> From: crash-utility-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [crash-utility-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] on behalf of Dave Anderson [anderson@xxxxxxxxxx] > Sent: Monday, October 31, 2016 4:47 PM > It's always appreciated when bug reports come with proposed fixes, and > and your patch certainly looks reasonable to me. But the gcore extension > module is maintained by Daisuke Hatayama, and any changes will require > his ACK and a subsequent package update. Daisuke is a member of this > mailing list, but just to make sure he sees this, I've cc'd him directly > as well. Oh, absolutely -- I expected that. The message started as a plea for help which I didn't want to bother him directly with (but I knew he monitored this list). Then as I did my due diligence, it morphed into a solution. I should have switched gears and sent it directly to him at that point (and thank you for doing so) but I guess I was already on track to post it to the list. Thanks for the feedback. ----- Original Message ----- > I am trying to use gcore to generate a user application core from a kernel > dump file. I compiled the latest crash-7.1.6 and crash-gcore-command-1.3.1 > from https://people.redhat.com/anderson/. I installed a debug kernel > (vmlinux-4.1.34-33-debug.gz from openSUSE Leap 42.1) and did a controlled > (sysrq-trigger) crash. When I attempt to use gcore on the process in > question, after reading > <https://people.redhat.com/anderson/extensions/gcore_help_gcore.html>, I get > a segmentation fault: > > eje-code:~ # crash /boot/vmlinux-4.1.34-33-debug.gz > /var/crash/2016-10-31-17\:01//vmcore > > crash 7.1.6 > Copyright (C) 2002-2016 Red Hat, Inc. > Copyright (C) 2004, 2005, 2006, 2010 IBM Corporation > Copyright (C) 1999-2006 Hewlett-Packard Co > Copyright (C) 2005, 2006, 2011, 2012 Fujitsu Limited > Copyright (C) 2006, 2007 VA Linux Systems Japan K.K. > Copyright (C) 2005, 2011 NEC Corporation > Copyright (C) 1999, 2002, 2007 Silicon Graphics, Inc. > Copyright (C) 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 Mission Critical Linux, Inc. > This program is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License, > and you are welcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it under > certain conditions. Enter "help copying" to see the conditions. > This program has absolutely no warranty. Enter "help warranty" for details. > > GNU gdb (GDB) 7.6 > Copyright (C) 2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. > License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html> > This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. > There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law. Type "show copying" > and "show warranty" for details. > This GDB was configured as "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"... > > KERNEL: /boot/vmlinux-4.1.34-33-debug.gz > DUMPFILE: /var/crash/2016-10-31-17:01//vmcore > CPUS: 4 > DATE: Mon Oct 31 13:01:36 2016 > UPTIME: 02:12:08 > LOAD AVERAGE: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00 > TASKS: 204 > NODENAME: eje-code > RELEASE: 4.1.34-33-debug > VERSION: #1 SMP Thu Oct 20 08:03:29 UTC 2016 (fe18aba) > MACHINE: x86_64 (2094 Mhz) > MEMORY: 4 GB > PANIC: "sysrq: SysRq : Trigger a crash" > PID: 3260 > COMMAND: "crashtest" > TASK: ffff88011a020550 [THREAD_INFO: ffff8800bcd98000] > CPU: 3 > STATE: TASK_RUNNING (SYSRQ) > > crash> extend /usr/lib64/crash/extensions/gcore.so > /usr/lib64/crash/extensions/gcore.so: shared object loaded > crash> gcore -f 0 -v 7 3260 > gcore: Opening file core.3260.crashtest ... > gcore: done. > gcore: Writing ELF header ... > gcore: done. > gcore: Retrieving and writing note information ... > Segmentation fault > > Sixty-four bytes of core get written before the segmentation fault (I'm > guessing that's the ELF header). I can gcore some other processes (although > I get many "gcore: WARNING: page fault at 7ffca6a5d000" errors). I tried > this both with an echo from bash from the command line and a custom test > program that just does a controlled crash in a function nested four deep. > The segmentation fault sometimes causes a hang (which I can end with > Ctrl-C). > > It does the same thing if I specify the task address (in this case, "gcore > ffff88011a020550"). I've tried it without any options, too, and with > different combinations. > > I obtained a core dump of gcore and this is my debugging session: > > eje-code:~ # gdb /usr/lib64/crash/extensions/gcore.so > /var/core/core.eje-code-crash-3074 > GNU gdb (GDB; openSUSE Leap 42.1) 7.11.1 > Copyright (C) 2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc. > License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html> > This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. > There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law. Type "show copying" > and "show warranty" for details. > This GDB was configured as "x86_64-suse-linux". > Type "show configuration" for configuration details. > For bug reporting instructions, please see: > <http://bugs.opensuse.org/>. > Find the GDB manual and other documentation resources online at: > <http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/documentation/>. > For help, type "help". > Type "apropos word" to search for commands related to "word"... > Reading symbols from /usr/lib64/crash/extensions/gcore.so...done. > > warning: core file may not match specified executable file. [Not sure why > ...] > [New LWP 3074] > [Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled] > Using host libthread_db library "/lib64/libthread_db.so.1". > Core was generated by `crash /boot/vmlinux-4.1.34-33-debug.gz > /var/crash/2016-10-31-17:01//vmcore'. > Program terminated with signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. > #0 0x0000000000000000 in ?? () > Missing separate debuginfos, use: zypper install > glibc-debuginfo-2.19-17.4.x86_64 liblzma5-debuginfo-5.0.5-3.5.x86_64 > libncurses5-debuginfo-5.9-53.4.x86_64 libz1-debuginfo-1.2.8-6.4.x86_64 > (gdb) bt > #0 0x0000000000000000 in ?? () > #1 0x00007f1235eed4e4 in restore_regs_syscall_context (target=0x6939df8, > regs=0xf6f280, active_regs=0x7ffefa968880) > at libgcore/gcore_x86.c:1656 > #2 0x00007f1235eedcb6 in genregs_get (target=0x6939df8, regset=0x7f12360f6460 > <x86_64_regsets>, size=216, > buf=0xf6f280) at libgcore/gcore_x86.c:1795 > #3 0x00007f1235ee6438 in fill_write_thread_core_info (fp=0x59efb10, > tc=0x6939df8, dump_tc=0x6939df8, info=0xf6ee80, > view=0x7f12360f5d80 <x86_64_regset_view>, offset=0x7ffefa968ab0, > total=0xf6ee98) at libgcore/gcore_coredump.c:469 > #4 0x00007f1235ee682c in fill_write_note_info (fp=0x59efb10, info=0xf6ee80, > phnum=20, offset=0x7ffefa968ab0) > at libgcore/gcore_coredump.c:566 > #5 0x00007f1235ee4dd1 in gcore_coredump () at libgcore/gcore_coredump.c:112 > #6 0x00007f1235eeeb8b in do_gcore (arg=0x0) at gcore.c:317 > #7 0x00007f1235eee926 in cmd_gcore () at gcore.c:253 > #8 0x0000000000472b8c in ?? () > #9 0x0000000000000000 in ?? () > (gdb) bt > #0 0x0000000000000000 in ?? () > #1 0x00007f1235eed4e4 in restore_regs_syscall_context (target=0x6939df8, > regs=0xf6f280, active_regs=0x7ffefa968880) > at libgcore/gcore_x86.c:1656 > #2 0x00007f1235eedcb6 in genregs_get (target=0x6939df8, regset=0x7f12360f6460 > <x86_64_regsets>, size=216, > buf=0xf6f280) at libgcore/gcore_x86.c:1795 > #3 0x00007f1235ee6438 in fill_write_thread_core_info (fp=0x59efb10, > tc=0x6939df8, dump_tc=0x6939df8, info=0xf6ee80, > view=0x7f12360f5d80 <x86_64_regset_view>, offset=0x7ffefa968ab0, > total=0xf6ee98) at libgcore/gcore_coredump.c:469 > #4 0x00007f1235ee682c in fill_write_note_info (fp=0x59efb10, info=0xf6ee80, > phnum=20, offset=0x7ffefa968ab0) > at libgcore/gcore_coredump.c:566 > #5 0x00007f1235ee4dd1 in gcore_coredump () at libgcore/gcore_coredump.c:112 > #6 0x00007f1235eeeb8b in do_gcore (arg=0x0) at gcore.c:317 > #7 0x00007f1235eee926 in cmd_gcore () at gcore.c:253 > #8 0x0000000000472b8c in ?? () > #9 0x0000000000000000 in ?? () > (gdb) up > #1 0x00007f1235eed4e4 in restore_regs_syscall_context (target=0x6939df8, > regs=0xf6f280, active_regs=0x7ffefa968880) > at libgcore/gcore_x86.c:1656 > 1656 regs->sp = gxt->get_old_rsp(target->processor); > (gdb) print gxt > $1 = (struct gcore_x86_table *) 0x215ea0 <gcore_x86_table> > (gdb) print *target > $2 = {task = 18446612137045525840, thread_info = 18446612135482589184, pid = > 3260, comm = "crashtest\000@XI\215u H", > processor = 3, ptask = 18446612137046565648, mm_struct = > 18446612137048351232, tc_next = 0x0} > (gdb) print *regs > $3 = {r15 = 0, r14 = 2, r13 = 2, r12 = 34324496, bp = 2, bx = 4196186, r11 = > 582, r10 = 140728806957456, > r9 = 140048302249728, r8 = 34324720, ax = 18446744073709551578, cx = > 140048297135408, dx = 2, si = 140048302292992, > di = 3, orig_ax = 1, ip = 140048297135408, cs = 51, flags = 582, sp = > 140728806957864, ss = 43, fs_base = 0, > gs_base = 0, ds = 0, es = 0, fs = 0, gs = 0} > (gdb) print *gxt > $4 = {get_old_rsp = 0x0, get_thread_struct_fpu = 0x0, > get_thread_struct_fpu_size = 0x0, is_special_syscall = 0x0, > is_special_ia32_syscall = 0x0, tsk_used_math = 0x0} > ============================= > > So not only is get_old_rsp zero, all the fields in gxt are zero. > > Looks like a kernel support issue. This field is filled in by > gcore_x86_table_register_get_old_rsp() which looks up four symbols in > various forms, none of which exist in my kernel: > > eje-code:~ # fgrep old_rsp /proc/kallsyms > eje-code:~ # fgrep cpu_pda /proc/kallsyms > eje-code:~ # > > old_rsp did exist in openSUSE 12.1 and 13.1 (3.11.10-29 for the latter). > > According to http://lists.openwall.net/linux-kernel/2015/03/17/766 old_rsp > was renamed rsp_scratch. I don't know if the semantics changed -- it doesn't > appear so -- but I added code to accept this symbol as an alternative and > the core dump generates and works (I can see a correct backtrace). I do not > warrant the work though. :-) Someone may want to review my work, and check > the other functions and see if they are supposed to be zero. Since they > haven't been invoked I don't know if they are supposed to be non-zero or > not. > > Here is the diff: > > --- gcore_x86.c~ 2014-11-06 04:58:47.000000000 -0500 > +++ gcore_x86.c 2016-10-31 16:01:00.989025841 -0400 > @@ -1351,6 +1351,26 @@ static ulong gcore_x86_64_get_old_rsp(in > } > > /** > + * gcore_x86_64_get_rsp_scratch() - get rsp at per-cpu area > + * > + * @cpu target CPU's CPU id > + * > + * Given a CPU id, returns a RSP value saved at per-cpu area for the > + * CPU whose id is the given CPU id. > + */ > +static ulong gcore_x86_64_get_rsp_scratch(int cpu) > +{ > + ulong old_rsp; > + > + readmem(symbol_value("rsp_scratch") + kt->__per_cpu_offset[cpu], > + KVADDR, &old_rsp, sizeof(old_rsp), > + "gcore_x86_64_get_rsp_scratch: rsp_scratch", > + gcore_verbose_error_handle()); > + > + return old_rsp; > +} > + > +/** > * gcore_x86_64_get_per_cpu__old_rsp() - get rsp at per-cpu area > * > * @cpu target CPU's CPU id > @@ -1834,6 +1854,11 @@ static void gcore_x86_table_register_get > > else if (symbol_exists("_cpu_pda")) > gxt->get_old_rsp = gcore_x86_64_get_cpu__pda_oldrsp; > + > + else if (symbol_exists("rsp_scratch")) > + gxt->get_old_rsp = gcore_x86_64_get_rsp_scratch; > + > + if (!gxt->get_old_rsp) printf ("Warning: NO gxt->get_old_rsp\n"); > } > #endif > > > > -- > Crash-utility mailing list > Crash-utility@xxxxxxxxxx > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/crash-utility -- Crash-utility mailing list Crash-utility@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/crash-utility -- Crash-utility mailing list Crash-utility@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/crash-utility