On 11/12/2014 08:26 AM, Petr Tesarik wrote:
> On Wed, 12 Nov 2014 08:18:04 -0500
> Christopher Covington <cov(a)codeaurora.org> wrote:
>
>> On 11/12/2014 03:05 AM, Petr Tesarik wrote:
>>> On Tue, 11 Nov 2014 12:27:44 -0500
>>> Christopher Covington <cov(a)codeaurora.org> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 11/11/2014 06:22 AM, Laszlo Ersek wrote:
>>>>> (Note: I'm not subscribed to either qemu-devel or the kexec list;
please
>>>>> keep me CC'd.)
>>>>>
>>>>> QEMU is able to dump the guest's memory in KDUMP format
(kdump-zlib,
>>>>> kdump-lzo, kdump-snappy) with the "dump-guest-memory" QMP
command.
>>>>>
>>>>> The resultant vmcore is usually analyzed with the "crash"
utility.
>>>>>
>>>>> The original tool producing such files is kdump. Unlike the
procedure
>>>>> performed by QEMU, kdump runs from *within* the guest (under a
kexec'd
>>>>> kdump kernel), and has more information about the original guest
kernel
>>>>> state (which is being dumped) than QEMU. To QEMU, the guest kernel
state
>>>>> is opaque.
>>>>>
>>>>> For this reason, the kdump preparation logic in QEMU hardcodes a
number
>>>>> of fields in the kdump header. The direct issue is the
"phys_base"
>>>>> field. Refer to dump.c, functions create_header32(),
create_header64(),
>>>>> and "include/sysemu/dump.h", macro PHYS_BASE (with the
replacement text
>>>>> "0").
>>>>>
>>>>>
http://git.qemu.org/?p=qemu.git;a=blob;f=dump.c;h=9c7dad8f865af3b778589dd...
>>>>>
>>>>>
http://git.qemu.org/?p=qemu.git;a=blob;f=include/sysemu/dump.h;h=7e4ec5c7...
>>>>>
>>>>> This works in most cases, because the guest Linux kernel indeed tends
to
>>>>> be loaded at guest-phys address 0. However, when the guest Linux
kernel
>>>>> is booted on top of OVMF (which has a somewhat unusual UEFI memory
map),
>>>>> then the guest Linux kernel is loaded at 16MB, thereby getting out
of
>>>>> sync with the phys_base=0 setting visible in the KDUMP header.
>>>>>
>>>>> This trips up the "crash" utility.
>>>>>
>>>>> Dave worked around the issue in "crash" for ELF format
dumps -- "crash"
>>>>> can identify QEMU as the originator of the vmcore by finding the
QEMU
>>>>> notes in the ELF vmcore. If those are present, then "crash"
employs a
>>>>> heuristic, probing for a phys_base up to 32MB, in 1MB steps.
>>>>
>>>> What advantages does KDUMP have over ELF?
>>>
>>> It's smaller (data is compressed), and it contains a header with some
>>> useful information (e.g. the crashed kernel's version and release).
>>
>> What if the ELF dumper used SHF_COMPRESSED or could dump an ELF.xz?
>
> Not the same thing. With KDUMP, each page is compressed separately, so
> if a utility like crash needs a page from the middle, it can find it
> and unpack it immediately. If we had an ELF.xz, then the whole file
> must be unpacked before it can be used. And unpacking a few terabytes
> takes ... a while. ;-)
Understood on the ELF.xz approach, but why couldn't each page (or maybe a
configurable size) be a SHF_COMPRESSED section?
Perhaps it could, technically -- it's just not how Qiao Nuohan
implemented the feature. I didn't research the background for this.
Thanks
Laszlo