From: Alexey Rodriguez <mrchebas@gmail.com>
To: OCaml List <caml-list@inria.fr>
Subject: [Caml-list] Re: Exception backtraces and stack overflows
Date: Mon, 16 Jul 2012 17:06:04 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <CACfYrzGwnho0tT_6DXXzsoXQSHbnVF=PC7+UTYsHLRH5Gm=4_Q@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CACfYrzEuDSc89he37PV4BZomdp_KhPTnkwvFhhYH+na8p92+MA@mail.gmail.com>
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Hi again,
A colleague suggested doing the following experiment: call List.map on a
large list and throw an exception from deep down in the call chain.
Now the backtrace I get contains 1022 entries for map, an entry for the
raise site and some other entry. This matches the 1024 limit of
BACKTRACE_BUFFER_SIZE. Since the limit has been reached, the backtrace is
useless to diagnose the stack overflow. This matches my understanding of
caml_stash_backtrace: all stack frames are inspected and reported as long
as there is space in the trace buffer.
So it seems there is something funny happening when a stack overflow is
detected in the SIGSEGV handler: there are only 3 trace entries whereas
the stack contains over a hundred thousand frames. Is this intended
behavior?
If it is of any help I am including the test program. I am using Ocaml
3.12.0 on a x86-64 platform.
Cheers,
Alexey
On Mon, Jul 16, 2012 at 3:51 PM, Alexey Rodriguez <mrchebas@gmail.com>wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am having trouble understanding exception backtraces for stack overflows.
>
> Sometimes the backtrace only contains entries for the function that filled
> the stack with frames (you would see many backtrace entries pointing to
> List.map if you were trying to map a very long list). Such traces are
> useless to fix the stack overflow since you cannot use them to find the
> code path that leads to List.map.
>
> In other situations, the backtrace contains the full path from the Ocaml
> entry point to the recursive functions that is blowing up the stack. In
> these situations the backtrace appears to have "compressed" the hundreds of
> thousands of frames that the recursive calls generated since there is only
> one entry for List.map.
>
> Is there documentation that explains when you get one backtrace or the
> other? I tried to understand the source code of caml_stash_backtrace and
> there it seems that all the stack frames are captured (if the backtrace
> buffer size allows). Casual inspection with gdb shows that
> caml_stash_backtrace does not get the full stack at the moment of the
> fault. Maybe the signal handler is skipping over the hundreds of thousands
> of frames somehow? If someone can elucidate this mystery for me I'll be
> very grateful!
>
> I can provide more details if needed, but probably someone on the list can
> already help with this short description.
>
> Oh, one more question on backtraces. I see that when tracing is enabled,
> caml_stash_backtrace is called whenever an exception is thrown. This might
> be expensive as Not_found is raised by many functions in the standard
> library. Is there a high overhead in leaving tracing enabled? This is
> useful in production systems as very often it is not possible to have the
> original inputs to trigger the bug in a debug build.
>
> Thanks!
>
> Alexey
>
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let make_list n =
let rec go accum = function
| 0 -> accum
| n -> go (n::accum) (n-1)
in
go [] n
let rec my_map f = function
| [] -> []
| (x::xs) ->
let y = f x in
let ys = my_map f xs in
y :: ys
exception Die_die_die
(* Make this false to generate a "normally handled" exception and get
* many backtrace entries. *)
let generate_stack_overflow = true
let inc n =
if not generate_stack_overflow && n = 10000 then raise Die_die_die;
n + 1
let main () =
Printf.fprintf stderr "Making list\n";
let l = make_list (1000 * 400) in
Printf.fprintf stderr "Mapping\n";
let _l2 = my_map inc l in
Printf.fprintf stderr "Done\n"
let () = main ()
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2012-07-16 15:06 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2012-07-16 13:51 [Caml-list] " Alexey Rodriguez
2012-07-16 15:06 ` Alexey Rodriguez [this message]
2012-07-16 22:09 ` [Caml-list] " Fabrice Le Fessant
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