[jcigar at ulb.ac.be: Listen queue overflow: 8 already in queue awaiting acceptance]

Julien Cigar jcigar at ulb.ac.be
Fri Oct 3 08:01:56 UTC 2014


On Thu, Oct 02, 2014 at 04:36:49PM -0700, hiren panchasara wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 2, 2014 at 11:19 AM, Julien Cigar <jcigar at ulb.ac.be> wrote:
> > On Thu, Oct 02, 2014 at 10:24:13AM -0700, hiren panchasara wrote:
> >> On Thu, Oct 2, 2014 at 9:42 AM, Julien Cigar <jcigar at ulb.ac.be> wrote:
> >> > sorry for cross-posting, I'm forwarding this as it seems that part of
> >> > the problem is also related to:
> >> > https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-net/2014-September/039664.html
> >>
> >> Umm, this looks like a different problem than the subject of this email.
> >
> > yes and no, seems the same hardware (HP and igb) and I have also some
> > "requests for mbufs denied" (https://dpaste.de/t8kJ/raw) without any
> > reasons. I should add that the box hanged a week ago and I had to do a
> > hard reboot, I have the feeling that it's somewhat related to this
> > problem ..
> >
> I suggest you try to debug these 2 problems separately.  Did you get a
> chance to look at kgdb to find the culprit process as I suggested
> below?

I tried what you suggested, but I get a "No struct type named inpcb"
Any idea ? :)

> 
> cheers,
> Hiren
> >> >
> >> > I also wonder if something has been fixed in -STABLE in this area ..
> >> >
> >> > (please keep me in CC as I'm not subscribed on freebsd-net@ an
> >> > freebsd-stable@)
> >> >
> >> > --
> >> > Julien Cigar
> >> > Belgian Biodiversity Platform (http://www.biodiversity.be)
> >> > PGP fingerprint: EEF9 F697 4B68 D275 7B11  6A25 B2BB 3710 A204 23C0
> >> > No trees were killed in the creation of this message.
> >> > However, many electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
> >> >
> >> >
> >> > ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> >> > From: Julien Cigar <jcigar at ulb.ac.be>
> >> > To: freebsd-questions at freebsd.org
> >> > Cc:
> >> > Date: Thu, 2 Oct 2014 11:52:06 +0200
> >> > Subject: Listen queue overflow: 8 already in queue awaiting acceptance
> >> > Hello,
> >> >
> >> > I'm running 10-RELEASE on a HP Proliant DL160 Gen8 and I'm seeing the
> >> > following in my kernel logs:
> >> > sonewconn: pcb 0xfffff8010e561310: Listen queue overflow: 8 already in
> >> > queue awaiting acceptance
> >>
> >> This usually means the application is not keeping up with the incoming
> >> connections.
> >> >
> >> > I already raised kern.ipc.soacceptqueue to 1024 and  netstat -naA | grep
> >> > "fffff8010e561310" returns nothing
> >>
> >> This is the usual way of finding the culprit process. If this doesn't
> >> return anything, it probably means that it is a short-lived process.
> >>
> >> Here is an example of what you could do:
> >>
> >> sonewconn: pcb 0xfffff8008f40cb10: Listen queue overflow: 1 already in queue
> >> awaiting acceptance
> >>
> >> From kgdb,
> >> (kgdb) p ((struct inpcb *)0xfffff8008f40cb10)->inp_inc
> >> $3 = {inc_flags = 0 '\0', inc_len = 0 '\0', inc_fibnum = 0, inc_ie = {ie_fport
> >> = 0, ie_lport = 10295, ie_dependfaddr = {
> >>       ie46_foreign = {ia46_pad32 = {0, 0, 0}, ia46_addr4 = {s_addr = 0}},
> >> ie6_foreign = {__u6_addr = {
> >>           __u6_addr8 = '\0' <repeats 15 times>, __u6_addr16 = {0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
> >> 0, 0, 0}, __u6_addr32 = {0, 0, 0, 0}}}},
> >>     ie_dependladdr = {ie46_local = {ia46_pad32 = {0, 0, 0}, ia46_addr4 =
> >> {s_addr = 0}}, ie6_local = {__u6_addr = {
> >>           __u6_addr8 = '\0' <repeats 15 times>, __u6_addr16 = {0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
> >> 0, 0, 0}, __u6_addr32 = {0, 0, 0, 0}}}}}}
> >>
> >> Here, ie_lport = 10295 which is in n/w byte order and converting it to host
> >> byte order, 10295 -> 0x2837 and swapping them gives us 0x3728 which is 14120.
> >>
> >> Now, use sockstat to find out what process is on that port:
> >>
> >> $ sockstat -l | grep 14120
> >>
> >> cheers,
> >> Hiren
> >
> > --
> > Julien Cigar
> > Belgian Biodiversity Platform (http://www.biodiversity.be)
> > PGP fingerprint: EEF9 F697 4B68 D275 7B11  6A25 B2BB 3710 A204 23C0
> > No trees were killed in the creation of this message.
> > However, many electrons were terribly inconvenienced.

-- 
Julien Cigar
Belgian Biodiversity Platform (http://www.biodiversity.be)
PGP fingerprint: EEF9 F697 4B68 D275 7B11  6A25 B2BB 3710 A204 23C0
No trees were killed in the creation of this message.
However, many electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
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