On 08/06/2012 10:31 PM, John Stultz wrote:
> On 08/06/2012 11:28 AM, Sasha Levin wrote:
>> On 08/06/2012 08:20 PM, John Stultz wrote:
>>> On 08/06/2012 10:21 AM, John Stultz wrote:
>>>> On 08/05/2012 09:55 AM, Sasha Levin wrote:
>>>>> On 07/30/2012 03:17 PM, Avi Kivity wrote:
>>>>>> Possible causes:
>>>>>>    - the APIC calibration in the guest failed, so it is programming too
>>>>>> low values into the timer
>>>>>>    - it actually needs 1 us wakeups and then can't keep up (esp. as kvm
>>>>>> interrupt injection is slowing it down)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> You can try to find out by changing
>>>>>> arch/x86/kvm/lapic.c:start_lapic_timer() to impose a minimum wakeup of
>>>>>> (say) 20 microseconds which will let the guest live long enough for you
>>>>>> to ftrace it and see what kind of timers it is programming.
>>>>> I've kept trying to narrow it down, and found out It's triggerable using 
>>>>> adjtimex().
>>> Sorry, one more question: Could you provide details on how is it 
>>> trigger-able using adjtimex?
>> It triggers after a while of fuzzing using trinity of just adjtimex 
>> ('./trinity --quiet -l off -cadjtimex').
>>
>> Trinity is available here: http://git.codemonkey.org.uk/?p=trinity.git .
>>
>> Let me know if I can help further with reproducing this, I can probably copy 
>> over my testing environment to some other host if you'd like.
> So far no luck. Dmesg mostly just gets filled up with trinity-child OOMs.   
> How much memory are you running with?
> 
> Are you running trinity as root or as some user that has CAP_SYS_TIME and can 
> actually change values via adjtimex? Or does it trip just by reading the 
> values?

As root in a disposable vm. It triggers at a random point, not after a specific 
call.

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