An user reported a crash with Redis scripting (see issue #480 on
github), inspection of the kindly provided strack trace showed that
server.lua_caller was probably set to NULL. The stack trace also slowed
that the call to the hook was originating from a point where we just
used to set/get a few global variables in the Lua state.
What was happening is that we did not set the timeout hook selectively
only when the user script was called. Now we set it more selectively,
specifically only in the context of the lua_pcall() call, and make sure
to remove the hook when the call returns. Otherwise the hook can get
called in random contexts every time we do something with the Lua
state.
A previous commit removed -g -rdynamic -ggdb as LDFLAGS, not allowing
Redis to produce a stack trace wth symbol names on crash.
This commit fixes the issue.
This commit reverts most of c575766202, in
order to use back main stack for signal handling.
The main reason is that otherwise it is completely pointless that we do
a lot of efforts to print the stack trace on crash, and the content of
the stack and registers as well. Using an alternate stack broken this
feature completely.
Now it uses the new wait_for_condition testing primitive.
Also wait_for_condition implementation was fixed in this commit to properly
escape the expr command and its argument.
A new primitive wait_for_condition was introduced in the scripting
engine that makes waiting for events simpler, so that it is simpler to
write tests that are more resistant to timing issues.
1) One integer "immediate" encoding that can encode from 0 to 12 in the
encoding byte itself.
2) One 8 bit signed integer encoding that can encode 8 bit signed small
integers in a single byte.
The idea is to exploit all the not used bits we have around in a
backward compatible way.
This fixes compilation on FreeBSD (and possibly other systems) by
not using ucontext_t at all if HAVE_BACKTRACE is not defined.
Also the ifdefs to get the registers are modified to explicitly test for the
operating system in the first level, and the arch in the second level
of nesting.
Two limits are added:
1) Up to SLOWLOG_ENTRY_MAX_ARGV arguments are logged.
2) Up to SLOWLOG_ENTRY_MAX_STRING bytes per argument are logged.
3) slowlog-max-len is set to 128 by default (was 1024).
The number of remaining arguments / bytes is logged in the entry
so that the user can understand better the nature of the logged command.
just fieldobj itself as sentinel of the fact a field object is used or
not, instead of using the filed length, that may be confusing both for
people and for the compiler emitting a warning.