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authorArjan van de Ven <arjan@linux.intel.com>2009-01-11 15:03:23 +0000
committerLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>2009-01-12 16:39:58 -0800
commitd32ad102c6d748b510fd89f1af4232eac1be8732 (patch)
treea4ce3739944046310efa0b190a320867ebe198f5
parent7df52316601bfe308e427e0882f3e801682d800b (diff)
downloadlinux-d32ad102c6d748b510fd89f1af4232eac1be8732.tar.bz2
script: improve markup_oops.pl to also decode oopses in modules
There has been some light flamewar on lkml about decoding oopses in modules (as part of the crashdump flamewar). Now this isn't rocket science, just the markup_oops.pl script cheaped out and didn't handle modules. But really; a flamewar all about that?? What happened to C++ in the kernel or reading files from inside the kernel? This patch adds module support to markup_oops.pl; it's not the most pretty perl but it works for my testcases... Signed-off-by: Arjan van de Ven <arjan@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
-rw-r--r--scripts/markup_oops.pl59
1 files changed, 50 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/scripts/markup_oops.pl b/scripts/markup_oops.pl
index 700a7a654a3f..d40449cafa84 100644
--- a/scripts/markup_oops.pl
+++ b/scripts/markup_oops.pl
@@ -1,5 +1,7 @@
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
+use File::Basename;
+
# Copyright 2008, Intel Corporation
#
# This file is part of the Linux kernel
@@ -13,23 +15,41 @@
my $vmlinux_name = $ARGV[0];
-
+if (!defined($vmlinux_name)) {
+ my $kerver = `uname -r`;
+ chomp($kerver);
+ $vmlinux_name = "/lib/modules/$kerver/build/vmlinux";
+ print "No vmlinux specified, assuming $vmlinux_name\n";
+}
+my $filename = $vmlinux_name;
#
# Step 1: Parse the oops to find the EIP value
#
my $target = "0";
+my $function;
+my $module = "";
+my $func_offset;
+my $vmaoffset = 0;
+
while (<STDIN>) {
- if ($_ =~ /EIP: 0060:\[\<([a-z0-9]+)\>\]/) {
+ my $line = $_;
+ if ($line =~ /EIP: 0060:\[\<([a-z0-9]+)\>\]/) {
$target = $1;
}
-}
+ if ($line =~ /EIP is at ([a-zA-Z0-9\_]+)\+(0x[0-9a-f]+)\/0x[a-f0-9]/) {
+ $function = $1;
+ $func_offset = $2;
+ }
-if ($target =~ /^f8/) {
- print "This script does not work on modules ... \n";
- exit;
+ # check if it's a module
+ if ($line =~ /EIP is at ([a-zA-Z0-9\_]+)\+(0x[0-9a-f]+)\/0x[a-f0-9]+\W\[([a-zA-Z0-9\_\-]+)\]/) {
+ $module = $3;
+ }
}
+my $decodestart = hex($target) - hex($func_offset);
+my $decodestop = $decodestart + 8192;
if ($target eq "0") {
print "No oops found!\n";
print "Usage: \n";
@@ -37,6 +57,29 @@ if ($target eq "0") {
exit;
}
+# if it's a module, we need to find the .ko file and calculate a load offset
+if ($module ne "") {
+ my $dir = dirname($filename);
+ $dir = $dir . "/";
+ my $mod = $module . ".ko";
+ my $modulefile = `find $dir -name $mod | head -1`;
+ chomp($modulefile);
+ $filename = $modulefile;
+ if ($filename eq "") {
+ print "Module .ko file for $module not found. Aborting\n";
+ exit;
+ }
+ # ok so we found the module, now we need to calculate the vma offset
+ open(FILE, "objdump -dS $filename |") || die "Cannot start objdump";
+ while (<FILE>) {
+ if ($_ =~ /^([0-9a-f]+) \<$function\>\:/) {
+ my $fu = $1;
+ $vmaoffset = hex($target) - hex($fu) - hex($func_offset);
+ }
+ }
+ close(FILE);
+}
+
my $counter = 0;
my $state = 0;
my $center = 0;
@@ -59,9 +102,7 @@ sub InRange {
# first, parse the input into the lines array, but to keep size down,
# we only do this for 4Kb around the sweet spot
-my $filename;
-
-open(FILE, "objdump -dS $vmlinux_name |") || die "Cannot start objdump";
+open(FILE, "objdump -dS --adjust-vma=$vmaoffset --start-address=$decodestart --stop-address=$decodestop $filename |") || die "Cannot start objdump";
while (<FILE>) {
my $line = $_;