
Issue #19156 has been updated by mk (Matthias Käppler). It looks like I can't do anything useful with that address: ``` (gdb) p *0x7fced23f4000 Cannot access memory at address 0x7fced23f4000 ``` This is getting mysterious. I looked at process maps to see what kind of memory region this is, and it looks like it's a memory-mapped file from `prometheus-client-mmap`: ``` pmap -x 216 ... 00007fced23f3000 4 4 0 rw-s- gauge_max_puma_0-0.db 00007fced23f5000 4 4 0 r---- wait.so ... ``` I also cannot dump this region, but I can print the value for the object starting at `0x...3000`: ``` (gdb) dump memory /tmp/memdmp 0x7fced23f3000 0x7fced23f5000 Cannot access memory at address 0x7fced23f4000 ``` but: ``` (gdb) p *0x7fced23f3000 $1 = 104 ``` That doesn't tell me anything, but I know this library uses a binary format to serialize metric samples into JSON strings from Ruby hashes using a C extension. The only Ruby strings in here are metric names and labels IIRC. I will investigate more in this direction. It indeed does sound like it is not strictly a bug with MRI, though I wonder if it should be more resilient to these kind of rogue objects and just filter them out? ---------------------------------------- Bug #19156: ObjectSpace.dump_all segfault during string inspection https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/19156#change-100323 * Author: mk (Matthias Käppler) * Status: Open * Priority: Normal * ruby -v: ruby 3.0.4p208 (2022-04-12 revision 3fa771dded) [x86_64-linux] * Backport: 2.7: UNKNOWN, 3.0: UNKNOWN, 3.1: UNKNOWN ---------------------------------------- I am working on a feature that would allow our application to capture heap dumps during shutdown for later inspection. These heap dumps are captured via `ObjectSpace.dump_all(output: io)`. While walking the object space, MRI occasionally segfaults while inspecting string objects in `search_nonascii` of `string.c`: ``` /usr/local/lib/ruby/3.0.0/objspace.rb:87: [BUG] Segmentation fault at 0x00007efee4201000 ruby 3.0.4p208 (2022-04-12 revision 3fa771dded) [x86_64-linux] ... -- Control frame information ----------------------------------------------- c:0053 p:---- s:0312 e:000311 CFUNC :_dump_all c:0052 p:0130 s:0305 e:000304 METHOD /usr/local/lib/ruby/3.0.0/objspace.rb:87 c:0051 p:0023 s:0295 e:000294 METHOD /home/git/gitlab/lib/gitlab/memory/reports/heap_dump.rb:26 ... -- C level backtrace information ------------------------------------------- /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(rb_print_backtrace+0x11) [0x7efee4ad0c5e] vm_dump.c:758 /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(rb_vm_bugreport) vm_dump.c:998 /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(rb_bug_for_fatal_signal+0xf8) [0x7efee48d0b08] error.c:787 /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(sigsegv+0x55) [0x7efee4a23db5] signal.c:963 /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0(__restore_rt+0x0) [0x7efee4f12140] ../sysdeps/pthread/funlockfile.c:28 /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(search_nonascii+0x30) [0x7efee4a3ca60] string.c:552 /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(coderange_scan) string.c:585 /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(enc_coderange_scan+0x1b) [0x7efee4a3e28a] string.c:709 /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(rb_enc_str_coderange) string.c:727 /usr/local/lib/ruby/3.0.0/x86_64-linux/objspace.so(is_broken_string+0x8) [0x7efeced9c304] ../../internal/string.h:116 /usr/local/lib/ruby/3.0.0/x86_64-linux/objspace.so(dump_object) objspace_dump.c:388 /usr/local/lib/ruby/3.0.0/x86_64-linux/objspace.so(heap_i+0x39) [0x7efeced9caa9] objspace_dump.c:521 /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(objspace_each_objects_without_setup+0xaf) [0x7efee48e878f] gc.c:3232 /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(objspace_each_objects_protected+0x14) [0x7efee48e87c4] gc.c:3242 /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(rb_ensure+0x12a) [0x7efee48d96aa] eval.c:1162 /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(objspace_each_objects+0x28) [0x7efee48fb458] gc.c:3310 /usr/local/lib/libruby.so.3.0(rb_objspace_each_objects) gc.c:3298 /usr/local/lib/ruby/3.0.0/x86_64-linux/objspace.so(objspace_dump_all+0x88) [0x7efeced9b068] objspace_dump.c:616 ... ``` Unfortunately I couldn't get my hands on that memory region to see which strings are causing this since this doesn't always happen. I suspect this is also a problem with MRI master since the code looks unchanged from 3.0.4. -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/