"1195725856" and other mysterious numbers

Last week was the final week for this half's performance review at Facebook, where we write summaries of work and impact we and our peers had over the last half year. Naturally, that can only mean one thing: the entire company trends towards peak levels of procrastination, doing literally anything and everything to avoid the unspeakable horror of having to write a few paragraphs of text.

My personal distraction of choice a few days before the deadline was looking at lines like this, spamming from some hosts serving NFS traffic:

RPC: fragment too large: 1195725856 RPC: fragment too large: 1212498244

Let's take a look at the kernel code responsible for generating this warning – grepping for "fragment too large" show it comes from svc_tcp_recv_record in net/sunrpc/svcsock.c:

if ( svc_sock_reclen ( svsk ) + svsk -> sk_datalen > serv -> sv_max_mesg ) { net_notice_ratelimited ( "RPC: fragment too large: %d

" , svc_sock_reclen ( svsk )); goto err_delete ; }

So we're erroring out because we got passed some message which is beyond sv_max_mesg , cool. But where does this come from? Looking at svc_sock_reclen shows the following:

static inline u32 svc_sock_reclen ( struct svc_sock * svsk ) { return ntohl ( svsk -> sk_reclen ) & RPC_FRAGMENT_SIZE_MASK ; }

ntohl converts a uint from network byte ordering to the host's byte ordering. The bitwise AND with RPC_FRAGMENT_SIZE_MASK results in only some of the data being retained, and looking at the definition show us how many bits that is:

#define RPC_LAST_STREAM_FRAGMENT (1U << 31) #define RPC_FRAGMENT_SIZE_MASK (~RPC_LAST_STREAM_FRAGMENT)

Okay, so we will only keep the first 31 bits and zero out the rest, since ~ is bitwise NOT .

That means that these numbers come from the first four bytes of the fragment, omitting the final highest bit, which is reserved to record whether the fragment is the last one for this record (see svc_sock_final_rec ). The fact that the error happens so early in fragment parsing in particular got me thinking that the fragment may not be protocol-confirming in the first place, since it's not like we got very far in processing at all, not even past the first four bytes. So what are these first four bytes, then? Looking at the numbers in hex shows something interesting:

% python >>> hex ( 1195725856 ) '0x47455420' >>> hex ( 1212498244 ) '0x48454144'

These are all really tightly clustered, generally from 0x40 to 0x50, which implies there might actually be some semantic meaning per-byte. And since these are char -sized, here's a guess about what might be encoded in them…

>>> ' \x47\x45\x54\x20 ' 'GET ' >>> ' \x48\x45\x41\x44 ' 'HEAD'

Oh dear. Somebody is sending HTTP requests to NFS RPC, but at least we are outright rejecting the fragments instead of actually allocating/dirtying a gigabyte of memory.

Next up was finding out who's actually sending these requests. rpcinfo -p shows NFS is listening on the default port, 2049, so we can set up a trap with tcpdump like so:

tcpdump -i any -w trap.pcap dst port 2049 # ...wait for logs to appear again, then ^C... tcpdump -qX -r trap.pcap | less +/HEAD

From here, it was pretty easy to catch the origin of these requests by tracing back to the origin host and service using the captured pcap data. After that one can coordinate with the team responsible to work out what's actually going on here, and avoid these errant packets being sent out in the first place. As a bonus, you also get to learn more about parts of infrastructure you might otherwise not interact with, which is always cool. :-)

Funnily enough, if you Google for these numbers you can find tons of threads with people encountering them in the wild. Maybe we should start printing ASCII in future in some of the error paths hit when all character values are between 0x0 and 0x7F, I'm sure it would help a lot of people realise what's going on much more quickly. Maybe I'll send a patch upstream to do that in svc_tcp_recv_record and a few other places in the kernel that directly parse the first few data bytes from packets as an integer, let's see.

Here's a trivial script that can generate a bunch of other integers for HTTP that might be of interest:

#!/usr/bin/env python import struct def interpret_as ( fmt , data ): nr_bytes = struct . calcsize ( fmt ) data_fmt = "{: %(b)d . %(b)d }" % { "b" : nr_bytes } padded_data = data_fmt . format ( data ) . encode ( "ascii" ) return "{},{},{},{}" . format ( data , nr_bytes , struct . unpack ( "<" + fmt , padded_data )[ 0 ], struct . unpack ( ">" + fmt , padded_data )[ 0 ], ) print ( "data,bytes,little-endian,big-endian" ) for method in [ "GET" , "HEAD" , "POST" , "PUT" , "DELETE" , "OPTIONS" , "TRACE" , "PATCH" , "CONNECT" ]: # Since none of these use the high bit, signed/unsigned # results are the same, so only need to check one assert ord ( method [ 0 ]) & 1 << 7 == 0 if len ( method ) >= 7 : # Known: method + " " print ( interpret_as ( "Q" , method )) # u64 print ( interpret_as ( "I" , method )) # u32 print ( interpret_as ( "H" , method )) # u16

And the results:

data bytes little-endian big-endian GET 4 542393671 1195725856 GET 2 17735 18245 HEAD 4 1145128264 1212498244 HEAD 2 17736 18501 POST 4 1414745936 1347375956 POST 2 20304 20559 PUT 4 542397776 1347769376 PUT 2 21840 20565 DELETE 4 1162626372 1145392197 DELETE 2 17732 17477 OPTIONS 8 2329291534720323663 5715160600973038368 OPTIONS 4 1230262351 1330664521 OPTIONS 2 20559 20304 TRACE 4 1128354388 1414676803 TRACE 2 21076 21586 PATCH 4 1129595216 1346458691 PATCH 2 16720 20545 CONNECT 8 2329560872202948419 4850181421777769504 CONNECT 4 1313754947 1129270862 CONNECT 2 20291 17231

As expected, if you Google for most of these numbers, you can find an endless supply of questions mentioning them in error messages (some previously unidentified examples which I replied to: 1, 2, 3).

Hopefully this post will help people find their real problem – using the wrong protocol – more quickly in future. In particular, if your affected application crashed due to ENOMEM/"Out of memory", please especially consider submitting a patch to clamp the size to some reasonable maximum :-)