On 24 February 2010 13:45, Dave Anderson <anderson@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Right -- you should see the user-space return-address values starting > from the point shown in the ESP (386) or RSP (x86_64) value shown > in the kernel entry-point exception frame. Although the first few > frames will typically be in a user library instead of the binary. > > Dave Here is the bt: #0 [f672de20] schedule at c0616008 #1 [f672de98] schedule_timeout at c061675c #2 [f672debc] do_futex at c0438ea7 #3 [f672df80] sys_futex at c0439942 #4 [f672dfb8] system_call at c0404f10 EAX: 000000f0 EBX: 0a50db84 ECX: 00000000 EDX: 00000b73 DS: 007b ESI: bfd90dd8 ES: 007b EDI: 00000b73 SS: 007b ESP: bfd90dd0 EBP: bfd90e24 CS: 0073 EIP: 00f14402 ERR: 000000f0 EFLAGS: 00200206 I then do "rd -u bfd90dd0 16" and search for the addresses in the binary, but they're not found. Is ESP's value the one that I should be reading from? Gallus -- Crash-utility mailing list Crash-utility@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/crash-utility