Commit Graph

309 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Robert Watson
9b0fce602a Refine textdump comments slightly.
MFC after:	3 months
2008-01-10 00:26:47 +00:00
Robert Watson
618c7db30a Add textdump(4) facility, which provides an alternative form of kernel
dump using mechanically generated/extracted debugging output rather than
a simple memory dump.  Current sources of debugging output are:

- DDB output capture buffer, if there is captured output to save
- Kernel message buffer
- Kernel configuration, if included in kernel
- Kernel version string
- Panic message

Textdumps are stored in swap/dump partitions as with regular dumps, but
are laid out as ustar files in order to allow multiple parts to be stored
as a stream of sequentially written blocks.  Blocks are written out in
reverse order, as the size of a textdump isn't known a priori.  As with
regular dumps, they will be extracted using savecore(8).

One new DDB(4) command is added, "textdump", which accepts "set",
"unset", and "status" arguments.  By default, normal kernel dumps are
generated unless "textdump set" is run in order to schedule a textdump.
It can be canceled using "textdump unset" to restore generation of a
normal kernel dump.

Several sysctls exist to configure aspects of textdumps;
debug.ddb.textdump.pending can be set to check whether a textdump is
pending, or set/unset in order to control whether the next kernel dump
will be a textdump from userspace.

While textdumps don't have to be generated as a result of a DDB script
run automatically as part of a kernel panic, this is a particular useful
way to use them, as instead of generating a complete memory dump, a
simple transcript of an automated DDB session can be captured using the
DDB output capture and textdump facilities.  This can be used to
generate quite brief kernel bug reports rich in debugging information
but not dependent on kernel symbol tables or precisely synchronized
source code.  Most textdumps I generate are less than 100k including
the full message buffer.  Using textdumps with an interactive debugging
session is also useful, with capture being enabled/disabled in order to
record some but not all of the DDB session.

MFC after:	3 months
2007-12-26 11:32:33 +00:00
Robert Watson
44daa2da55 Remove duplicate $FreeBSD$ that snuck in.
MFC after:	3 months
2007-12-26 10:51:07 +00:00
Robert Watson
c9b0cc3b96 Add a simple scripting facility to DDB(4), allowing the user to
define a set of named scripts.  Each script consists of a list of DDB
commands separated by ";"s that will be executed verbatim.  No higher
level language constructs, such as branching, are provided for:
scripts are executed by sequentially injecting commands into the DDB
input buffer.

Four new commands are present in DDB: "run" to run a specific script,
"script" to define or print a script, "scripts" to list currently
defined scripts, and "unscript" to delete a script, modeled on shell
alias commands.  Scripts may also be manipulated using sysctls in the
debug.ddb.scripting MIB space, although users will prefer to use the
soon-to-be-added ddb(8) tool for usability reasons.

Scripts with certain names are automatically executed on various DDB
events, such as entering the debugger via a panic, a witness error,
watchdog, breakpoint, sysctl, serial break, etc, allowing customized
handling.

MFC after:	3 months
2007-12-26 09:33:19 +00:00
Robert Watson
086fec574e Add a new DDB(4) facility, output capture. Input and output from DDB may be
captured to a memory buffer for later inspection using sysctl(8), or in the
future, to a textdump.

A new DDB command, "capture", is added, which accepts arguments "on", "off",
"reset", and "status".

A new DDB sysctl tree, debug.ddb.capture, is added, which can be used to
resize the capture buffer and extract buffer contents.

MFC after:	3 months
2007-12-25 23:06:51 +00:00
John Baldwin
6b76a4c77a Make the examine command honor db_pager_quit so you can use 'q' or 'x'
at the pager prompt to abort an examine command that spans multiple pages.

MFC after:	1 week
2007-10-27 20:19:11 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
a0f4a3a63b Print the stack bounds of the thread. 2007-10-16 17:52:59 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
b61ce5b0e6 - Move all of the PS_ flags into either p_flag or td_flags.
- p_sflag was mostly protected by PROC_LOCK rather than the PROC_SLOCK or
   previously the sched_lock.  These bugs have existed for some time.
 - Allow swapout to try each thread in a process individually and then
   swapin the whole process if any of these fail.  This allows us to move
   most scheduler related swap flags into td_flags.
 - Keep ki_sflag for backwards compat but change all in source tools to
   use the new and more correct location of P_INMEM.

Reported by:	pho
Reviewed by:	attilio, kib
Approved by:	re (kensmith)
2007-09-17 05:31:39 +00:00
Xin LI
f67af5c918 Use FOREACH_PROC_IN_SYSTEM instead of using its unrolled form. 2007-01-17 15:05:52 +00:00
Julian Elischer
ad1e7d285a Threading cleanup.. part 2 of several.
Make part of John Birrell's KSE patch permanent..
Specifically, remove:
Any reference of the ksegrp structure. This feature was
never fully utilised and made things overly complicated.
All code in the scheduler that tried to make threaded programs
fair to unthreaded programs.  Libpthread processes will already
do this to some extent and libthr processes already disable it.

Also:
Since this makes such a big change to the scheduler(s), take the opportunity
to rename some structures and elements that had to be moved anyhow.
This makes the code a lot more readable.

The ULE scheduler compiles again but I have no idea if it works.

The 4bsd scheduler still reqires a little cleaning and some functions that now do
ALMOST nothing will go away, but I thought I'd do that as a separate commit.

Tested by David Xu, and Dan Eischen using libthr and libpthread.
2006-12-06 06:34:57 +00:00
John Baldwin
e6337905e5 Fix the output format of MI ddb watches in 'show watch' on 64-bit
platforms.
2006-11-17 16:41:56 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
a0396f2797 Set up the context for the dbbe_trace callback in the ddb. Otherwise,
trap caused by backtracing would lead to panic.

Noted and reviewed by:	bde
2006-11-06 11:10:57 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
9641e38966 On trap while inside ddb, the trap handler calls kdb_reenter(), that
longjmp to the default context. As result, "alltrace" command may
be prematurely terminated (without error message). This is happens,
for instance, when system is low on memory and referenced page in
kernel-mode thread stack is swapped out.

Protect "alltrace" against termination on trap by setting temporary
kdb_jmpbuf context.

Submitted by:	Peter Holm
2006-11-02 11:47:38 +00:00
John Birrell
8460a577a4 Make KSE a kernel option, turned on by default in all GENERIC
kernel configs except sun4v (which doesn't process signals properly
with KSE).

Reviewed by:	davidxu@
2006-10-26 21:42:22 +00:00
Bruce Evans
e4b732cff1 The powerpc and sparc64 MD `reboot' commands should never have existed
since they just duplicated the MI `reset' command.  Instead of removing
them, make `reboot' an MI alias for `reboot' since this gives a better
way of killing the `r' alias for `reset'.  Remove the `registers' command
that was used to kill the alias.

Turn the powerpc and sparc64 MD `halt' command into an MI command.

A copy of sparc64/db_interface.c grew in sun4v just after I found the
extra reboot commands.  It has not been changed, and is now not
identical.  Duplicated commands come out duplicated in ddb's online
help, but cause large problems when used (e.g., on i386's with 2 halt's
and an hwatch, typing h doesn' give the expected message about an
ambiguous command, but hangs like the halt command or a looping parseri
would).
2006-10-10 07:26:54 +00:00
Bruce Evans
c7eeb59df0 Fixed loss of whitespace suppression at ends of lines. Whitespace
suppression is only needed at ends of lines, but rev.1.32 forced it
off precisely there.

The --More-- prompt is now cleared by explicitly forcing out the
whitespace in "\r        \r".  It might be better to use the line
editor's clearing functions, but these are currently static and not
much different.
2006-10-10 06:36:01 +00:00
Bruce Evans
75149ab872 Added some aliases:
- `b' is now an official alias for `break'.  It used to be an unofficial
  alias, but this was broken by adding the `bt' alias for `trace'.
- `t' is now an official alias for `trace'.  It used to be an unofficial
  alias, but this was broken by adding the `thread' command.
- `registers' is now an alias for `show registers'.  This is a hack to
  break the unofficial `r' alias for `reset'.  `r' really means
  `registers' in some debuggers, so I sometimes type it accidentally and
  am annoyed when it resets the system.  A short command shouldn't have
  such a large effect.  Now at least `res' must be typed to disambiguate
  `reset'.
2006-10-08 18:37:00 +00:00
Bruce Evans
2481da7487 Fixed formatting of printing of command tables. WIth the default max
output width of 79, only 6 columns of width 12 each fit, but 7 columns
were printed.

The fix is to pass the width of the next output to db_end_line() and
not assume there that this width is always 1.

Related unfixed bugs:
- 1 character is wasted for a space after the last column
- suppression of trailing spaces used to limit the misformatting, but
  seems to have been lost
- in db_examine(), the width of the next output is not know and is
  still assumed to be 1.
2006-10-08 18:15:08 +00:00
John Baldwin
d25168e14e Fix two nits in the ps header that offset each other making them largely
unnoticable.
2006-08-01 22:30:55 +00:00
John Baldwin
8b6d68671b Some cosmetic tweaks:
- Right justify 'pid' label.
- Move the uid column to the right 2 columns so that the 3 process id
  columns (pid, ppid, pgrp) are grouped together.
- Expand the uid column to 5 chars.
- Don't indent the tid for multithreaded processes.

Requested by:	bde (1, 2, 4)
2006-08-01 15:29:46 +00:00
John Baldwin
15cc91d345 Disable the pager for 'panic' and 'call' to be paranoid. 2006-07-19 18:26:53 +00:00
John Baldwin
19e9205a23 Simplify the pager support in DDB. Allowing different db commands to
install custom pager functions didn't actually happen in practice (they
all just used the simple pager and passed in a local quit pointer).  So,
just hardcode the simple pager as the only pager and make it set a global
db_pager_quit flag that db commands can check when the user hits 'q' (or a
suitable variant) at the pager prompt.  Also, now that it's easy to do so,
enable paging by default for all ddb commands.  Any command that wishes to
honor the quit flag can do so by checking db_pager_quit.  Note that the
pager can also be effectively disabled by setting $lines to 0.

Other fixes:
- 'show idt' on i386 and pc98 now actually checks the quit flag and
  terminates early.
- 'show intr' now actually checks the quit flag and terminates early.
2006-07-12 21:22:44 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
d48b6d9ad6 Never zero-out db_last_symtab. Whan backtraces are done
in parallel in several threads, one symbol lookup could
clear db_last_symtab when another one going to use it as
starting point for traversal.

Approved by:	pjd (mentor)
MFC after:	1 month
2006-06-16 16:17:52 +00:00
John Baldwin
10fd453475 Use __LP64__ rather than the PTR64 hack.
Suggested by:	ru
2006-05-11 21:59:55 +00:00
John Baldwin
a421d57149 Sort includes. 2006-04-27 22:09:18 +00:00
John Baldwin
eefcd2a1e6 A whitespace fix.
Submitted by:	bde
2006-04-27 22:02:27 +00:00
John Baldwin
60b0d00999 Drop locking comments. ddb functions should never use locking anyway and
no other ddb functions try to annotate what locking would otherwise be
appropriate in comments.

Prodded by:	bde
2006-04-27 21:59:43 +00:00
John Baldwin
c9a08d1cad - Overhaul the 'ps' command in ddb to be mostly readable again. :) It is
now back to using fixed-size columns for output and each line of output
  should fit in 80 columns on both 32-bit and 64-bit architectures.  In
  general the output is close to that of the userland ps(1) with the
  exception that the 'wmesg' field is mostly similar to the "state" field
  in top(1) in that it will show either a wmesg, a lock name (prefixed with
  an *), "CPU xx" (for a running thread), or nothing if none of those three
  conditions are true.  It also respects td_name when listing threads in
  a multithreaded process.  There is a somewhat evilly-defined PTR64 macro
  I use to make account for the change in the size of the 'wchan' column
  in the formatted output (wchan is now the only pointer in the ps output
  and is available so it can be passed to 'show sleepq', 'show turnstile',
  or 'show lock').
- Add two new commands "show proc [process]" and "show thread [thread]"
  that show details about the specified process or thread (specified
  either by pid/tid or pointer), respectively.  If an address it not
  specified, it uses the current kdb thread.
2006-04-25 20:34:04 +00:00
John Baldwin
d605beaaa8 Add two helper functions: db_lookup_thread() and db_lookup_proc(). They
take the addr value passed to a ddb command and attempt to use it to
lookup a struct thread * or struct proc *, respectively.  Each function
first reparses the passed in value as if it was an ID entered in base 10.
For threads the ID is treated as a thread ID, for proceses the ID is
treated as a PID.  If a thread or proc matching the ID is found, it is
returned.  For db_lookup_thread(), if the check_pid argument is true and
it didn't find a thread with a matching thread ID, it will treat the ID as
a PID and look for a matching process.  If it finds one it returns the
first thread in the process.  If none of the ID lookups succeeded, then
the functions assume that the passed in address is a thread or proc
pointer, respectively.  This allows one to use tids, pids, or structure
pointers interchangeably in ddb functions that want to lookup threads or
processes if desired.
2006-04-25 20:22:48 +00:00
John Baldwin
cf93bc6617 Use LIST_FOREACH(). 2006-04-21 20:39:51 +00:00
John Baldwin
e1e31c0e43 Clean up the way we handle auxiliary commands for a given ddb command
table.  Previously, the ddb code knew of each linker set of auxiliary
commands and which explicit command list they were tied to.  These changes
add a simple command_table struct that contains both the static list of
commands and the pointers for any auxiliary linker set of additional
commands.  This also makes it possible for other arbitrary command tables
to be defined in other parts of the kernel w/o having to edit ddb itself.

The DB_SET macro has also been trimmed down to just creating an entry in
a linker set.  A new DB_FUNC macro does what the old DB_SET did which is
to not only add an entry to the linker set but also to include a function
prototype for the function being added.  With these changes, it's now also
possible to create aliases for ddb functions using DB_SET() directly if
desired.
2006-03-07 22:17:06 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
f4e9888107 Fix -Wundef. 2005-12-04 02:12:43 +00:00
John Baldwin
3924da21a3 - Rename 'traceall' to 'alltrace' so that the 'tr' shortcut for 'trace'
still works.  Also, this is consistent with 'show pcpu' vs
  'show allpcpu'.  (And 'show allstacks' on OS X for that matter.)
- Add 'bt' as an alias for 'trace'.  We already have a 'where' alias as
  well, so this makes it easier for gdb-wired hands to work in ddb.

Ok'd by:	rwatson (1)
Requested by:	scottl (2)
MFC after:	1 day
2005-10-24 15:21:36 +00:00
Olivier Houchard
da927f93bd - Call db_setup_paging() for traceall.
- Make it so one can't call db_setup_paging() if it has already been called
before. traceall needs this, or else the db_setup_paging() call from
db_trace_thread() will reset the printed line number, and override its
argument.
This is not perfect for traceall, because even if one presses 'q' while in
the middle of printing a backtrace it will finish printing the backtrace
before exiting, as db_trace_thread() won't be notified it should stop, but
it is hard to do better without reworking the pager interface a lot more.
2005-10-02 22:57:31 +00:00
Robert Watson
a7ad956bdf Add a DDB "traceall" function, which stack traces all known process
threads.  This is quite useful if generating a debug log for post-mortem
by another developer, in which case the person at the console may not
know which threads are of interest.  The output of this can be quite
long.

Discussed with:	kris
MFC after:	3 days
2005-10-02 11:41:12 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
216e80c2ba Move the prototypes of db_md_set_watchpoint(), db_md_clr_watchpoint()
and db_md_list_watchpoints() to ddb/ddb.h.
2005-09-10 03:01:25 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
cec9a4bf57 Remove the need to forward declare statics by moving them around. 2005-08-10 07:08:14 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
a2aeb24eff Implement functions calls from within DDB on ia64. On ia64 a function
pointer doesn't point to the first instruction of that function, but
rather to a descriptor. The descriptor has the address of the first
instruction, as well as the value of the global pointer. The symbol
table doesn't know anything about descriptors, so if you lookup the
name of a function you get the address of the first instruction. The
cast from the address, which is the result of the symbol lookup, to a
function pointer as is done in db_fncall is therefore invalid.
Abstract this detail behind the DB_CALL macro. By default DB_CALL is
defined as db_fncall_generic, which yields the old behaviour. On ia64
the macro is defined as db_fncall_ia64, in which a descriptor is
constructed to yield a valid function pointer.

While here, introduce DB_MAXARGS. DB_MAXARGS replaces the existing
(local) MAXARGS. The DB_MAXARGS macro can be defined by platforms to
create a convenient maximum. By default this will be the legacy 10.
On ia64 we define this macro to be 8, for 8 is the maximum number of
arguments that can be passed in registers. This avoids having to
implement spilling of arguments on the memory stack.

Approved by: re (dwhite)
2005-07-02 23:52:37 +00:00
Paul Saab
8cb038b4b2 Don't enter the debugger if KDB_UNATTENDED is set or if
debug.debugger_on_panic=0.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2005-04-20 20:52:46 +00:00
Peter Wemm
20984f2f04 rev 1.54 of i386/include/pcb.h depended on sys/proc.h. The prerequisite
was satisified for the rest of the kernel on the i386 build except for
these two files.  Rather than adding a submarine include to pcb.h, I've
added proc.h here.

I forgot to include these with the original commit. Sorry folks.
2005-04-14 05:25:40 +00:00
Warner Losh
dd3cb56845 Start each of the license/copyright comments with /*- 2005-01-06 01:34:41 +00:00
Robert Watson
a13aca1a8e When printing a stack trace for a thread, also print the pid and tid.
When a series of traces is included in a bug report, this will make it
easier to tie the trace information back to ps or threads output,
each of which will show the pid or the tid, but usually not both.
2004-11-23 23:11:47 +00:00
Robert Watson
2afce774e7 When printing information on the current thread, such as when entering
DDB, also print the pid of the process if present.  Since much
debugging still centers around processes, having the pid is quite
helpful.
2004-11-23 23:07:12 +00:00
Olivier Houchard
75f88c7ca4 Do not attempt to skip a breakpoint that is a result of a software single step,
or bad things happen.
2004-11-21 18:11:02 +00:00
David Schultz
626ff2081f Remove the uarea column from the DDB 'ps' display, and from grog's gdb
scripts.

Reviewed by:	arch@
2004-11-20 02:32:42 +00:00
John Baldwin
d39d4a6e64 - Change the ddb paging "support" to use a variable (db_lines_per_page) to
control the number of lines per page rather than a constant.  The variable
  can be examined and changed in ddb as '$lines'.  Setting the variable to
  0 will effectively turn off paging.
- Change db_putchar() to force out pending whitespace before outputting
  newlines and carriage returns so that one can rub out content on the
  current line via '\r     \r' type strings.
- Change the simple pager to rub out the --More-- prompt explicitly when
  the routine exits.
- Add some aliases to the simple pager to make it more compatible with
  more(1): 'e' and 'j' do a single line.  'd' does half a page, and
  'f' does a full page.

MFC after:	1 month
Inspired by:	kris
2004-11-01 22:15:15 +00:00
Julian Elischer
ed062c8d66 Refactor a bunch of scheduler code to give basically the same behaviour
but with slightly cleaned up interfaces.

The KSE structure has become the same as the "per thread scheduler
private data" structure. In order to not make the diffs too great
one is #defined as the other at this time.

The KSE (or td_sched) structure is  now allocated per thread and has no
allocation code of its own.

Concurrency for a KSEGRP is now kept track of via a simple pair of counters
rather than using KSE structures as tokens.

Since the KSE structure is different in each scheduler, kern_switch.c
is now included at the end of each scheduler. Nothing outside the
scheduler knows the contents of the KSE (aka td_sched) structure.

The fields in the ksegrp structure that are to do with the scheduler's
queueing mechanisms are now moved to the kg_sched structure.
(per ksegrp scheduler private data structure). In other words how the
scheduler queues and keeps track of threads is no-one's business except
the scheduler's. This should allow people to write experimental
schedulers with completely different internal structuring.

A scheduler call sched_set_concurrency(kg, N) has been added that
notifies teh scheduler that no more than N threads from that ksegrp
should be allowed to be on concurrently scheduled. This is also
used to enforce 'fainess' at this time so that a ksegrp with
10000 threads can not swamp a the run queue and force out a process
with 1 thread, since the current code will not set the concurrency above
NCPU, and both schedulers will not allow more than that many
onto the system run queue at a time. Each scheduler should eventualy develop
their own methods to do this now that they are effectively separated.

Rejig libthr's kernel interface to follow the same code paths as
linkse for scope system threads. This has slightly hurt libthr's performance
but I will work to recover as much of it as I can.

Thread exit code has been cleaned up greatly.
exit and exec code now transitions a process back to
'standard non-threaded mode' before taking the next step.
Reviewed by:	scottl, peter
MFC after:	1 week
2004-09-05 02:09:54 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
0171fe42f2 Damage control. Correcly advance symtab and strtab pointers, not
table length values.

Spotted by:	iedowse
2004-07-28 08:59:08 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
eec256de79 Avoid casts as lvalues. 2004-07-28 06:21:53 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
026c3aaa60 Oops... Add the CS_OWN flag to the trace and where commands so that
db_stack_trace() actually has a chance to parse its own arguments.
2004-07-21 05:55:51 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
fd32d93b97 Unify db_stack_trace_cmd(). All it did was look up the thread given
the thread ID and call db_trace_thread().
Since arm has all the logic in db_stack_trace_cmd(), rename the
new DB_COMMAND function to db_stack_trace to avoid conflicts on
arm.
While here, have db_stack_trace parse its own arguments so that
we can use a more natural radix for IDs. If the ID is not a thread
ID, or more precisely when no thread exists with the ID, try if
there's a process with that ID and return the first thread in it.
This makes it easier to print stack traces from the ps output.

requested by: rwatson@
tested on: amd64, i386, ia64
2004-07-21 05:07:09 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
f3be7cb3e9 Re-add the gdb command. It was removed to be replaced by something
more generic, but that didn't actually happen. Since the feature to
switch backends (and historically this means from DDB to GDB) is
important, make sure people can do just that until such the generic
mechanism actually sees the light of day.

Suggested by: rwatson@
2004-07-12 01:38:07 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
412e1faf02 Remove now unused files:
db_elf.c, db_kld.c: The new KDB backend supports both at the same time.
db_sysctl.c: The functionality has been moved to sys/kern/subr_kdb.c.
db_trap.c: The DDB entry point has been moved to sys/ddb/db_main.c.
2004-07-11 01:50:09 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
37224cd3fc Mega update for the KDB framework: turn DDB into a KDB backend.
Most of the changes are a direct result of adding thread awareness.
Typically, DDB_REGS is gone. All registers are taken from the
trapframe and backtraces use the PCB based contexts. DDB_REGS was
defined to be a trapframe on all platforms anyway.
Thread awareness introduces the following new commands:
	thread X	switch to thread X (where X is the TID),
	show threads	list all threads.

The backtrace code has been made more flexible so that one can
create backtraces for any thread by giving the thread ID as an
argument to trace.

With this change, ia64 has support for breakpoints.
2004-07-10 23:47:20 +00:00
Bruce Evans
130ff9c31a Fixed DDB_NOKLDSYM on amd64's:
machdep.c:
Initialize the symbol table pointers, not quite like for other arches.

db_elf.c:
Don't claim to be an i486 in the fake ELF header.
2004-05-18 05:30:06 +00:00
Warner Losh
f36cfd49ad Remove advertising clause from University of California Regent's
license, per letter dated July 22, 1999 and email from Peter Wemm,
Alan Cox and Robert Watson.

Approved by: core, peter, alc, rwatson
2004-04-07 20:46:16 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
74cc032b41 Give DDB a "watchdog" command which disables all watchdogs. 2004-02-29 09:55:32 +00:00
John Baldwin
44f3b09204 Switch the sleep/wakeup and condition variable implementations to use the
sleep queue interface:
- Sleep queues attempt to merge some of the benefits of both sleep queues
  and condition variables.  Having sleep qeueus in a hash table avoids
  having to allocate a queue head for each wait channel.  Thus, struct cv
  has shrunk down to just a single char * pointer now.  However, the
  hash table does not hold threads directly, but queue heads.  This means
  that once you have located a queue in the hash bucket, you no longer have
  to walk the rest of the hash chain looking for threads.  Instead, you have
  a list of all the threads sleeping on that wait channel.
- Outside of the sleepq code and the sleep/cv code the kernel no longer
  differentiates between cv's and sleep/wakeup.  For example, calls to
  abortsleep() and cv_abort() are replaced with a call to sleepq_abort().
  Thus, the TDF_CVWAITQ flag is removed.  Also, calls to unsleep() and
  cv_waitq_remove() have been replaced with calls to sleepq_remove().
- The sched_sleep() function no longer accepts a priority argument as
  sleep's no longer inherently bump the priority.  Instead, this is soley
  a propery of msleep() which explicitly calls sched_prio() before
  blocking.
- The TDF_ONSLEEPQ flag has been dropped as it was never used.  The
  associated TDF_SET_ONSLEEPQ and TDF_CLR_ON_SLEEPQ macros have also been
  dropped and replaced with a single explicit clearing of td_wchan.
  TD_SET_ONSLEEPQ() would really have only made sense if it had taken
  the wait channel and message as arguments anyway.  Now that that only
  happens in one place, a macro would be overkill.
2004-02-27 18:52:44 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
9aece96fc0 Add DDB_NUMSYM option which in addition to the symbolic representation
also prints the actual numerical value of the symbol in question.

Users of addr2line(1) will be less proficient in hex arithmetic as a
consequence.

This amongst other things means that traceback lines change from:
   siointr1(c4016800,c073bda0,0,c06b699c,69f) at siointr1+0xc5
to
   siointr1(c4016800,c073bda0,0,c06b699c,69f) at 0xc062b0bd = siointr1+0xc5

I made this an option to avoid bikesheds.
~
~
~
2004-02-24 22:51:42 +00:00
Nate Lawson
5de6c5b5a5 If not in the debugger or if the user requests it with the
debug.ddb_use_printf sysctl, output kernel debugger data to both the
console and kernel message buffer via printf.  This fixes the case where
backtrace() went directly to the console and should help debugging greatly.
Thanks to Ian Dowse for the work, minor edits or any bugs are by myself.

Submitted by:	iedowse
2004-01-28 06:51:18 +00:00
Bruce Evans
f8191f94aa Reworked rev.1.14. Use the ELF symbol type again to summarily reject
some symbols in X_db_search_symbol().  Reject the same symbols that
rev.1.13 did (all except STT_OBJECT and STT_FUNC), except don't reject
typeless symbols.  This keeps the typeless symbols in non-verbosely
written assembler code visible, but makes file symbols invisible.  ELF
file symbols have type STT_FILE and value 0, so this stops small values
and offsets sometimes being displayed in terms of the first file symbol
in the kernel (usually device_if.c).  I think it rejects some other
unwanted symbols (small absolute symbols for things like struct offsets).
It may reject some wanted symbols (large absolute symbols for addresses
like PTmap).
2003-09-28 06:02:33 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
71b797c176 Label the uarea address as such in DDB's ps output 2003-08-30 19:06:57 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
26502503e5 Further cleanup <machine/cpu.h> and <machine/md_var.h>: move the MI
prototypes of cpu_halt(), cpu_reset() and swi_vm() from md_var.h to
cpu.h. This affects db_command.c and kern_shutdown.c.

ia64: move all MD prototypes from cpu.h to md_var.h. This affects
madt.c, interrupt.c and mp_machdep.c. Remove is_physical_memory().
It's not used (vm_machdep.c).

alpha: the MD prototypes have been left in cpu.h with a comment
that they should be there. Moving them is left for later. It was
expected that the impact would be significant enough to be done in
a seperate commit.

powerpc: MD prototypes left in cpu.h. Comment added.

Suggested by: bde
Tested with: make universe (pc98 incomplete)
2003-08-16 16:57:57 +00:00
Hartmut Brandt
0ddc915c01 db_get_value uses a local buffer to first fetch all the bytes of a
integer value and then to construct the integer from it. This buffer
was sizeof(int) bytes long, which was fine until the (undocumented) 'g'
modifier for 8-byte integers was introduced. Change this to sizeof(uint64_t).
2003-08-12 13:24:21 +00:00
John Baldwin
3f2a1b0656 Update the 'ps', 'show pci', and 'show ktr' ddb commands to use the new
pager callout instead of homerolling their own paging facility.
2003-07-31 17:29:42 +00:00
John Baldwin
1e16f6098b Add a one-shot callout facility to db_printf() that executes the registered
callout when a specified number of lines have been output.  This can be
used to implement pagers for ddb commands that output a lot of text.  A
simple paging function is included that automatically rearms itself when
fired.

Reviewed by:	bde, julian
2003-07-31 17:27:52 +00:00
John Baldwin
cb075651f8 Whitespace nit. 2003-07-30 20:59:36 +00:00
David Xu
0e2a4d3aeb Rename P_THREADED to P_SA. P_SA means a process is using scheduler
activations.
2003-06-15 00:31:24 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
753960f7c4 Use __FBSDID(). 2003-06-10 22:09:23 +00:00
Julian Elischer
b410626185 Attempt to crunch down the thread state info so that it is more likely to
fit on one line. Account for threads better.

* No need to report that it is on a sleep queue if it is actually sleeping
* "Normal" state is almost ubiquitous.. only report abnormal states.
* increment the #lines count for each separate thread shown in threaded
  programs.

makes it less likely that a threaded program will make all the data
on a screen overflow off the top of the screen.
2003-06-06 20:28:11 +00:00
John Baldwin
a85b6f827b Handle the TDS_INACTIVE state by printing '[INACTIVE]' instead of
panic'ing.  Also, for unknown thread states, print out the value rather
than panic.  Panic'ing in the debugger is pointless at best.
2003-06-06 17:20:47 +00:00
John Baldwin
ac39898e7e Whitespace nits. 2003-06-06 17:19:27 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
04361c8c3a Make "where" an alias for "trace" 2003-06-01 09:06:23 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
bd961794c3 Add /* FALLTHROUGH */
Found by:       FlexeLint
2003-05-31 20:43:47 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
9a4b535c7a Add /* FALLTHROUGH */
Found by:       FlexeLint
2003-05-31 19:00:02 +00:00
Julian Elischer
060563ec50 Move the _oncpu entry from the KSE to the thread.
The entry in the KSE still exists but it's purpose will change a bit
when we add the ability to lock a KSE to a cpu.
2003-04-10 17:35:44 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
8543efae60 The kernel bcopy() is safe for overlapping regions (and always has), so
there is no use for a separate ovbcopy().
2003-04-04 12:10:04 +00:00
Julian Elischer
ac2e415327 Change the process flags P_KSES to be P_THREADED.
This is just a cosmetic change but I've been meaning to do it for about a year.
2003-02-27 02:05:19 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
5215b1872f - Split the struct kse into struct upcall and struct kse. struct kse will
soon be visible only to schedulers.  This greatly simplifies much the
   KSE code.

Submitted by:	davidxu
2003-02-17 05:14:26 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
029f0b69a4 Change "dev_t gdbdev" to "void *gdb_arg", some possible paths for GDB
will not have a dev_t.
2003-02-16 19:22:21 +00:00
Julian Elischer
6f8132a867 Reversion of commit by Davidxu plus fixes since applied.
I'm not convinced there is anything major wrong with the patch but
them's the rules..

I am using my "David's mentor" hat to revert this as he's
offline for a while.
2003-02-01 12:17:09 +00:00
David Xu
0dbb100b9b Move UPCALL related data structure out of kse, introduce a new
data structure called kse_upcall to manage UPCALL. All KSE binding
and loaning code are gone.

A thread owns an upcall can collect all completed syscall contexts in
its ksegrp, turn itself into UPCALL mode, and takes those contexts back
to userland. Any thread without upcall structure has to export their
contexts and exit at user boundary.

Any thread running in user mode owns an upcall structure, when it enters
kernel, if the kse mailbox's current thread pointer is not NULL, then
when the thread is blocked in kernel, a new UPCALL thread is created and
the upcall structure is transfered to the new UPCALL thread. if the kse
mailbox's current thread pointer is NULL, then when a thread is blocked
in kernel, no UPCALL thread will be created.

Each upcall always has an owner thread. Userland can remove an upcall by
calling kse_exit, when all upcalls in ksegrp are removed, the group is
atomatically shutdown. An upcall owner thread also exits when process is
in exiting state. when an owner thread exits, the upcall it owns is also
removed.

KSE is a pure scheduler entity. it represents a virtual cpu. when a thread
is running, it always has a KSE associated with it. scheduler is free to
assign a KSE to thread according thread priority, if thread priority is changed,
KSE can be moved from one thread to another.

When a ksegrp is created, there is always N KSEs created in the group. the
N is the number of physical cpu in the current system. This makes it is
possible that even an userland UTS is single CPU safe, threads in kernel still
can execute on different cpu in parallel. Userland calls kse_create to add more
upcall structures into ksegrp to increase concurrent in userland itself, kernel
is not restricted by number of upcalls userland provides.

The code hasn't been tested under SMP by author due to lack of hardware.

Reviewed by: julian
2003-01-26 11:41:35 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
d43f696c1c Revert previous and move the prototype for db_alt_break to ddb.h.
Requested by:	bde (I think)
2002-12-31 18:30:53 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
edb333eef8 - Add a function db_alt_break which recognizes the character sequence used to
implement ALT_BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER.  The caller provides a pointer to a state
  variable to allow different state to be maintained for separate instances of
  a device.
- Use struct vm_map * instead of vm_map_t in db_break.h to avoid its users
  needing to include vm headers.

Requested by:	njl
2002-12-31 06:51:19 +00:00
Julian Elischer
93a7aa79d6 Add code to ddb to allow backtracing an arbitrary thread.
(show thread {address})

Remove the IDLE kse state and replace it with a change in
the way threads sahre KSEs. Every KSE now has a thread, which is
considered its "owner" however a KSE may also be lent to other
threads in the same group to allow completion of in-kernel work.
n this case the owner remains the same and the KSE will revert to the
owner when the other work has been completed.

All creations of upcalls etc. is now done from
kse_reassign() which in turn is called from mi_switch or
thread_exit(). This means that special code can be removed from
msleep() and cv_wait().

kse_release() does not leave a KSE with no thread any more but
converts the existing thread into teh KSE's owner, and sets it up
for doing an upcall. It is just inhibitted from being scheduled until
there is some reason to do an upcall.

Remove all trace of the kse_idle queue since it is no-longer needed.
"Idle" KSEs are now on the loanable queue.
2002-12-28 01:23:07 +00:00
Maxime Henrion
4578a2e652 - Rename the DDB specific %z printf format to %y.
- Make DDB use %y instead of %z.
- Teach GCC about %y.
- Implement support for the C99 %z format modifier.

Approved by:	re@
Reviewed by:	peter
Tested on:	i386, sparc64
2002-10-25 19:41:32 +00:00
Julian Elischer
1dab89f156 Remove the process state PRS_WAIT.
It is never used. I left it there from pre-KSE days as I didn't know
if I'd need it or not but now I know I don't.. It's functionality
is in TDI_IWAIT in the thread.
2002-10-21 22:27:36 +00:00
Julian Elischer
48bfcddd94 Round out the facilty for a 'bound' thread to loan out its KSE
in specific situations. The owner thread must be blocked, and the
borrower can not proceed back to user space with the borrowed KSE.
The borrower will return the KSE on the next context switch where
teh owner wants it back. This removes a lot of possible
race conditions and deadlocks. It is consceivable that the
borrower should inherit the priority of the owner too.
that's another discussion and would be simple to do.

Also, as part of this, the "preallocatd spare thread" is attached to the
thread doing a syscall rather than the KSE. This removes the need to lock
the scheduler when we want to access it, as it's now "at hand".

DDB now shows a lot mor info for threaded proceses though it may need
some optimisation to squeeze it all back into 80 chars again.
(possible JKH project)

Upcalls are now "bound" threads, but "KSE Lending" now means that
other completing syscalls can be completed using that KSE before the upcall
finally makes it back to the UTS. (getting threads OUT OF THE KERNEL is
one of the highest priorities in the KSE system.) The upcall when it happens
will present all the completed syscalls to the KSE for selection.
2002-10-09 02:33:36 +00:00
John Baldwin
551cf4e150 Rename the mutex thread and process states to use a more generic 'LOCK'
name instead.  (e.g., SLOCK instead of SMTX, TD_ON_LOCK() instead of
TD_ON_MUTEX())  Eventually a turnstile abstraction will be added that
will be shared with mutexes and other types of locks.  SLOCK/TDI_LOCK will
be used internally by the turnstile code and will not be specific to
mutexes.  Making the change now ensures that turnstiles can be dropped
in at a later date without affecting the ABI of userland applications.
2002-10-02 20:31:47 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
c2476fafad Indentation indicates missing braces.
Spotted by:	FlexeLint
2002-10-01 21:59:46 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
37c841831f Be consistent about "static" functions: if the function is marked
static in its prototype, mark it static at the definition too.

Inspired by:    FlexeLint warning #512
2002-09-28 17:15:38 +00:00
Mark Murray
bda9921d3f Constify to kill some warnings. 2002-09-21 17:29:36 +00:00
John Baldwin
c79408a059 Implement db_print_backtrace() if DDB is compiled into the kernel. This
MD function is just a wrapper around db_stack_trace_cmd() that prints out
a backtrace of curthread.  Currently, this function is only implemented
on i386 and alpha (and the alpha version isn't quite tested yet, will do
that in a bit).  Other changes:

- For i386, fix a bug in the raw frame address case.  The eip we extract
  from the passed in frame address does not match the frame we received.
  Thus, instead of printing a bogus frame with the wrong eip, go ahead
  and advance frame down to the same frame as the eip we are using.
- For alpha, attempt to add a way of doing a raw trace for alpha.  Instead
  of passing a frame address in 'addr', pass in a pointer to a structure
  containing PC and KSP and use those to start the backtrace.  The alpha
  db_print_backtrace() uses asm to read in the current PC and KSP values
  into such a request.

Tested on:	i386
Requested by:	many
2002-09-19 18:46:29 +00:00
Bruce Evans
1d47f58a3d Garbage-collected __ELF__ ifdefs.
Fixed some style bugs (mainly unused includes).
2002-09-15 22:28:39 +00:00
Bruce Evans
2ac73c2ce3 Don't use the ELF symbol type to summarily reject symbols in
X_db_search_symbol().  Otherwise we don't see important symbols in
non-verbosely written assembler code.

NetBSD already has this.  The kld version already has a stronger form
of it without really trying -- linker_ddb_search_symbol() doesn't
support ddb's symbol search strategy parameter, so the kld
X_db_search_symbol() doesn't pass the parameter to linker_ddb...() and
linker_ddb...() doesn't make distinctions based on the symbol type.

db_elf.c now works better than db_kld.c when it works (which is essentially
when there are no modules except the kernel).  It works after booting
with -d.  db_kld.c doesn't work until lots of SYSINIT()s have run.
2002-09-15 22:17:40 +00:00
Bruce Evans
abd368f09a Made this work on i386's at least. It wants ELF section headers for
symbol table sections.  Reconstruct the necessary section headers from
(ksym_start, ksym_end).  This was much easier than converting to use
module metadata, and just works for static symbols, unlike db_kld when
there is no module metadata.  Initialize (ksym_start, ksym_end) from
bootinfo on i386's only.

The boot loader should load section headers for all sections that it
loads, and apparently did this for at least the symbol table sections
when this file last worked under FreeBSD (on alphas only) and always
did this under NetBSD (where this file was obtained from).  At least
on i386's, boot2 discards the section headers (except for converting
them to (bootinfo.bi_symtab, bootinfo.bi_esymtab), and as far as I can
tell, loader(8) discards them apart from converting them to the bootinfo
values and module metadata.
2002-09-15 21:49:13 +00:00
Bruce Evans
f05c39e9d5 Made this compile (but not work). This involved mainly const poisoning
and renaming ALIGNED_POINTER() to _ALIGNED_POINTER() plus the following
hacks for i386's:
- define _ALIGNED_POINTER() if it is not already defined.  Most non-i386
  arches define it <machine/param.h> define it in <machine/param.h>,
  although none actually used it in the kernel.
- define ksym_start and ksym_end.  Most non-i386 arches still define and
  initialize these in machdep.c although they didn't used them.  Here is
  a better place to define them but not to initialize them.
2002-09-15 20:48:08 +00:00
Julian Elischer
71fad9fdee Completely redo thread states.
Reviewed by:	davidxu@freebsd.org
2002-09-11 08:13:56 +00:00
Bruce Evans
efdfb8fea3 db_ps.c:
Don't attempt to follow null pointers for zombie processes in db_ps().

Style fix: use explicit an comparison with NULL for all null pointer
checks in db_ps() instead of for half of them.

db_interface.c:
Fixed ddb's handling of traps from with ddb on i386's only.

This was mostly fixed in rev.1.27 (by longjmp()'ing back to the top
level) but was completly broken in rev.1.48 (by not unwinding the new
state (mainly db_active) either before or after the longjmp().  This
mostly never worked for other arches, since rev.1.27 has not been ported
and lower level longjmp()'s only handle traps for memory accesses.  All
cases should be handled at a lower level to provided better control and
simplify unwinding of state.

Implementation details: don't pretend to maintain db_active in a nested
way -- ddb cannot be reentered in a nested way.  Use db_active instead
of the db_global_jmpbuf_valid flag and longjmp()'s return value for things
related to reentering ddb.  [re]entering is still not atomic enough.
2002-08-31 04:25:44 +00:00
Juli Mallett
c96c380580 When talking about c_db_sym_t, mention that it is not just like db_sym_t:
it's const.

Inspired by:	bde
2002-08-14 17:56:47 +00:00