Commit Graph

349 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Baptiste Daroussin
b4b4b5304b Revert crap accidentally committed 2017-01-28 16:31:23 +00:00
Baptiste Daroussin
814aaaa7da Revert r312923 a better approach will be taken later 2017-01-28 16:30:14 +00:00
Mark Johnston
c2718b428e Revert r311952.
It broke DDB type-ahead since it caused db_check_interrupt() to drop
unrecognized characters.

Reported by:	bde
2017-01-14 22:06:25 +00:00
Mark Johnston
5fddef7999 Enable the use of ^C and ^S/^Q in DDB.
This lets one interrupt DDB's output, which is useful if paging is
disabled and the output device is slow.

Submitted by:	Anton Rang <rang@acm.org>
Reviewed by:	jhb
MFC after:	1 week
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9138
2017-01-12 00:22:36 +00:00
John Baldwin
ecb65f66c6 Use casts to force an unsigned comparison in db_search_symbol().
On all of our platforms, db_expr_t is a signed integer while
db_addr_t is an unsigned integer value.  db_search_symbol used variables
of type db_expr_t to hold the current offset of the requested address from
the "best" symbol found so far.  This value was initialized to '~0'.
When a new symbol is found from a symbol table, the associated diff for the
new symbol is compared against the existing value as 'if (newdiff < diff)'
to determine if the new symbol had a smaller diff and was thus a closer
match.

On 64-bit MIPS, the '~0' was treated as a negative value (-1).  A lookup
that found a perfect match of an address against a symbol returned a diff
of 0.  However, in signed comparisons, 0 is not less than -1.  As a result,
DDB on 64-bit MIPS never resolved any addresses to symbols.  Workaround
this by using casts to force an unsigned comparison.

Probably the diff returned from db_search_symbol() and X_db_search_symbol()
should be changed to a db_addr_t instead of a db_expr_t as it is an
unsigned value (and is an offset of an address, so should fit in the same
size as an address).

Sponsored by:	DARPA / AFRL
2016-12-14 00:18:12 +00:00
Konrad Witaszczyk
480f31c214 Add support for encrypted kernel crash dumps.
Changes include modifications in kernel crash dump routines, dumpon(8) and
savecore(8). A new tool called decryptcore(8) was added.

A new DIOCSKERNELDUMP I/O control was added to send a kernel crash dump
configuration in the diocskerneldump_arg structure to the kernel.
The old DIOCSKERNELDUMP I/O control was renamed to DIOCSKERNELDUMP_FREEBSD11 for
backward ABI compatibility.

dumpon(8) generates an one-time random symmetric key and encrypts it using
an RSA public key in capability mode. Currently only AES-256-CBC is supported
but EKCD was designed to implement support for other algorithms in the future.
The public key is chosen using the -k flag. The dumpon rc(8) script can do this
automatically during startup using the dumppubkey rc.conf(5) variable.  Once the
keys are calculated dumpon sends them to the kernel via DIOCSKERNELDUMP I/O
control.

When the kernel receives the DIOCSKERNELDUMP I/O control it generates a random
IV and sets up the key schedule for the specified algorithm. Each time the
kernel tries to write a crash dump to the dump device, the IV is replaced by
a SHA-256 hash of the previous value. This is intended to make a possible
differential cryptanalysis harder since it is possible to write multiple crash
dumps without reboot by repeating the following commands:
# sysctl debug.kdb.enter=1
db> call doadump(0)
db> continue
# savecore

A kernel dump key consists of an algorithm identifier, an IV and an encrypted
symmetric key. The kernel dump key size is included in a kernel dump header.
The size is an unsigned 32-bit integer and it is aligned to a block size.
The header structure has 512 bytes to match the block size so it was required to
make a panic string 4 bytes shorter to add a new field to the header structure.
If the kernel dump key size in the header is nonzero it is assumed that the
kernel dump key is placed after the first header on the dump device and the core
dump is encrypted.

Separate functions were implemented to write the kernel dump header and the
kernel dump key as they need to be unencrypted. The dump_write function encrypts
data if the kernel was compiled with the EKCD option. Encrypted kernel textdumps
are not supported due to the way they are constructed which makes it impossible
to use the CBC mode for encryption. It should be also noted that textdumps don't
contain sensitive data by design as a user decides what information should be
dumped.

savecore(8) writes the kernel dump key to a key.# file if its size in the header
is nonzero. # is the number of the current core dump.

decryptcore(8) decrypts the core dump using a private RSA key and the kernel
dump key. This is performed by a child process in capability mode.
If the decryption was not successful the parent process removes a partially
decrypted core dump.

Description on how to encrypt crash dumps was added to the decryptcore(8),
dumpon(8), rc.conf(5) and savecore(8) manual pages.

EKCD was tested on amd64 using bhyve and i386, mipsel and sparc64 using QEMU.
The feature still has to be tested on arm and arm64 as it wasn't possible to run
FreeBSD due to the problems with QEMU emulation and lack of hardware.

Designed by:	def, pjd
Reviewed by:	cem, oshogbo, pjd
Partial review:	delphij, emaste, jhb, kib
Approved by:	pjd (mentor)
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4712
2016-12-10 16:20:39 +00:00
Bruce Evans
808cf02c24 Determine the operand/address size of %cs in a new function
db_segsize().

Use db_segsize() to set the default operand/address size for
disassembling.  Allow overriding this with the "alternate" display
format /I.  The API of db_disasm() should be debooleanized to pass a
more general request (amd64 needs overrides to sizes of 16, 32, and
64, but this commit doesn't implement anything for amd64 since much
larger changes are needed to restore the amd64 disassmbler's support
for non-default sizes).

Fix db_print_loc_and_inst() to ask for the normal format and not the
alternate in normal operation.

This is most useful for vm86 mode, but also works for 16-bit protected
mode.

Use db_segsize() to avoid trying to print a garbage stack trace if %cs
is 16 bits.  Print something like the stack trace termination message
for a trap boundary instead.

Document that the alternate format is now useful on i386.
2016-09-25 16:30:29 +00:00
Bruce Evans
e1e554a382 Silently ignore unexpected single-step traps (except for turning
off single-stepping).  Only do this on arches (only x86 so far)
which classify single-step traps unambiguously.

This allows other parts of the kernel to be intentionally and
unintentionally sloppy about generating single-step traps.  On
x86, at least the following places were unintentionally sloppy:
- all operations that context-switched [er]flags.  Especially
  spinlock_enter()/exit() and cpu_switch().  When single-stepped,
  saving the flags leaves PSL_T set in the saved flags, so
  restoring gives a trap that is spurious if it occurs after
  single-step mode has been left.  Switching contexts away from
  a low priority thread gives especially long-lived saved copies.
- the vm86 emulation allows user mode to set PSL_T.  This was
  correct until vm86 bios call mode was unintentionally given
  access to kdb handling its single-step traps.
Now these places are intentionally sloppy, but unexpected
debugger traps still cause panics if no debugger that handles
the trap is attached when the trap is delivered.
2016-09-17 11:43:51 +00:00
Bruce Evans
1e24fd3bd9 Statically initialize the run mode to the one that will become
current on first entry.  This fixes a spurious "Stepping aborted"
message when the first entry is for a breakpoint.

Don't reset to the run mode to STEP_NONE when stopping, and remove
STEP_NONE.  This mode was never really used, except transiently to
mis-decide whether to print the message on first entry.
2016-09-16 06:31:10 +00:00
Bruce Evans
bd20334ca0 Abort single stepping in ddb if the trap is not for single-stepping.
This is not very easy to do, since ddb didn't know when traps are
for single-stepping.  It more or less assumed that traps are either
breakpoints or single-step, but even for x86 this became inadequate
with the release of the i386 in ~1986, and FreeBSD passes it other
trap types for NMIs and panics.

On x86, teach ddb when a trap is for single stepping using the %dr6
register.  Unknown traps are now treated almost the same as breakpoints
instead of as the same as single-steps.  Previously, the classification
of breakpoints was almost correct and everything else was unknown so
had to be treated as a single-step.  Now the classification of single-
steps is precise, the classification of breakpoints is almost correct
(as before) and everything else is unknown and treated like a
breakpoint.

This fixes:
- breakpoints not set by ddb, including the main one in kdb_enter(),
  were treated as single-steps and not stopped on when stepping
  (except for the usual, simple case of a step with residual count 1).
  As special cases, kdb_enter() didn't stop for fatal traps or panics
- similarly for "hardware breakpoints".

Use a new MD macro IS_SSTEP_TRAP(type, code) to code to classify
single-steps.  This is excessively complicated for bug-for-bug and
backwards compatibilty.  Design errors apparently started in Mach
in ~1990 or perhaps in the FreeBSD interface in ~1993.  Common trap
types like single steps should have a unique MI code (like the TRAP*
codes for user SIGTRAP) so that debuggers don't need macros like
IS_SSTEP_TRAP() to decode them.  But 'type' is actually an ambiguous
MD trap number, and code was always 0 (now it is (int)%dr6 on x86).
So it was impossible to determine the trap type from the args.
Global variables had to be used.

There is already a classification macro db_pc_is_single_step(), but
this just gets in the way.  It is only used to recover from bugs in
IS_BREAKPOINT_TRAP().  On some arches, IS_BREAKPOINT_TRAP() just
duplicates the ambiguity in 'type' and misclassifies single-steps as
breakpoints.  It defaults to 'false', which is the opposite of what is
needed for bug-for-bug compatibility.

When this is cleaned up, MI classification bits should be passed in
'code'.  This could be done now for positive-logic bits, since 'code'
was always 0, but some negative logic is needed for compatibility so
a simple MI classificition is not usable yet.

After reading %dr6, clear the single-step bit in it so that the type
of the next debugger trap can be decoded.  This is a little
ddb-specific.  ddb doesn't understand the need to clear this bit and
doing it before calling kdb is easiest.  gdb would need to reverse
this to support hardware breakpoints, but it just doesn't support
them now since gdbstub doesn't support %dr*.

Fix a bug involving %dr6: when emulating a single-step trap for vm86,
set the bit for it in %dr6.  Userland debuggers need this.  ddb now
needs this for vm86 bios calls.  The bit gets copied to 'code' then
cleared again.

Fix related style bugs:
- when clearing bits for hardware breakpoints in %dr6, spell the mask
  as ~0xf on both amd64 and i386 to get the correct number of bits
  using sign extension and not need a comment about using the wrong
  mask on amd64 (amd64 traps for invalid results but clearing the
  reserved top bits didn't trap since they are 0).
- rewrite my old wrong comments about using %dr6 for ddb watchpoints.
2016-09-15 17:24:23 +00:00
Bruce Evans
5c48342f16 Pass the trap type and code down from db_trap() to db_stop_at_pc() so
that the latter can easily determine what the trap type actually is
after callers are fixed to encode the type unambigously.

ddb currently barely understands breakpoints, and it treats all
non-breakpoints as single-step traps.  This works OK for stopping
after every instruction when single-stepping, but is broken for
single-stepping with a count > 1 (especially with a large count).
ddb needs to stop on the first non-single-step trap while single-
stepping.  Otherwise, ddb doesn't even stop the first time for
fatal traps and external breakpoints like the one in kdb_enter().
2016-09-09 15:53:42 +00:00
Bruce Evans
10c458cc3b Fix stopping when the specified breakpoint count is reached. The
countdown was done correctly, but the action when the count was not
reduced to 0 was to fall through to generic code which almost always
stopped.
2016-09-09 14:09:50 +00:00
Justin Hibbits
51d025a596 Correct the type of db_cmd_loop_done.
On big endian hardware that uses 1 byte bool a type mismatch of bool vs int will
cause the least signifcant byte of db_cmd_loop_done to be set, but the MSB to be
read, and read as 0.  This causes ddb to stay in an infinite loop.

MFC after:	1 week
2016-09-09 04:16:53 +00:00
Bruce Evans
27a465b033 Expand error messages: print symbol names, parentheses and shift tokens,
and negative shift counts.

Fix error messages: print "Division" instead of "Divide"; print
multiplier-like, addition-like and logical operator tokens instead of
garbage (usually the command name).

ddb has a primitive lexer with excessive information hiding that makes
it hard to find even the point in the line where a syntax error is
detected.  Old ddb just printed "Syntax error" and this was unimproved
in most places by printing a garbage token.
2016-08-28 19:33:09 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
7e89a3221f ddb: Add 'show active trace' command
'show active trace', or 'acttrace' for short, prints backtraces from running
threads only.

Reviewed by:	mjg
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7646
2016-08-26 02:46:47 +00:00
Bruce Evans
2b7a7ace9e In ddb ps, left justify the non-numeric fields 'state' and 'wmesg' and
the fixed-width numeric field 'wchan', as in ps(1).  They were sort
of centered, although the template shows 'state' as right-justified.
The `wmesg' field very rarely has a prefix of '*' (for lock names)
that is still to the left of the header, and the width of this field
is reduced from 8 to 7 (more than 6 is an error).

The 'wmesg' and 'wchan' fields are still misnamed and poorly handled.
They are named sort of backwards relative to ps(1):
- wmesg in ddb = mwchan in ps
- wmesg in ddb = wchan in ps (if it is a wait channel name, not a lock name)
- wchan in ddb = nwchan in ps
ddb ps wastes lots of space for the unimportant 'wchan' field (20
columns altogether on 64-bit arches).  ps(1) documents using a
compressed format, but the compression only omits leading nybbles of
0 so it has neveqr worked on arches that put the kernel in the top half
of the address space.  It just avoids wasting space for an 0x prefix.
2016-08-14 15:26:40 +00:00
Bruce Evans
cecc0aa9f9 Don't print an extra newline after the instruction when printing for
single stepping of multiple instructions (e.g., s/p,<count> and n/p).
db_print_loc_and_inst() already prints a newline on all arches although
it probably shouldn't.

Especially on SMP systems, single stepping tends to deadlock or panic
too quickly to be useful for anything except finding bugs in itself,
but with printing "itself" includes console drivers so it is useful
for generating stress tests for console drivers.
2016-08-14 13:23:02 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
5f00f45775 Fix ddb "show proc" to show full arguments
PR:		200052
Submitted by:	Chang-Hsien Tsai <luke.tw AT gmail.com>
2016-08-01 22:41:50 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
2d19b736ed Rewrite subr_sleepqueue.c use of callouts to not depend on the
specifics of callout KPI.  Esp., do not depend on the exact interface
of callout_stop(9) return values.

The main change is that instead of requiring precise callouts, code
maintains absolute time to wake up.  Callouts now should ensure that a
wake occurs at the requested moment, but we can tolerate both run-away
callout, and callout_stop(9) lying about running callout either way.

As consequence, it removes the constant source of the bugs where
sleepq_check_timeout() causes uninterruptible thread state where the
thread is detached from CPU, see e.g. r234952 and r296320.

Patch also removes dual meaning of the TDF_TIMEOUT flag, making code
(IMO much) simpler to reason about.

Tested by:	pho
Reviewed by:	jhb
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 month
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7137
2016-07-28 09:09:55 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
c69cee69f9 Add a small set of logical operators to DDB command language.
This are based on Mach3.
Documentation is pending but has been promised.

Submitted by:	Dan Partelly
Reviewed by:	adrian, jhb (older version)

Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4230
RelNotes:	yes
2016-05-16 19:42:38 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
8c6a0d07a6 Revert r298938: Change x/a to work similar to gdb.
This badly breaks x/ia: ddb and gdb syntax are quite different and it is
unclear if they can be reconciled.
2016-05-06 20:28:28 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
dd40d6d5e0 Enhance the ddb examine (x) command.
* Change x/a to work similar to gdb.  The content of the memory is
  treated as an address, printed symbolically and the address is advanced.
  This way you can x/a <stack_address> and then just hit return a bunch
  of times to locate useful data on the stack.

* Add x/p.  The content of the memory is treated as an address and
  printed as hex.

This is based on the similar commit from DragonFlyBSD without the
cosmetic changes.

Relnotes:	yes
Obtained from:	DragonflyBSD (Matthew Dillon)
Reference:	0624d20e86affcd708609cbf9014207537537a72
2016-05-02 19:32:06 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
4ed3c0e713 sys: Make use of our rounddown() macro when sys/param.h is available.
No functional change.
2016-04-30 14:41:18 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
ad29e12e0c sys/ddb: spelling fixes in comments.
No functional change.
2016-04-29 20:53:39 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
fc891c1907 ddb: Make use of our roundup() macro when available. 2016-04-26 01:52:35 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
63b6b7a74a Indentation issues.
Contract some lines leftover from r298310.

Mea culpa.
2016-04-20 16:19:44 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
02abd40029 kernel: use our nitems() macro when it is available through param.h.
No functional change, only trivial cases are done in this sweep,

Discussed in:	freebsd-current
2016-04-19 23:48:27 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
9f915a92c7 ddb: for pointers replace 0 with NULL.
Mostly cosmetical, no functional change.

Found with devel/coccinelle.
2016-04-15 17:27:20 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
16952e289f Avoid NULL pointer dereference, for a process which is not (yet) a
member of a process group, e.g. during the system bootstrap.

Submitted by:	Mark Cave-Ayland <mark.cave-ayland@ilande.co.uk>
MFC after:	1 week
2016-04-15 09:13:01 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
c975a5d359 Add td_swinvoltick to track last involuntary context switch
Expose in DDB via "show thread."

Reviewed by:	markj
Sponsored by:	EMC / Isilon Storage Division
2016-03-25 19:35:29 +00:00
Zbigniew Bodek
cdf23c193a Add helper to catch single step debug event and distinguish it from bkpt
Some architectures (including ARMv6/v7) do not have separate single step
events and cannot see difference between breakpoint and single step.
Add db_pc_is_singlestep() to avoid skipping instruction we stepped on
to trigger debug event.
This commit does not change the existing functionality but adds possibility
to implement custom db_pc_is_singlestep().

Reviewed by:   imp
Submitted by:  Zbigniew Bodek <zbb@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by:  Juniper Networks Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4036
2015-11-27 19:03:59 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
edc8222303 Make kstack_pages a tunable on arm, x86, and powepc. On i386, the
initial thread stack is not adjusted by the tunable, the stack is
allocated too early to get access to the kernel environment. See
TD0_KSTACK_PAGES for the thread0 stack sizing on i386.

The tunable was tested on x86 only.  From the visual inspection, it
seems that it might work on arm and powerpc.  The arm
USPACE_SVC_STACK_TOP and powerpc USPACE macros seems to be already
incorrect for the threads with non-default kstack size.  I only
changed the macros to use variable instead of constant, since I cannot
test.

On arm64, mips and sparc64, some static data structures are sized by
KSTACK_PAGES, so the tunable is disabled.

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	2 week
2015-08-10 17:18:21 +00:00
John Baldwin
9a2d6ab990 Various changes to the registers displayed in DDB for x86.
- Fix segment registers to only display the low 16 bits.
- Remove unused handlers and entries for the debug registers.
- Display xcr0 (if valid) in 'show sysregs'.
- Add '0x' prefix to MSR values to match other values in 'show sysregs'.
- MFamd64: Display various MSRs in 'show sysregs'.
- Add a 'show dbregs' to display the value of debug registers.
- Dynamically size the column width for register values to properly
  align columns on 64-bit platforms.
- Display %gs for i386 in 'show registers'.

Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2784
Reviewed by:	kib, markj
MFC after:	2 weeks
2015-07-22 01:09:02 +00:00
Mark Johnston
e31a60b486 Don't return undefined symbols to a DDB symbol lookup.
Undefined symbols have a value of zero, so it makes no sense to return
such a symbol when performing a lookup by value. This occurs for example
when unwinding the stack after calling a NULL function pointer, and we
confusingly report the faulting function as uart_sab82532_class() on
amd64.

Convert db_print_loc_and_inst() to only attempt disassembly if we managed
to find a symbol corresponding to the IP. Otherwise we may fault and
re-enter the debugger.

Reviewed by:	jhb
Sponsored by:	EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2858
2015-07-21 23:07:55 +00:00
Zbigniew Bodek
721555e7ee Fix KSTACK_PAGES issue when the default value was changed in KERNCONF
If KSTACK_PAGES was changed to anything alse than the default,
the value from param.h was taken instead in some places and
the value from KENRCONF in some others. This resulted in
inconsistency which caused corruption in SMP envorinment.

Ensure all places where KSTACK_PAGES are used the opt_kstack_pages.h
is included.

The file opt_kstack_pages.h could not be included in param.h
because was breaking the toolchain compilation.

Reviewed by:   kib
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by:  The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3094
2015-07-16 10:46:52 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
8fe344fa48 Correct the function name in catch-all error handling case.
MFC after:	1 week
2015-06-17 10:20:59 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
0a95ab74df ddb: de-register 2015-05-23 14:59:27 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
7fb888588c ddb: Use NULL for pointers
Hinted by:	DragonflyBSD
2015-05-22 19:04:06 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
cd508278c1 ddb: finish converting boolean values.
The replacement started at r283088 was necessarily incomplete without
replacing boolean_t with bool.  This also involved cleaning some type
mismatches and ansifying old C function declarations.

Pointed out by:	bde
Discussed with:	bde, ian, jhb
2015-05-21 15:16:18 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
2b490bc747 ddb: stop boolean screaming.
TRUE --> true
FALSE--> false

Hinted by:	NetBSD
2015-05-18 22:27:46 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
a41dd0319c ddb: ANSI-fy function declarations.
MFC after:	5 days
2014-10-12 18:01:52 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
1549fb22e6 ddb: space/tab fixes.
No functional change.

MFC after:	3 days
2014-10-11 20:25:19 +00:00
Roger Pau Monné
c98a2727cc ddb: allow specifying the exact address of the symtab and strtab
When the FreeBSD kernel is loaded from Xen the symtab and strtab are
not loaded the same way as the native boot loader. This patch adds
three new global variables to ddb that can be used to specify the
exact position and size of those tables, so they can be directly used
as parameters to db_add_symbol_table. A new helper is introduced, so callers
that used to set ksym_start and ksym_end can use this helper to set the new
variables.

It also adds support for loading them from the Xen PVH port, that was
previously missing those tables.

Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by:	kib

ddb/db_main.c:
 - Add three new global variables: ksymtab, kstrtab, ksymtab_size that
   can be used to specify the position and size of the symtab and
   strtab.
 - Use those new variables in db_init in order to call db_add_symbol_table.
 - Move the logic in db_init to db_fetch_symtab in order to set ksymtab,
   kstrtab, ksymtab_size from ksym_start and ksym_end.

ddb/ddb.h:
 - Add prototype for db_fetch_ksymtab.
 - Declate the extern variables ksymtab, kstrtab and ksymtab_size.

x86/xen/pv.c:
 - Add support for finding the symtab and strtab when booted as a Xen
   PVH guest. Since Xen loads the symtab and strtab as NetBSD expects
   to find them we have to adapt and use the same method.

amd64/amd64/machdep.c:
arm/arm/machdep.c:
i386/i386/machdep.c:
mips/mips/machdep.c:
pc98/pc98/machdep.c:
powerpc/aim/machdep.c:
powerpc/booke/machdep.c:
sparc64/sparc64/machdep.c:
 - Use the newly introduced db_fetch_ksymtab in order to set ksymtab,
   kstrtab and ksymtab_size.
2014-09-25 08:28:10 +00:00
Warner Losh
c6cb86cc6a ins is only set and unused, but only when we're not doing software
single stepping. Only set it when we're doing that by bending
style(9) rules a little to avoid even worse #ifdef soup.
2014-08-14 16:01:51 +00:00
John-Mark Gurney
527be4f229 handle longer commands so that lines don't overflow... people who added
commands forgot to check this...
2014-06-02 23:50:19 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
1285b2d147 ddb: Minor style cleanups.
#define should be followed by tab.

MFC after:	1 week
2014-03-31 16:37:41 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
21d748a957 Small textdump enhancements.
Allow textdumps to be called explicitly from DDB.

If "dump" is called in DDB and textdumps are enabled then abort the
dump and tell the user to turn off textdumps.

Add options TEXTDUMP_PREFERRED to turn textdumps on by default.
Add options TEXTDUMP_VERBOSE to be a bit more verbose while textdumping.

Reviewed by: rwatson

MFC after:	2 weeks
2012-11-01 04:07:08 +00:00
John Baldwin
28926c5766 Update the ddb and gdb backends for the new 'trace_thread' hook.
It is implemented via db_trace_thread() for DDB and not implemented
for GDB.  This should have been part of r234190.

Pointy hat to:	jhb
Reported by:	jkim
MFC after:	1 week
2012-04-12 21:34:58 +00:00
Ed Schouten
dc15eac046 Use strchr() and strrchr().
It seems strchr() and strrchr() are used more often than index() and
rindex(). Therefore, simply migrate all kernel code to use it.

For the XFS code, remove an empty line to make the code identical to
the code in the Linux kernel.
2012-01-02 12:12:10 +00:00
Sergey Kandaurov
148ddfed15 Use FOREACH_PROC_IN_SYSTEM instead of using its unrolled form.
Reviewed by:	kib
2011-12-18 15:36:21 +00:00