Source changes (dormant parity infra, retained from iterate 2.AI/2.AO): - xenia-kernel/exports.rs: nt_create_event manual_reset polarity + related event wiring - xenia-gpu/mmio_region.rs: D1MODE_VBLANK_VLINE_STATUS hardcode parity Also lands the audit-runs/ analysis notes (.md/.txt/.json digests) for the iterate 2.x VSync/0x10e8/0x1004 wedge investigation. Raw trace dumps (.jsonl/.gz/.csv/.stdout) and agent worktrees (.claude/) are gitignored as regenerable local artifacts — see memory + HANDOFF for the running findings. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
11 KiB
Phase C+22 investigation — RtlEnter/RtlLeave post-wait control-flow divergence (2026-05-18)
TL;DR
ESCALATE. The divergence at tid=6→1 idx=104,607 (canary
import.call RtlEnterCriticalSection vs ours import.call RtlLeaveCriticalSection) is a downstream effect of the same
scheduler-determinism asymmetry that C+20 escalated. C+21's
floating-absorb correctly removes the visible wait.begin jitter
event from the diff (floating_wait (c/o) = 2/0 engaged on this
chain in the fresh c22 sample), but the post-wait guest-code
branch taken in canary because shared state was mutated during
the wait is NOT an observation artifact — it's a structural
behavioral consequence of scheduler interleaving and cannot be
papered over at the diff layer without falsely matching genuinely
different guest behavior.
Verification: NOT jitter
Per reading-error #32 discipline, sampled 4 canary cold streams
- 1 fresh ours cold. The Enter/Leave PATTERN in the post-wait region is structurally consistent across all canary samples:
| sample | events 104,604-104,615 (tid=6, import.call only) |
|---|---|
| c21 archived | E E L L (nested pair after acquire) |
| jitter-1 | E (wait.begin slow-path) E L L |
| jitter-2 | E E L L (same as c21) |
| jitter-3 | (index-shifted +3) E E L L |
| fresh c22 | E (wait.begin slow-path) E L L |
All canary samples take an EXTRA nested RtlEnter after the post-
loop E at 104,604. Ours never does — it goes E L NtClose.
The two canary jitter shapes (with vs without the wait.begin emission inside the first E pair) are the C+21 absorption target; both shapes converge to the same post-wait nested-Enter behavior.
Mechanism (classification: A + B-via-A)
C+21 absorption confirmed working — the diff harness correctly
folds the wait.begin and handle.create events on shared-global
dispatcher sid=75ae880ec432eb36 / raw=0xf8000034 (an Event
dispatcher used cross-tid) into the matched prefix:
fresh c22 floating_create (c/o) = 1/0
fresh c22 floating_wait (c/o) = 2/0
Result: matched prefix advances to 104,607 (canary stream internally at idx 104,610 after C+21 unfolds the 3 absorbed events).
The remaining divergence is:
canary [104,610] import.call RtlEnterCriticalSection (nested 2nd acquire)
ours [104,607] import.call RtlLeaveCriticalSection (release first acquire)
This is NOT a "ghost" event. It's a real divergence in guest control flow at the same logical execution point.
Why it happens
Sylpheed's guest code at this PC, after the post-loop CS acquire, reads a state value (e.g. a queue pointer, a reference count, an event-signaled flag) protected by that CS. Based on the value, it either:
- (canary's path): re-enters a nested CS to drain or clean up additional state, then releases both levels.
- (ours's path): proceeds directly to release the outer CS and close the Event handle.
In canary's contended scenario, while tid=6 was blocked on the
shared dispatcher at 104,608 (the embedded DISPATCHER_HEADER of
the CS object — its wait.begin was on sid=75ae880ec432eb36,
the canary's first-toucher SID for this Event), another guest
thread held the CS and may have mutated the protected state.
When tid=6 resumes and the slow-path RtlEnter completes
acquisition, the state value that the post-acquire branch reads
has changed, and the branch takes the nested-cleanup path.
In ours, tid=1 never blocked here. No other thread had a chance to mutate the protected state during a wait window. The state value the branch reads is the pre-wait value, and the branch takes the simple-release path.
This is the same downstream effect that the C+20 escalation analysis predicted: "That requires ours to schedule tid=9 ahead of (or concurrently with) tid=1's RtlEnter, exactly as canary's host scheduler did. Ours's deterministic single-stepping scheduler runs tid=1 near-monolithically through this region — tid=9 has no opportunity to claim the CS before tid=1 fast-paths through."
The classification is class A in the C+22 prompt taxonomy: ours's RtlEnter takes a fast path (uncontended) that canary's contended path doesn't — same root cause as C+20.
Why this can't be absorbed in the diff tool (reading-error
#23 risk)
Unlike the wait.begin event itself (which is a transient observation directly correlated to scheduling), the post-divergence Enter / Leave sequence corresponds to distinct guest code paths. Folding canary's extra RtlEnter at idx 104,610 + matching RtlLeave at 104,613 into the matched prefix would require the diff tool to over-absorb a 6-event block per contention occurrence, regardless of whether ours's code path ACTUALLY corresponds to canary's contended path. This crosses the line from "scheduling-jitter mitigation" to "matching genuinely different guest behavior" — reading-error #23 in action.
The C+21 absorb is justified because the wait.begin event is guaranteed to be a no-op observation if/when it fires (canary's xeKeWaitForSingleObject is the slow path that the fast path trivially skips). The post-wait Enter / Leave block is the opposite: real work, real guest code execution.
Engine-side fixes considered and rejected
(i) Wire wait.begin into ours's rtl_enter_critical_section
park path Symmetric to canary, but does NOT fix the divergence at idx 104,607 because ours doesn't park here at all. The patch would be inert in this case; the divergence persists. Useful prophylactic but not the C+22 target.
(ii) Force ours to spin-wait briefly at every RtlEnter to
give other tids a chance to claim the CS Extremely fragile, no guarantee of matching canary's exact interleave. Likely shifts divergence elsewhere without resolving it.
(iii) Implement deterministic CS-priority scheduling
where any other tid that has a pending wait on the same CS gets to run before the current tid's fast-path Would change ours's scheduler semantics broadly. Multi-thousand- LOC scope. Explicitly NOT authorized per the C+22 prompt:
You may NOT (without escalating): Refactor scheduler / thread-model.
(iv) Record canary's contention trace and replay it in ours
("scheduling-trace replay") A new subsystem; recorded under C+20 escalation already.
(v) Modify Sylpheed's guest code at the post-loop branch to
force the simple-release path Would require modifying guest binary — outside scope and defeats the parity goal.
(vi) Add a no-op cs_ptr Phase A emitter additive for
diagnosis
~30 LOC each engine + canary recompile. Cvar-OFF zero-cost.
Would allow future investigation to distinguish whether
canary's nested RtlEnter at 104,610 is on the SAME CS pointer
(recursive bump) or a DIFFERENT CS (nested cleanup lock).
Deferred — not needed for the escalation decision because the
mechanism (post-wait state mutation) is already established by
the C+20 analysis; the additional cs_ptr data would only
refine the cause-of-branch story.
Cascade outcome (per C+22 prompt)
- A=verify divergence is NOT jitter: PASS (4 canary cold samples
agree on EE-LL nested pattern; C+21 absorber engaged
floating_wait (c/o) = 2/0and matched prefix is 104,607 exactly). - B=classify (A/B/C/D): PASS — (A) ours's RtlEnter fast-paths while canary's contends → downstream state mutation during the wait → different post-acquire branch in guest code.
- C=land fix or escalate cleanly: ESCALATION (per C+22 prompt authorized fallback).
- D=main matched-prefix > 104,607: N/A (no engine change).
Cold-vs-cold gate matrix (escalation-mode)
| gate | result |
|---|---|
| ours-cold byte-identical to c19 | YES (121,569 |
| events match) | |
| Main matched-prefix | 104,607 (= C+21) |
| Sister chains | 11/32/3/41/16 ✓ |
Phase B image_loaded_sha256 |
unchanged ✓ |
| Engine source | UNCHANGED |
| C+21 absorber engagement | 1/0 + 2/0 (fired) |
Per-chain delta vs C+21 baseline
NONE. All chains identical to C+21:
| chain | C+21 | C+22 (this) | delta |
|---|---|---|---|
| canary tid=6 → ours tid=1 main | 104,607 | 104,607 | 0 |
| canary tid=4 → ours tid=11 | 11 | 11 | 0 |
| canary tid=7 → ours tid=2 | 32 | 32 | 0 |
| canary tid=12 → ours tid=7 | 3 | 3 | 0 |
| canary tid=14 → ours tid=9 | 41 | 41 | 0 |
| canary tid=15 → ours tid=10 | 16 | 16 | 0 |
Methodology note — reading-error class #34
#34 (NEW): cold-run determinism depends on input path form.
Running ours against default.xex directly (extracted file)
produces a different boot trajectory than running against the
parent .iso containing it. The C+19 / C+21 baselines used the
.iso path; the .xex direct path yields 40x more imports and
1.6M unimpl warnings (CPU stuck/looping in a probe that doesn't
fire on the iso). All cold-vs-cold protocol entries MUST use
the iso path. Reproduces deterministically: ours-cold against
.iso is byte-identical to the c19 archived ours-cold modulo
host_ns/guest_cycle fields (verified 121,569 events all match
post-normalization).
Likely cause: the iso path triggers xenia_vfs::disc_image:: DiscImageDevice::open at main.rs:1397-1400, mounting a full
disc VFS at d:\ / \Device\Cdrom0\. The bare-xex path skips
this and leaves the VFS unmounted for most disc-prefixed
opens, causing different boot-validator branches.
This affects ALL future cold-vs-cold protocol runs — always pass the .iso path, not the loose .xex.
Recommendation for next sessions
This is the SECOND C-series session (after C+20) classified as scheduler-determinism in the post-loop RtlEnter region near idx 104,607. The pattern is stable and well-understood. Recommended next-target sequence:
-
C+23 = D-NEW-2 (
KeWaitForSingleObjecttimeout_nssign/scale asymmetry on tid=12→7 idx=3): canary=-30000000 vs ours=429466729600. Small ε-class encoding fix inke_wait_for_single_object's timeout-pointer dereference. Independent of scheduler determinism. Out of scope for C+22 per prompt's explicit "You may NOT ... Fix D-NEW-2 in this session." -
C+24 = D-NEW-3 (canary tid=14 → ours tid=9 idx=41: canary calls
XAudioGetVoiceCategoryVolumeChangeMaskwhile ours callsRtlEnterCriticalSection). Pre-context shows identical KeReleaseSpinLockFromRaisedIrql + KfLowerIrql pair; the next branch picks completely different exports. Likely a missing/stubbed XAudio export in ours that, when absent, causes a fallback to a different code path. -
Open the parallel scheduler-determinism track to attack the C+20 / C+22 family at the root. Estimated multi-session refactor; per prompt this is "a separate session."
Files
diff-cold-vs-cold.md— full diff report.cold-vs-cold-result.md— matched-prefix table + gates.canary-binary-cache-pre-wipe.tar.gz— pre-wipe oracle backup.canary-xdg-cache-pre-wipe.tar.gz— pre-wipe XDG oracle.escalation.md— this document's TL;DR + recommended next.