Hi,
We ported it to crash as a loadable extension, but only did the i386
stuff.
If there's enough interest we could see about liberating our internal
code.
Cool.
I also have such crash extention module works only on x86-64...
and tested only with 2.6.10 and 2.6.20 .
# crash -s vmlinux-2.6.20-1.2320.fc5 /mnt/fc5/var/crash/2008-01-28-18
\:17/vmcore
:
crash> extend elfcoredump.so
elfcoredump.so: shared object loaded
crash> elfdump 1
elfdump: write elfcore.1 done...
crash>
# gdb /sbin/init elfcore.1
:
To enable dump shmem, add -s option .
But unfortunately , the module is coredump_filter unaware.
and has a lots TBD code .
BTW, Oda-san mentioned page swapout case on another thread ,
in that case , I decided simply seek to next page (same as ZERO page case).
sigh... i know its incorrect.
I think this module contains incomplete functionality , but
should be maintained in crash community .
Castor, how about merge mine and your i386 module ?
Thanks.
Seigo Iguchi.
From: "Castor Fu" <Castor.Fu(a)3PAR.com>
Subject: RE: [Crash-utility] user-space enhancements
Date: Thu, 4 Dec 2008 14:06:29 -0800
> There was a group at IBM (Stefan Schlosser <sschloss(a)de.ibm.com>)
> a few years ago which set up stuff to generate
> a elf corefile for a user space process for lcrash.
>
We ported it to crash as a loadable extension, but only did the i386
stuff.
If there's enough interest we could see about liberating our internal
code.
>
> -castor
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: crash-utility-bounces(a)redhat.com
> [mailto:crash-utility-bounces@redhat.com] On Behalf Of Bradshaw, James
> Sent: Thursday, December 04, 2008 12:58 PM
> To: Discussion list for crash utility usage, maintenance and development
> Subject: RE: [Crash-utility] user-space enhancements
>
>
> Right. To be able to examine user space, you'd have to build an elf core
>
> file by processing the desired task structure in the kdump file, find
> all
> the user pages, etc.--essentially what elf_core_dump() does in a running
>
> kernel. Then you could use gdb offline or the embedded gdb.
>
> I understand your desire not to burden crash with user space stuff,
> although the extensions facility seems to provide a mechanism for
> cleanly
> excluding such functionality from the standard configuration. Just a
> thought.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: crash-utility-bounces(a)redhat.com
> [mailto:crash-utility-bounces@redhat.com] On Behalf Of Dave Anderson
> Sent: Thursday, December 04, 2008 3:25 PM
> To: Discussion list for crash utility usage, maintenance and development
> Subject: Re: [Crash-utility] user-space enhancements
>
>
> ----- "James Bradshaw" <jbradsha(a)enterasys.com> wrote:
>
> > One of the items in the bug list is the following:
> >
> > DESCRIPTION:
> > User space enhancements:
> > - show user space stack backtrace, if present in the dump file,
> > - ability to link user space namelist (debug object files),
> >
> > RESOLUTION STATUS: TBD
> >
> > Is anyone currently working on this?
>
> The items in the TODO list, with the exception of the first
> one about the "search" command, are all essentially "wish-list"
> items. They were originally requested to be put there by IBM
> several years ago when the
http://people.redhat.com/anderson
> site was instantiated as the "upstream" source of the crash
> utility.
>
> The only item that I'm aware of that somebody is actually looking
> into is the one regarding "local variables", where I believe the
> guy looking into it is part of the IBM LTC in India. I don't
> expect much to come out of it, though, because for one thing
> it presumes that the crash utility's backtrace frame information
> is etched in stone -- and with the exception of ia64 which has
> unwind information actually built into the kernel -- the backtrace
> is essentially a "best-guess" operation. So trying to pull local
> arguments (or function arguments for that matter) from a
> dubious source doesn't make a whole lot of sense.
>
> As far as a user-space backtrace, I still think the way to go
> is to work on creating a core dump file of the requested task,
> and then use gdb externally on that core file, completely outside
> of the crash utility. Trying to overload the crash utility with
> a bunch of user-space stuff is something I don't have a lot of
> interest in.
>
> Dave
>
>
>
>
>
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