-----Original Message-----
-----Original Message-----
> Hi Kazu,
>
> On 03/12/2021 12:21 PM, HAGIO KAZUHITO(萩尾 一仁) wrote:
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> >>>> --- a/diskdump.c
> >>>> +++ b/diskdump.c
> >>>> @@ -594,6 +594,9 @@ restart:
> >>>> else if (STRNEQ(header->utsname.machine, "mips")
&&
> >>>> machine_type_mismatch(file, "MIPS", NULL, 0))
> >>>> goto err;
> >>>> + else if (STRNEQ(header->utsname.machine, "mips64")
&&
> >>>> + machine_type_mismatch(file, "MIPS", NULL, 0))
> >>>> + goto err;
> >>> Why do you make MACHINE_TYPE the same as the MIPS one?
> >>> With this, doesn't a MIPS64 crash match a MIPS vmcore?
> >> The value of the machine type e_machine in mips32 or mips64 is MIPS, which
> >> corresponds to EM_MIPS.
> >> The definition in gdb-7.6/include/elf/common.h:110 is as follows:
> >> #define EM_MIPS 8 /* MIPS R3000 */
> >> But there is no related definition of EM_MIPS64 or other mips64, so both
> >> mips32 and mips64 should use EM_MIPS, and the corresponding e_machine is
> >> MIPS.
> >>
> >> If the MACHINE_TYPE of mips64 is defined as MIPS64, as follows:
> >> define MACHINE_TYPE "MIPS64"
> >>
> >> The following error will appear when running crash:
> >> WARNING: machine type mismatch:
> >> crash utility: MIPS64
> >> vmcore: MIPS
> > Then, is there any problem with this?
> > machine_type_mismatch(file, "MIPS64", NULL, 0))
> >
> > This can prevent a mips64 crash from trying to open a mips32 vmcore
> > and the reverse.
> Read the ELF header information of vmocre (whether it is mips32 or mips64),
> and the obtained machine type is MIPS, not MIPS64. In mips64, if you use
> machine_type_mismatch(file, "MIPS64", NULL, 0)), there will be a machine
> type
> mismatch. You can only use machine_type_mismatch(file, "MIPS", NULL, 0)),
> only then It can be successfully matched to the machine type.
Probably I misunderstand something, but then need to know it..
The machine_type_mismatch() doesn't use the ELF's EM_MIPS value.
Why do we need to match crash's MACHINE_TYPE with ELF's EM_MIPS?
int
machine_type(char *type)
{
return STREQ(MACHINE_TYPE, type);
}
int
machine_type_mismatch(char *file, char *e_machine, char *alt, ulong query)
{
if (machine_type(e_machine) || machine_type(alt))
return FALSE;
if (query == KDUMP_LOCAL) /* already printed by NETDUMP_LOCAL */
return TRUE;
error(WARNING, "machine type mismatch:\n");
fprintf(fp, " crash utility: %s\n", MACHINE_TYPE);
fprintf(fp, " %s: %s%s%s\n\n", file, e_machine,
alt ? " or " : "", alt ? alt : "");
return TRUE;
}
Without the following hunk, EM_MIPS has been used only for ELF32 in symbols.c.
--- a/symbols.c
+++ b/symbols.c
@@ -3636,6 +3636,11 @@ is_kernel(char *file)
goto bailout;
break;
+ case EM_MIPS:
+ if (machine_type_mismatch(file, "MIPS", NULL, 0))
+ goto bailout;
+ break;
+
default:
if (machine_type_mismatch(file, "(unknown)", NULL, 0))
goto bailout;
@@ -3890,6 +3895,11 @@ is_shared_object(char *file)
if (machine_type("SPARC64"))
return TRUE;
break;
+
+ case EM_MIPS:
+ if (machine_type("MIPS"))
+ return TRUE;
+ break;
}
So I thought that meybe we can also change these ELF64 cases to "MIPS64"
with defining MACHINE_TYPE as "MIPS64".
This is wrong? e.g. mips32 also can use an ELF64 kernel/module binary?
If there is such a case, maybe we can also use these?:
machine_type_mismatch(file, "MIPS", "MIPS64", 0)
machine_type("MIPS") || machine_type("MIPS64")
I'm thinking that as we define the values/functions for mips64 separately
from mips32, it would be reasonable to make crash's MACHINE_TYPE different
from mips32 as well, and we can remove some unusual ifdefs.
Thanks,
Kazu
> >
> >> # readelf -h vmcore
> >> ...
> >> Type: CORE (Core file)
> >> Machine: MIPS R3000
> >> ...
> >>
> >> Therefore, the MACHINE_TYPE of mips32 and mips64 both define MIPS.
> >>
> >> Thanks,
> >> Youling
--
Crash-utility mailing list
Crash-utility(a)redhat.com
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/crash-utility