Could the fact that my kernel's page offset is different from the defaut be the cause of the address being beyond the maximum? (from the kernel config diff I sent before, changing the VMSPLIT parameter, which gives the kernel 3GB of memory, causes the PAGE_OFFSET value to shift) dif between default ubuntu and my kernel config: < CONFIG_PAGE_OFFSET=0xC0000000 --- > # CONFIG_VMSPLIT_3G is not set > # CONFIG_VMSPLIT_3G_OPT is not set > # CONFIG_VMSPLIT_2G is not set > CONFIG_VMSPLIT_1G=y > CONFIG_PAGE_OFFSET=0x40000000 I don't know much about these memory internals, but just pointing out a spot in my config that is different from usual. I will try testing with the new patch and report back. -Kevin ________________________________________ From: Ken'ichi Ohmichi [oomichi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, September 25, 2008 9:59 PM To: Worth, Kevin Cc: Masaki Tachibana; kexec-ml Subject: Re: Problems writing ELF dumps with makedumpfile 1.2.9 Hi Kevin, Thank you for testing. Worth, Kevin wrote: > Below is the additional information you asked for (run with the patch you attached). > It appears the binutils readelf has problems with reading the vmcore file > (got error message "readelf: Error: Could not locate '/proc/vmcore'. > System error message: Value too large for defined data type"). > I installed elfutils and used eu-readelf. > That appears to work correctly. > > readmem: Can't seek the dump memory(/proc/vmcore). (Invalid argument) offset:b2800000ae7a02d8, addr:2c00000000 > create_2nd_bitmap: Can't exclude pages filled with zerocreate_2nd_bitmap: for creating an ELF dumpfile. > LOAD (0) > phys_start : 0 > phys_end : a0000 > virt_start : c0000000 > virt_end : c00a0000 > LOAD (1) > phys_start : 100000 > phys_end : 1000000 > virt_start : c0100000 > virt_end : c1000000 > LOAD (2) > phys_start : 5000000 > phys_end : 38000000 > virt_start : c5000000 > virt_end : f8000000 > LOAD (3) > phys_start : 38000000 > phys_end : bf790000 > virt_start : ffffffffffffffff > virt_end : 8778ffff > LOAD (4) > phys_start : 100000000 > phys_end : 140000000 > virt_start : ffffffffffffffff > virt_end : 3fffffff > Linux kdump > > max_mapnr : 140000 > > [snip] > > Program Headers: > Type Offset VirtAddr PhysAddr FileSiz MemSiz Flg Align > NOTE 0x000190 0x0000000000000000 0x0000000000000000 0x000148 0x000148 0x0 > LOAD 0x0002d8 0x00000000c0000000 0x0000000000000000 0x0a0000 0x0a0000 RWE 0x0 > LOAD 0x0a02d8 0x00000000c0100000 0x0000000000100000 0xf00000 0xf00000 RWE 0x0 > LOAD 0xfa02d8 0x00000000c5000000 0x0000000005000000 0x33000000 0x33000000 RWE 0x0 > LOAD 0x33fa02d8 0xffffffffffffffff 0x0000000038000000 0x87790000 0x87790000 RWE 0x0 > LOAD 0xbb7302d8 0xffffffffffffffff 0x0000000100000000 0x40000000 0x40000000 RWE 0x0 According to the above log, problematic physical address is 0x2c00000000, and this address is larger than the maximum physical address 0x140000000. So.. now I cannot guess the cause why it happens. In exclude_zero_pages(), the physical address is calculated by adding page_size like the following: int exclude_zero_pages(void) { ... for (pfn = paddr = 0; pfn < info->max_mapnr; pfn++, paddr += info->page_size) { print_progress(PROGRESS_ZERO_PAGES, pfn, info->max_mapnr); if (!is_in_segs(paddr)) continue; if (!is_dumpable(&bitmap2, pfn)) continue; if (!readmem(PADDR, paddr, buf, info->page_size)) return FALSE; if (is_zero_page(buf, info->page_size)) { clear_bit_on_2nd_bitmap(pfn); pfn_zero++; } } info->max_mapnr is 0x140000, so the physical address(paddr) must be smaller than 0x140000000 (0x140000 * 0x1000(page_size)). I'd like to know the detail, so could you please test again ? Some patches which we created recently are merged to one patch (v1.3.0-rc01.patch), and it contains new error messages for debugging this problem. Please download the patch from below URL and try it. https://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php?func=detail&aid=2129657&group_id=178938&atid=887141 or https://sourceforge.net/projects/makedumpfile/ -> [Tracker] -> [Patches] -> v1.3.0-rc01 Thanks Ken'ichi Ohmichi