On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 01:44:47PM -0400, Vivek Goyal wrote: > On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 10:53:05PM +0530, K.Prasad wrote: > > > > slimdump: Capture slimdump for fatal MCE generated crashes > > > > System crashes resulting from fatal hardware errors (such as MCE) don't need > > all the contents from crashing-kernel's memory. Generate a new 'slimdump' that > > retains only essential information while discarding the old memory. > > > > Why to enforce zeroing out of rest of the vmcore data in kernel. Why not > leave it to user space. > Our concern comes from the fact that it is unsafe for the OS to read any part of the corrupt memory region, so the kernel does not have to make that address space available for read/write. > As Andi said, you anyway will require disabling MCE temporarily in second > kernel. So that should allay the concern that we might run into second > MCE while trying to read the vmcore. > The processor manuals don't define the behaviour for a read operation upon a corrupt memory location. So the consequences for a read after disabling MCE is unknown (as I've mentioned here: https://lkml.org/lkml/2011/5/27/258). > A user might want to extract just the dmesg buffers also after MCE from > vmcore. > > What I am saying is that this sounds more like a policy. Don't enforce > it in kernel. Probably give user MCE registers as part of ELF note of > vmcore. Now leave it up to user what data he wants to extract from vmcore. > Just the MCE registers or something more then that. I'm unsure, at the moment, as to what it actually entails to extract dmesg buffers from the old kernel's memory; but given that there exists a corrupt memory region with unknown consequences for read operations upon it, I doubt if it is a safe idea to allow user-space application to navigate through the kernel data-structures to extract the dmesg. Alternatively, we might leave MCE enabled for the kdump kernel and modify the user-space application to turn resilient to SIGBUS signal. So if it reads a corrupt memory region, it will receive a signal from do_machine_check() upon which it can skip that particular address and/or fill it with zeroes (or somesuch). We haven't gone through the details....but just some loud thinking Thanks, K.Prasad