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Message #07668
[Bug 1020285] Re: Addition of leap second causes spuriously high CPU usage and futex lockups
This release has reached end-of-life [0].
[0] https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Releases
** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu Natty)
Status: Triaged => Invalid
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1020285
Title:
Addition of leap second causes spuriously high CPU usage and futex
lockups
Status in “base-files” package in Ubuntu:
Fix Released
Status in “linux” package in Ubuntu:
Fix Released
Status in “base-files” source package in Lucid:
Won't Fix
Status in “linux” source package in Lucid:
Fix Released
Status in “base-files” source package in Natty:
Won't Fix
Status in “linux” source package in Natty:
Invalid
Status in “base-files” source package in Oneiric:
Won't Fix
Status in “linux” source package in Oneiric:
Fix Released
Status in “base-files” source package in Precise:
Won't Fix
Status in “linux” source package in Precise:
Fix Released
Status in “base-files” source package in Quantal:
Won't Fix
Status in “linux” source package in Quantal:
Fix Released
Bug description:
[Impact]
Software that relies on fine-grained pthread timeouts will spin indefinitely and drive up system load following a leap second, when the kernel's idea of time has become desynced and sub-1s timeouts are all hit immediately. Mysql and Java are in particular reported to be affected by this. This is a transient issue, in that it will go away the first time the system is rebooted after the leap second and is expected to be fixed before the next leap second occurs; nevertheless admins have been caught off-guard by this misbehavior and in some cases may not have noticed the problem or know what to do about it, so we should help them along by resetting the kernel clock with a minimal-risk base-files update.
[Test Case]
1. Find a system that has been online, with mysqld or a java-based process running since before 2012-06-30.
2. Verify that one or more processes on the system are spinning in futex and driving up the system load.
3. Upgrade to the base-files package from -proposed.
4. Verify that the system load comes back down immediately.
5. A stress-test for leap-second handling has been provided at https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/7/3/37
[Regression potential]
No analysis has been done on the effect of resetting the date on applications that require a high-accuracy clock. While this fixes the problem with the pthreads interfaces, it may cause other problems for other software. Since the proposed fix is to reset the kernel's date to the current date, which is not atomic, there will be a slight skew of the clock backwards in time. ntp *should* fix this shortly thereafter for machines that have it enabled.
Also, because there's a single version check for each copy of the SRU, users whose applications are negatively affected by the running of this date command will also be negatively affected on each subsequent upgrade of the system, up to and including the quantal devel release.
As widely reported, the addition of the leap second on 2012-06-30 has
caused high CPU usage and futex lockups in a lot of applications
including JVMs, Mysql as well as desktop apps like Firefox and
Thunderbird.
https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/6/30/122
http://serverfault.com/questions/403732/anyone-else-experiencing-high-rates-of-linux-server-crashes-during-a-leap-second
https://blog.mozilla.org/it/2012/06/30/mysql-and-the-leap-second-high-cpu-and-the-fix/
We've seen this ourselves on the Canonical infrastructure on both
current Lucid and Precise kernels, i.e.
ii linux-image-2.6.32-41-server 2.6.32-41.90 Linux kernel image for version 2.6.32 on x86_64
ii linux-image-3.2.0-24-generic 3.2.0-24.39 Linux kernel image for version 3.2.0 on 64 bit x86 SMP
We can also confirm the 'date -s $(date)' workaround fixes the problem
without requiring a reboot.
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