo "SUCCESS!" |
| 499 | else |
| 500 | echo "FAILED!" |
| 501 | umount tmpmnt |
| 502 | fi |
| 503 | |
| 504 | echo > /sys/kernel/debug/$FAILTYPE/inject |
| 505 | |
| 506 | rmdir tmpmnt |
| 507 | losetup -d $DEVICE |
| 508 | rm testfile.img |
| 509 | |
| 510 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| 511 | |
| 512 | - Inject only skbuff allocation failures :: |
| 513 | |
| 514 | # mark skbuff_head_cache as faulty |
| 515 | echo 1 > /sys/kernel/slab/skbuff_head_cache/failslab |
| 516 | # Turn on cache filter (off by default) |
| 517 | echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/failslab/cache-filter |
| 518 | # Turn on fault injection |
| 519 | echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/failslab/times |
| 520 | echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/failslab/probability |
| 521 | |
| 522 | |
| 523 | Tool to run command with failslab or fail_page_alloc |
| 524 | ---------------------------------------------------- |
| 525 | In order to make it easier to accomplish the tasks mentioned above, we can use |
| 526 | tools/testing/fault-injection/failcmd.sh. Please run a command |
| 527 | "./tools/testing/fault-injection/failcmd.sh --help" for more information and |
| 528 | see the following examples. |
| 529 | |
| 530 | Examples: |
| 531 | |
| 532 | Run a command "make -C tools/testing/selftests/ run_tests" with injecting slab |
| 533 | allocation failure:: |
| 534 | |
| 535 | # ./tools/testing/fault-injection/failcmd.sh \ |
| 536 | -- make -C tools/testing/selftests/ run_tests |
| 537 | |
| 538 | Same as above except to specify 100 times failures at most instead of one time |
| 539 | at most by default:: |
| 540 | |
| 541 | # ./tools/testing/fault-injection/failcmd.sh --times=100 \ |
| 542 | -- make -C tools/testing/selftests/ run_tests |
| 543 | |
| 544 | Same as above except to inject page allocation failure instead of slab |
| 545 | allocation failure:: |
| 546 | |
| 547 | # env FAILCMD_TYPE=fail_page_alloc \ |
| 548 | ./tools/testing/fault-injection/failcmd.sh --times=100 \ |
| 549 | -- make -C tools/testing/selftests/ run_tests |
| 550 | |
| 551 | Systematic faults using fail-nth |
| 552 | --------------------------------- |
| 553 | |
| 554 | The following code systematically faults 0-th, 1-st, 2-nd and so on |
| 555 | capabilities in the socketpair() system call:: |
| 556 | |
| 557 | #include <sys/types.h> |
| 558 | #include <sys/stat.h> |
| 559 | #include <sys/socket.h> |
| 560 | #include <sys/syscall.h> |
| 561 | #include <fcntl.h> |
| 562 | #include <unistd.h> |
| 563 | #include <string.h> |
| 564 | #include <stdlib.h> |
| 565 | #include <stdio.h> |
| 566 | #include <errno.h> |
| 567 | |
| 568 | int main() |
| 569 | { |
| 570 | int i, err, res, fail_nth, fds[2]; |
| 571 | char buf[128]; |
| 572 | |
| 573 | system("echo N > /sys/kernel/debug/failslab/ignore-gfp-wait"); |
| 574 | sprintf(buf, "/proc/self/task/%ld/fail-nth", syscall(SYS_gettid)); |
| 575 | fail_nth = open(buf, O_RDWR); |
| 576 | for (i = 1;; i++) { |
| 577 | sprintf(buf, "%d", i); |
| 578 | write(fail_nth, buf, strlen(buf)); |
| 579 | res = socketpair(AF_LOCAL, SOCK_STREAM, 0, fds); |
| 580 | err = errno; |
| 581 | pread(fail_nth, buf, sizeof(buf), 0); |
| 582 | if (res == 0) { |
| 583 | close(fds[0]); |
| 584 | close(fds[1]); |
| 585 | } |
| 586 | printf("%d-th fault %c: res=%d/%d\n", i, atoi(buf) ? 'N' : 'Y', |
| 587 | res, err); |
| 588 | if (atoi(buf)) |
| 589 | break; |
| 590 | } |
| 591 | return 0; |
| 592 | } |
| 593 | |
| 594 | An example output:: |
| 595 | |
| 596 | 1-th fault Y: res=-1/23 |
| 597 | 2-th fault Y: res=-1/23 |
| 598 | 3-th fault Y: res=-1/12 |
| 599 | 4-th fault Y: res=-1/12 |
| 600 | 5-th fault Y: res=-1/23 |
| 601 | 6-th fault Y: res=-1/23 |
| 602 | 7-th fault Y: res=-1/23 |
| 603 | 8-th fault Y: res=-1/12 |
| 604 | 9-th fault Y: res=-1/12 |
| 605 | 10-th fault Y: res=-1/12 |
| 606 | 11-th fault Y: res=-1/12 |
| 607 | 12-th fault Y: res=-1/12 |
| 608 | 13-th fault Y: res=-1/12 |
| 609 | 14-th fault Y: res=-1/12 |
| 610 | 15-th fault Y: res=-1/12 |
| 611 | 16-th fault N: res=0/12 |