| NOTE: ksymoops is useless on 2.6. Please use the Oops in its original format |
| (from dmesg, etc). Ignore any references in this or other docs to "decoding |
| the Oops" or "running it through ksymoops". If you post an Oops from 2.6 that |
| has been run through ksymoops, people will just tell you to repost it. |
| |
| Quick Summary |
| ------------- |
| |
| Find the Oops and send it to the maintainer of the kernel area that seems to be |
| involved with the problem. Don't worry too much about getting the wrong person. |
| If you are unsure send it to the person responsible for the code relevant to |
| what you were doing. If it occurs repeatably try and describe how to recreate |
| it. That's worth even more than the oops. |
| |
| If you are totally stumped as to whom to send the report, send it to |
| linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org. Thanks for your help in making Linux as |
| stable as humanly possible. |
| |
| Where is the Oops? |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| Normally the Oops text is read from the kernel buffers by klogd and |
| handed to syslogd which writes it to a syslog file, typically |
| /var/log/messages (depends on /etc/syslog.conf). Sometimes klogd dies, |
| in which case you can run dmesg > file to read the data from the kernel |
| buffers and save it. Or you can cat /proc/kmsg > file, however you |
| have to break in to stop the transfer, kmsg is a "never ending file". |
| If the machine has crashed so badly that you cannot enter commands or |
| the disk is not available then you have three options :- |
| |
| (1) Hand copy the text from the screen and type it in after the machine |
| has restarted. Messy but it is the only option if you have not |
| planned for a crash. Alternatively, you can take a picture of |
| the screen with a digital camera - not nice, but better than |
| nothing. If the messages scroll off the top of the console, you |
| may find that booting with a higher resolution (eg, vga=791) |
| will allow you to read more of the text. (Caveat: This needs vesafb, |
| so won't help for 'early' oopses) |
| |
| (2) Boot with a serial console (see Documentation/serial-console.txt), |
| run a null modem to a second machine and capture the output there |
| using your favourite communication program. Minicom works well. |
| |
| (3) Use Kdump (see Documentation/kdump/kdump.txt), |
| extract the kernel ring buffer from old memory with using dmesg |
| gdbmacro in Documentation/kdump/gdbmacros.txt. |
| |
| |
| Full Information |
| ---------------- |
| |
| NOTE: the message from Linus below applies to 2.4 kernel. I have preserved it |
| for historical reasons, and because some of the information in it still |
| applies. Especially, please ignore any references to ksymoops. |
| |
| From: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org> |
| |
| How to track down an Oops.. [originally a mail to linux-kernel] |
| |
| The main trick is having 5 years of experience with those pesky oops |
| messages ;-) |
| |
| Actually, there are things you can do that make this easier. I have two |
| separate approaches: |
| |
| gdb /usr/src/linux/vmlinux |
| gdb> disassemble <offending_function> |
| |
| That's the easy way to find the problem, at least if the bug-report is |
| well made (like this one was - run through ksymoops to get the |
| information of which function and the offset in the function that it |
| happened in). |
| |
| Oh, it helps if the report happens on a kernel that is compiled with the |
| same compiler and similar setups. |
| |
| The other thing to do is disassemble the "Code:" part of the bug report: |
| ksymoops will do this too with the correct tools, but if you don't have |
| the tools you can just do a silly program: |
| |
| char str[] = "\xXX\xXX\xXX..."; |
| main(){} |
| |
| and compile it with gcc -g and then do "disassemble str" (where the "XX" |
| stuff are the values reported by the Oops - you can just cut-and-paste |
| and do a replace of spaces to "\x" - that's what I do, as I'm too lazy |
| to write a program to automate this all). |
| |
| Alternatively, you can use the shell script in scripts/decodecode. |
| Its usage is: decodecode < oops.txt |
| |
| The hex bytes that follow "Code:" may (in some architectures) have a series |
| of bytes that precede the current instruction pointer as well as bytes at and |
| following the current instruction pointer. In some cases, one instruction |
| byte or word is surrounded by <> or (), as in "<86>" or "(f00d)". These |
| <> or () markings indicate the current instruction pointer. Example from |
| i386, split into multiple lines for readability: |
| |
| Code: f9 0f 8d f9 00 00 00 8d 42 0c e8 dd 26 11 c7 a1 60 ea 2b f9 8b 50 08 a1 |
| 64 ea 2b f9 8d 34 82 8b 1e 85 db 74 6d 8b 15 60 ea 2b f9 <8b> 43 04 39 42 54 |
| 7e 04 40 89 42 54 8b 43 04 3b 05 00 f6 52 c0 |
| |
| Finally, if you want to see where the code comes from, you can do |
| |
| cd /usr/src/linux |
| make fs/buffer.s # or whatever file the bug happened in |
| |
| and then you get a better idea of what happens than with the gdb |
| disassembly. |
| |
| Now, the trick is just then to combine all the data you have: the C |
| sources (and general knowledge of what it _should_ do), the assembly |
| listing and the code disassembly (and additionally the register dump you |
| also get from the "oops" message - that can be useful to see _what_ the |
| corrupted pointers were, and when you have the assembler listing you can |
| also match the other registers to whatever C expressions they were used |
| for). |
| |
| Essentially, you just look at what doesn't match (in this case it was the |
| "Code" disassembly that didn't match with what the compiler generated). |
| Then you need to find out _why_ they don't match. Often it's simple - you |
| see that the code uses a NULL pointer and then you look at the code and |
| wonder how the NULL pointer got there, and if it's a valid thing to do |
| you just check against it.. |
| |
| Now, if somebody gets the idea that this is time-consuming and requires |
| some small amount of concentration, you're right. Which is why I will |
| mostly just ignore any panic reports that don't have the symbol table |
| info etc looked up: it simply gets too hard to look it up (I have some |
| programs to search for specific patterns in the kernel code segment, and |
| sometimes I have been able to look up those kinds of panics too, but |
| that really requires pretty good knowledge of the kernel just to be able |
| to pick out the right sequences etc..) |
| |
| _Sometimes_ it happens that I just see the disassembled code sequence |
| from the panic, and I know immediately where it's coming from. That's when |
| I get worried that I've been doing this for too long ;-) |
| |
| Linus |
| |
| |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Notes on Oops tracing with klogd: |
| |
| In order to help Linus and the other kernel developers there has been |
| substantial support incorporated into klogd for processing protection |
| faults. In order to have full support for address resolution at least |
| version 1.3-pl3 of the sysklogd package should be used. |
| |
| When a protection fault occurs the klogd daemon automatically |
| translates important addresses in the kernel log messages to their |
| symbolic equivalents. This translated kernel message is then |
| forwarded through whatever reporting mechanism klogd is using. The |
| protection fault message can be simply cut out of the message files |
| and forwarded to the kernel developers. |
| |
| Two types of address resolution are performed by klogd. The first is |
| static translation and the second is dynamic translation. Static |
| translation uses the System.map file in much the same manner that |
| ksymoops does. In order to do static translation the klogd daemon |
| must be able to find a system map file at daemon initialization time. |
| See the klogd man page for information on how klogd searches for map |
| files. |
| |
| Dynamic address translation is important when kernel loadable modules |
| are being used. Since memory for kernel modules is allocated from the |
| kernel's dynamic memory pools there are no fixed locations for either |
| the start of the module or for functions and symbols in the module. |
| |
| The kernel supports system calls which allow a program to determine |
| which modules are loaded and their location in memory. Using these |
| system calls the klogd daemon builds a symbol table which can be used |
| to debug a protection fault which occurs in a loadable kernel module. |
| |
| At the very minimum klogd will provide the name of the module which |
| generated the protection fault. There may be additional symbolic |
| information available if the developer of the loadable module chose to |
| export symbol information from the module. |
| |
| Since the kernel module environment can be dynamic there must be a |
| mechanism for notifying the klogd daemon when a change in module |
| environment occurs. There are command line options available which |
| allow klogd to signal the currently executing daemon that symbol |
| information should be refreshed. See the klogd manual page for more |
| information. |
| |
| A patch is included with the sysklogd distribution which modifies the |
| modules-2.0.0 package to automatically signal klogd whenever a module |
| is loaded or unloaded. Applying this patch provides essentially |
| seamless support for debugging protection faults which occur with |
| kernel loadable modules. |
| |
| The following is an example of a protection fault in a loadable module |
| processed by klogd: |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address f15e97cc |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: current->tss.cr3 = 0062d000, %cr3 = 0062d000 |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: *pde = 00000000 |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: Oops: 0002 |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: CPU: 0 |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: EIP: 0010:[oops:_oops+16/3868] |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: EFLAGS: 00010212 |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: eax: 315e97cc ebx: 003a6f80 ecx: 001be77b edx: 00237c0c |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: esi: 00000000 edi: bffffdb3 ebp: 00589f90 esp: 00589f8c |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: ds: 0018 es: 0018 fs: 002b gs: 002b ss: 0018 |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: Process oops_test (pid: 3374, process nr: 21, stackpage=00589000) |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: Stack: 315e97cc 00589f98 0100b0b4 bffffed4 0012e38e 00240c64 003a6f80 00000001 |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: 00000000 00237810 bfffff00 0010a7fa 00000003 00000001 00000000 bfffff00 |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: bffffdb3 bffffed4 ffffffda 0000002b 0007002b 0000002b 0000002b 00000036 |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: Call Trace: [oops:_oops_ioctl+48/80] [_sys_ioctl+254/272] [_system_call+82/128] |
| Aug 29 09:51:01 blizard kernel: Code: c7 00 05 00 00 00 eb 08 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 89 ec 5d c3 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Dr. G.W. Wettstein Oncology Research Div. Computing Facility |
| Roger Maris Cancer Center INTERNET: greg@wind.rmcc.com |
| 820 4th St. N. |
| Fargo, ND 58122 |
| Phone: 701-234-7556 |
| |
| |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Tainted kernels: |
| |
| Some oops reports contain the string 'Tainted: ' after the program |
| counter. This indicates that the kernel has been tainted by some |
| mechanism. The string is followed by a series of position-sensitive |
| characters, each representing a particular tainted value. |
| |
| 1: 'G' if all modules loaded have a GPL or compatible license, 'P' if |
| any proprietary module has been loaded. Modules without a |
| MODULE_LICENSE or with a MODULE_LICENSE that is not recognised by |
| insmod as GPL compatible are assumed to be proprietary. |
| |
| 2: 'F' if any module was force loaded by "insmod -f", ' ' if all |
| modules were loaded normally. |
| |
| 3: 'S' if the oops occurred on an SMP kernel running on hardware that |
| hasn't been certified as safe to run multiprocessor. |
| Currently this occurs only on various Athlons that are not |
| SMP capable. |
| |
| 4: 'R' if a module was force unloaded by "rmmod -f", ' ' if all |
| modules were unloaded normally. |
| |
| 5: 'M' if any processor has reported a Machine Check Exception, |
| ' ' if no Machine Check Exceptions have occurred. |
| |
| 6: 'B' if a page-release function has found a bad page reference or |
| some unexpected page flags. |
| |
| 7: 'U' if a user or user application specifically requested that the |
| Tainted flag be set, ' ' otherwise. |
| |
| The primary reason for the 'Tainted: ' string is to tell kernel |
| debuggers if this is a clean kernel or if anything unusual has |
| occurred. Tainting is permanent: even if an offending module is |
| unloaded, the tainted value remains to indicate that the kernel is not |
| trustworthy. |