xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/ddb.4 (revision 721351876cd4d3a8a700f62d2061331fa951a488)
1.\"
2.\" Mach Operating System
3.\" Copyright (c) 1991,1990 Carnegie Mellon University
4.\" Copyright (c) 2007 Robert N. M. Watson
5.\" All Rights Reserved.
6.\"
7.\" Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute this software and its
8.\" documentation is hereby granted, provided that both the copyright
9.\" notice and this permission notice appear in all copies of the
10.\" software, derivative works or modified versions, and any portions
11.\" thereof, and that both notices appear in supporting documentation.
12.\"
13.\" CARNEGIE MELLON ALLOWS FREE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE IN ITS "AS IS"
14.\" CONDITION.  CARNEGIE MELLON DISCLAIMS ANY LIABILITY OF ANY KIND FOR
15.\" ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
16.\"
17.\" Carnegie Mellon requests users of this software to return to
18.\"
19.\"  Software Distribution Coordinator  or  Software.Distribution@CS.CMU.EDU
20.\"  School of Computer Science
21.\"  Carnegie Mellon University
22.\"  Pittsburgh PA 15213-3890
23.\"
24.\" any improvements or extensions that they make and grant Carnegie Mellon
25.\" the rights to redistribute these changes.
26.\"
27.\" changed a \# to #, since groff choked on it.
28.\"
29.\" HISTORY
30.\" ddb.4,v
31.\" Revision 1.1  1993/07/15  18:41:02  brezak
32.\" Man page for DDB
33.\"
34.\" Revision 2.6  92/04/08  08:52:57  rpd
35.\" 	Changes from OSF.
36.\" 	[92/01/17  14:19:22  jsb]
37.\" 	Changes for OSF debugger modifications.
38.\" 	[91/12/12            tak]
39.\"
40.\" Revision 2.5  91/06/25  13:50:22  rpd
41.\" 	Added some watchpoint explanation.
42.\" 	[91/06/25            rpd]
43.\"
44.\" Revision 2.4  91/06/17  15:47:31  jsb
45.\" 	Added documentation for continue/c, match, search, and watchpoints.
46.\" 	I've not actually explained what a watchpoint is; maybe Rich can
47.\" 	do that (hint, hint).
48.\" 	[91/06/17  10:58:08  jsb]
49.\"
50.\" Revision 2.3  91/05/14  17:04:23  mrt
51.\" 	Correcting copyright
52.\"
53.\" Revision 2.2  91/02/14  14:10:06  mrt
54.\" 	Changed to new Mach copyright
55.\" 	[91/02/12  18:10:12  mrt]
56.\"
57.\" Revision 2.2  90/08/30  14:23:15  dbg
58.\" 	Created.
59.\" 	[90/08/30            dbg]
60.\"
61.\" $FreeBSD$
62.\"
63.Dd June 8, 2008
64.Dt DDB 4
65.Os
66.Sh NAME
67.Nm ddb
68.Nd interactive kernel debugger
69.Sh SYNOPSIS
70In order to enable kernel debugging facilities include:
71.Bd -ragged -offset indent
72.Cd options KDB
73.Cd options DDB
74.Ed
75.Pp
76To prevent activation of the debugger on kernel
77.Xr panic 9 :
78.Bd -ragged -offset indent
79.Cd options KDB_UNATTENDED
80.Ed
81.Pp
82In order to print a stack trace of the current thread on the console
83for a panic:
84.Bd -ragged -offset indent
85.Cd options KDB_TRACE
86.Ed
87.Pp
88To print the numerical value of symbols in addition to the symbolic
89representation, define:
90.Bd -ragged -offset indent
91.Cd options DDB_NUMSYM
92.Ed
93.Pp
94To enable the
95.Xr gdb 1
96backend, so that remote debugging with
97.Xr kgdb 1
98is possible, include:
99.Bd -ragged -offset indent
100.Cd options GDB
101.Ed
102.Sh DESCRIPTION
103The
104.Nm
105kernel debugger has most of the features of the old
106.Nm kdb ,
107but with a more rational syntax
108inspired by
109.Xr gdb 1 .
110If linked into the running kernel,
111it can be invoked locally with the
112.Ql debug
113.Xr keymap 5
114action.
115The debugger is also invoked on kernel
116.Xr panic 9
117if the
118.Va debug.debugger_on_panic
119.Xr sysctl 8
120MIB variable is set non-zero,
121which is the default
122unless the
123.Dv KDB_UNATTENDED
124option is specified.
125.Pp
126The current location is called
127.Va dot .
128The
129.Va dot
130is displayed with
131a hexadecimal format at a prompt.
132The commands
133.Ic examine
134and
135.Ic write
136update
137.Va dot
138to the address of the last line
139examined or the last location modified, and set
140.Va next
141to the address of
142the next location to be examined or changed.
143Other commands do not change
144.Va dot ,
145and set
146.Va next
147to be the same as
148.Va dot .
149.Pp
150The general command syntax is:
151.Ar command Ns Op Li / Ns Ar modifier
152.Ar address Ns Op Li , Ns Ar count
153.Pp
154A blank line repeats the previous command from the address
155.Va next
156with
157count 1 and no modifiers.
158Specifying
159.Ar address
160sets
161.Va dot
162to the address.
163Omitting
164.Ar address
165uses
166.Va dot .
167A missing
168.Ar count
169is taken
170to be 1 for printing commands or infinity for stack traces.
171.Pp
172The
173.Nm
174debugger has a pager feature (like the
175.Xr more 1
176command)
177for the output.
178If an output line exceeds the number set in the
179.Va lines
180variable, it displays
181.Dq Li --More--
182and waits for a response.
183The valid responses for it are:
184.Pp
185.Bl -tag -compact -width ".Li SPC"
186.It Li SPC
187one more page
188.It Li RET
189one more line
190.It Li q
191abort the current command, and return to the command input mode
192.El
193.Pp
194Finally,
195.Nm
196provides a small (currently 10 items) command history, and offers
197simple
198.Nm emacs Ns -style
199command line editing capabilities.
200In addition to
201the
202.Nm emacs
203control keys, the usual
204.Tn ANSI
205arrow keys might be used to
206browse through the history buffer, and move the cursor within the
207current line.
208.Sh COMMANDS
209.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
210.It Ic examine
211.It Ic x
212Display the addressed locations according to the formats in the modifier.
213Multiple modifier formats display multiple locations.
214If no format is specified, the last format specified for this command
215is used.
216.Pp
217The format characters are:
218.Bl -tag -compact -width indent
219.It Cm b
220look at by bytes (8 bits)
221.It Cm h
222look at by half words (16 bits)
223.It Cm l
224look at by long words (32 bits)
225.It Cm a
226print the location being displayed
227.It Cm A
228print the location with a line number if possible
229.It Cm x
230display in unsigned hex
231.It Cm z
232display in signed hex
233.It Cm o
234display in unsigned octal
235.It Cm d
236display in signed decimal
237.It Cm u
238display in unsigned decimal
239.It Cm r
240display in current radix, signed
241.It Cm c
242display low 8 bits as a character.
243Non-printing characters are displayed as an octal escape code (e.g.,
244.Ql \e000 ) .
245.It Cm s
246display the null-terminated string at the location.
247Non-printing characters are displayed as octal escapes.
248.It Cm m
249display in unsigned hex with character dump at the end of each line.
250The location is also displayed in hex at the beginning of each line.
251.It Cm i
252display as an instruction
253.It Cm I
254display as an instruction with possible alternate formats depending on the
255machine:
256.Bl -tag -width ".Tn powerpc" -compact
257.It Tn alpha
258Show the registers of the instruction.
259.It Tn amd64
260No alternate format.
261.It Tn i386
262No alternate format.
263.It Tn ia64
264No alternate format.
265.It Tn powerpc
266No alternate format.
267.It Tn sparc64
268No alternate format.
269.El
270.It Cm S
271display a symbol name for the pointer stored at the address
272.El
273.Pp
274.It Ic xf
275Examine forward:
276execute an
277.Ic examine
278command with the last specified parameters to it
279except that the next address displayed by it is used as the start address.
280.Pp
281.It Ic xb
282Examine backward:
283execute an
284.Ic examine
285command with the last specified parameters to it
286except that the last start address subtracted by the size displayed by it
287is used as the start address.
288.Pp
289.It Ic print Ns Op Li / Ns Cm acdoruxz
290.It Ic p Ns Op Li / Ns Cm acdoruxz
291Print
292.Ar addr Ns s
293according to the modifier character (as described above for
294.Cm examine ) .
295Valid formats are:
296.Cm a , x , z , o , d , u , r ,
297and
298.Cm c .
299If no modifier is specified, the last one specified to it is used.
300The argument
301.Ar addr
302can be a string, in which case it is printed as it is.
303For example:
304.Bd -literal -offset indent
305print/x "eax = " $eax "\enecx = " $ecx "\en"
306.Ed
307.Pp
308will print like:
309.Bd -literal -offset indent
310eax = xxxxxx
311ecx = yyyyyy
312.Ed
313.Pp
314.It Xo
315.Ic write Ns Op Li / Ns Cm bhl
316.Ar addr expr1 Op Ar expr2 ...
317.Xc
318.It Xo
319.Ic w Ns Op Li / Ns Cm bhl
320.Ar addr expr1 Op Ar expr2 ...
321.Xc
322Write the expressions specified after
323.Ar addr
324on the command line at succeeding locations starting with
325.Ar addr .
326The write unit size can be specified in the modifier with a letter
327.Cm b
328(byte),
329.Cm h
330(half word) or
331.Cm l
332(long word) respectively.
333If omitted,
334long word is assumed.
335.Pp
336.Sy Warning :
337since there is no delimiter between expressions, strange
338things may happen.
339It is best to enclose each expression in parentheses.
340.Pp
341.It Ic set Li $ Ns Ar variable Oo Li = Oc Ar expr
342Set the named variable or register with the value of
343.Ar expr .
344Valid variable names are described below.
345.Pp
346.It Ic break Ns Op Li / Ns Cm u
347.It Ic b Ns Op Li / Ns Cm u
348Set a break point at
349.Ar addr .
350If
351.Ar count
352is supplied, continues
353.Ar count
354\- 1 times before stopping at the
355break point.
356If the break point is set, a break point number is
357printed with
358.Ql # .
359This number can be used in deleting the break point
360or adding conditions to it.
361.Pp
362If the
363.Cm u
364modifier is specified, this command sets a break point in user
365address space.
366Without the
367.Cm u
368option, the address is considered to be in the kernel
369space, and a wrong space address is rejected with an error message.
370This modifier can be used only if it is supported by machine dependent
371routines.
372.Pp
373.Sy Warning :
374If a user text is shadowed by a normal user space debugger,
375user space break points may not work correctly.
376Setting a break
377point at the low-level code paths may also cause strange behavior.
378.Pp
379.It Ic delete Ar addr
380.It Ic d Ar addr
381.It Ic delete Li # Ns Ar number
382.It Ic d Li # Ns Ar number
383Delete the break point.
384The target break point can be specified by a
385break point number with
386.Ql # ,
387or by using the same
388.Ar addr
389specified in the original
390.Ic break
391command.
392.Pp
393.It Ic watch Ar addr Ns Li , Ns Ar size
394Set a watchpoint for a region.
395Execution stops when an attempt to modify the region occurs.
396The
397.Ar size
398argument defaults to 4.
399If you specify a wrong space address, the request is rejected
400with an error message.
401.Pp
402.Sy Warning :
403Attempts to watch wired kernel memory
404may cause unrecoverable error in some systems such as i386.
405Watchpoints on user addresses work best.
406.Pp
407.It Ic hwatch Ar addr Ns Li , Ns Ar size
408Set a hardware watchpoint for a region if supported by the
409architecture.
410Execution stops when an attempt to modify the region occurs.
411The
412.Ar size
413argument defaults to 4.
414.Pp
415.Sy Warning :
416The hardware debug facilities do not have a concept of separate
417address spaces like the watch command does.
418Use
419.Ic hwatch
420for setting watchpoints on kernel address locations only, and avoid
421its use on user mode address spaces.
422.Pp
423.It Ic dhwatch Ar addr Ns Li , Ns Ar size
424Delete specified hardware watchpoint.
425.Pp
426.It Ic step Ns Op Li / Ns Cm p
427.It Ic s Ns Op Li / Ns Cm p
428Single step
429.Ar count
430times (the comma is a mandatory part of the syntax).
431If the
432.Cm p
433modifier is specified, print each instruction at each step.
434Otherwise, only print the last instruction.
435.Pp
436.Sy Warning :
437depending on machine type, it may not be possible to
438single-step through some low-level code paths or user space code.
439On machines with software-emulated single-stepping (e.g., pmax),
440stepping through code executed by interrupt handlers will probably
441do the wrong thing.
442.Pp
443.It Ic continue Ns Op Li / Ns Cm c
444.It Ic c Ns Op Li / Ns Cm c
445Continue execution until a breakpoint or watchpoint.
446If the
447.Cm c
448modifier is specified, count instructions while executing.
449Some machines (e.g., pmax) also count loads and stores.
450.Pp
451.Sy Warning :
452when counting, the debugger is really silently single-stepping.
453This means that single-stepping on low-level code may cause strange
454behavior.
455.Pp
456.It Ic until Ns Op Li / Ns Cm p
457Stop at the next call or return instruction.
458If the
459.Cm p
460modifier is specified, print the call nesting depth and the
461cumulative instruction count at each call or return.
462Otherwise,
463only print when the matching return is hit.
464.Pp
465.It Ic next Ns Op Li / Ns Cm p
466.It Ic match Ns Op Li / Ns Cm p
467Stop at the matching return instruction.
468If the
469.Cm p
470modifier is specified, print the call nesting depth and the
471cumulative instruction count at each call or return.
472Otherwise, only print when the matching return is hit.
473.Pp
474.It Xo
475.Ic trace Ns Op Li / Ns Cm u
476.Op Ar pid | tid
477.Op Li , Ns Ar count
478.Xc
479.It Xo
480.Ic t Ns Op Li / Ns Cm u
481.Op Ar pid | tid
482.Op Li , Ns Ar count
483.Xc
484.It Xo
485.Ic where Ns Op Li / Ns Cm u
486.Op Ar pid | tid
487.Op Li , Ns Ar count
488.Xc
489.It Xo
490.Ic bt Ns Op Li / Ns Cm u
491.Op Ar pid | tid
492.Op Li , Ns Ar count
493.Xc
494Stack trace.
495The
496.Cm u
497option traces user space; if omitted,
498.Ic trace
499only traces
500kernel space.
501The optional argument
502.Ar count
503is the number of frames to be traced.
504If
505.Ar count
506is omitted, all frames are printed.
507.Pp
508.Sy Warning :
509User space stack trace is valid
510only if the machine dependent code supports it.
511.Pp
512.It Xo
513.Ic search Ns Op Li / Ns Cm bhl
514.Ar addr
515.Ar value
516.Op Ar mask
517.Op Li , Ns Ar count
518.Xc
519Search memory for
520.Ar value .
521This command might fail in interesting
522ways if it does not find the searched-for value.
523This is because
524.Nm
525does not always recover from touching bad memory.
526The optional
527.Ar count
528argument limits the search.
529.\"
530.Pp
531.It Ic show Cm all procs Ns Op Li / Ns Cm m
532.It Ic ps Ns Op Li / Ns Cm m
533Display all process information.
534The process information may not be shown if it is not
535supported in the machine, or the bottom of the stack of the
536target process is not in the main memory at that time.
537The
538.Cm m
539modifier will alter the display to show VM map
540addresses for the process and not show other information.
541.\"
542.Pp
543.It Ic show Cm allchains
544Show the same information like "show lockchain" does, but
545for every thread in the system.
546.\"
547.Pp
548.It Ic show Cm alllocks
549Show all locks that are currently held.
550.\"
551.Pp
552.It Ic show Cm allpcpu
553The same as "show pcpu", but for every CPU present in the system.
554.\"
555.Pp
556.It Ic show Cm allrman
557Show information related with resource management, including
558interrupt request lines, DMA request lines, I/O ports and I/O memory
559addresses.
560.\"
561.Pp
562.It Ic show Cm apic
563Dump data about APIC IDT vector mappings.
564.\"
565.Pp
566.It Ic show Cm breaks
567Show breakpoints set with the "break" command.
568.\"
569.Pp
570.It Ic show Cm buffer
571Show buffer structure of
572.Vt struct buf
573type.
574Such a structure is used within the
575.Fx
576kernel for the I/O subsystem
577implementation.
578For an exact interpretation of the output, please see the
579.Pa sys/buf.h
580header file.
581.\"
582.Pp
583.It Ic show Cm cbstat
584Show brief information about the TTY subsystem.
585.\"
586.Pp
587.It Ic show Cm cyrixreg
588Show registers specific to the Cyrix processor.
589.\"
590.Pp
591.It Ic show Cm domain Ar addr
592Print protocol domain structure
593.Vt struct domain
594at address
595.Ar addr .
596See the
597.Pa sys/domain.h
598header file for more details on the exact meaning of the structure fields.
599.\"
600.Pp
601.It Ic show Cm file Ar addr
602Show information about the file structure
603.Vt struct file
604present at address
605.Ar addr .
606.\"
607.Pp
608.It Ic show Cm files
609Show information about every file structure in the system.
610.\"
611.Pp
612.It Ic show Cm freepages
613Show the number of physical pages in each of the free lists.
614.\"
615.Pp
616.It Ic show Cm geom Op Ar addr
617If the
618.Ar addr
619argument is not given, displays the entire GEOM topology.
620If
621.Ar addr
622is given, displays details about the given GEOM object (class, geom,
623provider or consumer).
624.\"
625.Pp
626.It Ic show Cm idt
627Show IDT layout.
628The first column specifies the IDT vector.
629The second one is the name of the interrupt/trap handler.
630Those functions are machine dependent.
631.\"
632.Pp
633.It Ic show Cm inpcb Ar addr
634Show information on IP Control Block
635.Vt struct in_pcb
636present at
637.Ar addr .
638.\"
639.Pp
640.It Ic show Cm intr
641Dump information about interrupt handlers.
642.\"
643.Pp
644.It Ic show Cm intrcnt
645Dump the interrupt statistics.
646.\"
647.Pp
648.It Ic show Cm irqs
649Show interrupt lines and their respective kernel threads.
650.\"
651.Pp
652.It Ic show Cm lapic
653Show information from the local APIC registers for this CPU.
654.\"
655.Pp
656.It Ic show Cm lock Ar addr
657Show lock structure.
658The output format is as follows:
659.Bl -tag -offset 0 -width "flags"
660.It Ic class:
661Class of the lock.
662Possible types include
663.Xr mutex 9 ,
664.Xr rmlock 9 ,
665.Xr rwlock 9 ,
666.Xr sx 9 .
667.It Ic name:
668Name of the lock.
669.It Ic flags:
670Flags passed to the lock initialization function.
671For exact possibilities see manual pages of possible lock types.
672.It Ic state:
673Current state of a lock.
674As well as
675.Ic flags
676it's lock-specific.
677.It Ic owner:
678Lock owner.
679.El
680.\"
681.Pp
682.It Ic show Cm lockchain Ar addr
683Show all threads a particular thread at address
684.Ar addr
685is waiting on based on non-sleepable and non-spin locks.
686.\"
687.Pp
688.It Ic show Cm lockedbufs
689Show the same information as "show buf", but for every locked
690.Vt struct buf
691object.
692.\"
693.Pp
694.It Ic show Cm lockedvnods
695List all locked vnodes in the system.
696.\"
697.Pp
698.It Ic show Cm locks
699Prints all locks that are currently acquired.
700.\"
701.Pp
702.It Ic show Cm locktree
703.\"
704.Pp
705.It Ic show Cm malloc
706Prints
707.Xr malloc 9
708memory allocator statistics.
709The output format is as follows:
710.Pp
711.Bl -tag -compact -offset indent -width "Requests"
712.It Ic Type
713Specifies a type of memory.
714It is the same as a description string used while defining the
715given memory type with
716.Xr MALLOC_DECLARE 9 .
717.It Ic InUse
718Number of memory allocations of the given type, for which
719.Xr free 9
720has not been called yet.
721.It Ic MemUse
722Total memory consumed by the given allocation type.
723.It Ic Requests
724Number of memory allocation requests for the given
725memory type.
726.El
727.Pp
728The same information can be gathered in userspace with
729.Dq Nm vmstat Fl m .
730.\"
731.Pp
732.It Ic show Cm map Ns Oo Li / Ns Cm f Oc Ar addr
733Prints the VM map at
734.Ar addr .
735If the
736.Cm f
737modifier is specified the
738complete map is printed.
739.\"
740.Pp
741.It Ic show Cm msgbuf
742Print the system's message buffer.
743It is the same output as in the
744.Dq Nm dmesg
745case.
746It is useful if you got a kernel panic, attached a serial cable
747to the machine and want to get the boot messages from before the
748system hang.
749.\"
750.It Ic show Cm mount
751Displays short info about all currently mounted file systems.
752.Pp
753.It Ic show Cm mount Ar addr
754Displays details about the given mount point.
755.Pp
756.\"
757.Pp
758.It Ic show Cm object Ns Oo Li / Ns Cm f Oc Ar addr
759Prints the VM object at
760.Ar addr .
761If the
762.Cm f
763option is specified the
764complete object is printed.
765.\"
766.Pp
767.It Ic show Cm page
768Show statistics on VM pages.
769.\"
770.Pp
771.It Ic show Cm pageq
772Show statistics on VM page queues.
773.\"
774.Pp
775.It Ic show Cm pciregs
776Print PCI bus registers.
777The same information can be gathered in userspace by running
778.Dq Nm pciconf Fl lv .
779.\"
780.Pp
781.It Ic show Cm pcpu
782Print current processor state.
783The output format is as follows:
784.Pp
785.Bl -tag -compact -offset indent -width "spin locks held:"
786.It Ic cpuid
787Processor identifier.
788.It Ic curthread
789Thread pointer, process identifier and the name of the process.
790.It Ic curpcb
791Control block pointer.
792.It Ic fpcurthread
793FPU thread pointer.
794.It Ic idlethread
795Idle thread pointer.
796.It Ic APIC ID
797CPU identifier coming from APIC.
798.It Ic currentldt
799LDT pointer.
800.It Ic spin locks held
801Names of spin locks held.
802.El
803.\"
804.Pp
805.It Ic show Cm pgrpdump
806Dump process groups present within the system.
807.\"
808.Pp
809.It Ic show Cm proc Op Ar addr
810If no
811.Op Ar addr
812is specified, print information about the current process.
813Otherwise, show information about the process at address
814.Ar addr .
815.\"
816.Pp
817.It Ic show Cm procvm
818Show process virtual memory layout.
819.\"
820.Pp
821.It Ic show Cm protosw Ar addr
822Print protocol switch structure
823.Vt struct protosw
824at address
825.Ar addr .
826.\"
827.Pp
828.It Ic show Cm registers Ns Op Li / Ns Cm u
829Display the register set.
830If the
831.Cm u
832modifier is specified, it displays user registers instead of
833kernel registers or the currently saved one.
834.Pp
835.Sy Warning :
836The support of the
837.Cm u
838modifier depends on the machine.
839If not supported, incorrect information will be displayed.
840.\"
841.Pp
842.It Ic show Cm rman Ar addr
843Show resource manager object
844.Vt struct rman
845at address
846.Ar addr .
847Addresses of particular pointers can be gathered with "show allrman"
848command.
849.\"
850.Pp
851.It Ic show Cm rtc
852Show real time clock value.
853Useful for long debugging sessions.
854.\"
855.Pp
856.It Ic show Cm sleepchain
857Show all the threads a particular thread is waiting on based on
858sleepable locks.
859.\"
860.Pp
861.It Ic show Cm sleepq
862.It Ic show Cm sleepqueue
863Both commands provide the same functionality.
864They show sleepqueue
865.Vt struct sleepqueue
866structure.
867Sleepqueues are used within the
868.Fx
869kernel to implement sleepable
870synchronization primitives (thread holding a lock might sleep or
871be context switched), which at the time of writing are:
872.Xr condvar 9 ,
873.Xr sx 9
874and standard
875.Xr msleep 9
876interface.
877.\"
878.Pp
879.It Ic show Cm sockbuf Ar addr
880.It Ic show Cm socket Ar addr
881Those commands print
882.Vt struct sockbuf
883and
884.Vt struct socket
885objects placed at
886.Ar addr .
887Output consists of all values present in structures mentioned.
888For exact interpretation and more details, visit
889.Pa sys/socket.h
890header file.
891.\"
892.Pp
893.It Ic show Cm sysregs
894Show system registers (e.g.,
895.Li cr0-4
896on i386.)
897Not present on some platforms.
898.\"
899.Pp
900.It Ic show Cm tcpcb Ar addr
901Print TCP control block
902.Vt struct tcpcb
903lying at address
904.Ar addr .
905For exact interpretation of output, visit
906.Pa netinet/tcp.h
907header file.
908.\"
909.Pp
910.It Ic show Cm thread Op Ar addr
911If no
912.Ar addr
913is specified, show detailed information about current thread.
914Otherwise, information about thread at
915.Ar addr
916is printed.
917.\"
918.Pp
919.It Ic show Cm threads
920Show all threads within the system.
921Output format is as follows:
922.Pp
923.Bl -tag -width "PPID" -compact -offset indent -width "Second column"
924.It Ic First column
925Thread identifier (TID)
926.It Ic Second column
927Thread structure address
928.It Ic Third column
929Backtrace.
930.El
931.\"
932.Pp
933.It Ic show Cm turnstile Ar addr
934Show turnstile
935.Vt struct turnstile
936structure at address
937.Ar addr .
938Turnstiles are structures used within the
939.Fx
940kernel to implement
941synchronization primitives which, while holding a specific type of lock, cannot
942sleep or context switch to another thread.
943Currently, those are:
944.Xr mutex 9 ,
945.Xr rwlock 9 ,
946.Xr rmlock 9 .
947.\"
948.Pp
949.It Ic show Cm uma
950Show UMA allocator statistics.
951Output consists five columns:
952.Pp
953.Bl -tag -compact -offset indent -width "Requests"
954.It Cm "Zone"
955Name of the UMA zone.
956The same string that was passed to
957.Xr uma_zcreate 9
958as a first argument.
959.It Cm "Size"
960Size of a given memory object (slab).
961.It Cm "Used"
962Number of slabs being currently used.
963.It Cm "Free"
964Number of free slabs within the UMA zone.
965.It Cm "Requests"
966Number of allocations requests to the given zone.
967.El
968.Pp
969The very same information might be gathered in the userspace
970with the help of
971.Dq Nm vmstat Fl z
972.\"
973.Pp
974.It Ic show Cm unpcb Ar addr
975Shows UNIX domain socket private control block
976.Vt struct unpcb
977present at the address
978.Ar addr
979.\"
980.Pp
981.It Ic show Cm vmochk
982Prints, whether the internal VM objects are in a map somewhere
983and none have zero ref counts.
984.\"
985.Pp
986.It Ic show Cm vmopag
987This is supposed to show physical addresses consumed by a
988VM object.
989Currently, it is not possible to use this command when
990.Xr witness 9
991is compiled in the kernel.
992.\"
993.Pp
994.It Ic show Cm vnode Op Ar addr
995Prints vnode
996.Vt struct vnode
997structure lying at
998.Op Ar addr .
999For the exact interpretation of the output, look at the
1000.Pa sys/vnode.h
1001header file.
1002.\"
1003.Pp
1004.It Ic show Cm watches
1005Displays all watchpoints.
1006Shows watchpoints set with "watch" command.
1007.\"
1008.Pp
1009.It Ic show Cm witness
1010Shows information about lock acquisition coming from the
1011.Xr witness 9
1012subsystem.
1013.\"
1014.Pp
1015.It Ic gdb
1016Toggles between remote GDB and DDB mode.
1017In remote GDB mode, another machine is required that runs
1018.Xr gdb 1
1019using the remote debug feature, with a connection to the serial
1020console port on the target machine.
1021Currently only available on the
1022i386
1023architecture.
1024.Pp
1025.It Ic halt
1026Halt the system.
1027.Pp
1028.It Ic kill Ar sig pid
1029Send signal
1030.Ar sig
1031to process
1032.Ar pid .
1033The signal is acted on upon returning from the debugger.
1034This command can be used to kill a process causing resource contention
1035in the case of a hung system.
1036See
1037.Xr signal 3
1038for a list of signals.
1039Note that the arguments are reversed relative to
1040.Xr kill 2 .
1041.Pp
1042.It Ic reboot
1043.It Ic reset
1044Hard reset the system.
1045.Pp
1046.It Ic help
1047Print a short summary of the available commands and command
1048abbreviations.
1049.Pp
1050.It Ic capture on
1051.It Ic capture off
1052.It Ic capture reset
1053.It Ic capture status
1054.Nm
1055supports a basic output capture facility, which can be used to retrieve the
1056results of debugging commands from userpsace using
1057.Xr sysctl 2 .
1058.Ic capture on
1059enables output capture;
1060.Ic capture off
1061disables capture.
1062.Ic capture reset
1063will clear the capture buffer and disable capture.
1064.Ic capture status
1065will report current buffer use, buffer size, and disposition of output
1066capture.
1067.Pp
1068Userspace processes may inspect and manage
1069.Nm
1070capture state using
1071.Xr sysctl 8 :
1072.Pp
1073.Dv debug.ddb.capture.bufsize
1074may be used to query or set the current capture buffer size.
1075.Pp
1076.Dv debug.ddb.capture.maxbufsize
1077may be used to query the compile-time limit on the capture buffer size.
1078.Pp
1079.Dv debug.ddb.capture.bytes
1080may be used to query the number of bytes of output currently in the capture
1081buffer.
1082.Pp
1083.Dv debug.ddb.capture.data
1084returns the contents of the buffer as a string to an appropriately privileged
1085process.
1086.Pp
1087This facility is particularly useful in concert with the scripting and
1088.Xr textdump 4
1089facilities, allowing scripted debugging output to be captured and
1090committed to disk as part of a textdump for later analysis.
1091The contents of the capture buffer may also be inspected in a kernel core dump
1092using
1093.Xr kgdb 1 .
1094.Pp
1095.It Ic run
1096.It Ic script
1097.It Ic scripts
1098.It Ic unscript
1099Run, define, list, and delete scripts.
1100See the
1101.Sx SCRIPTING
1102section for more information on the scripting facility.
1103.Pp
1104.It Ic textdump set
1105.It Ic textdump status
1106.It Ic textdump unset
1107The
1108.Ic textdump set
1109command may be used to force the next kernel core dump to be a textdump
1110rather than a traditional memory dump or minidump.
1111.Ic textdump status
1112reports whether a textdump has been scheduled.
1113.Ic textdump unset
1114cancels a request to perform a textdump as the next kernel core dump.
1115More information may be found in
1116.Xr textdump 4 .
1117.El
1118.Sh VARIABLES
1119The debugger accesses registers and variables as
1120.Li $ Ns Ar name .
1121Register names are as in the
1122.Dq Ic show Cm registers
1123command.
1124Some variables are suffixed with numbers, and may have some modifier
1125following a colon immediately after the variable name.
1126For example, register variables can have a
1127.Cm u
1128modifier to indicate user register (e.g.,
1129.Dq Li $eax:u ) .
1130.Pp
1131Built-in variables currently supported are:
1132.Pp
1133.Bl -tag -width ".Va tabstops" -compact
1134.It Va radix
1135Input and output radix.
1136.It Va maxoff
1137Addresses are printed as
1138.Dq Ar symbol Ns Li + Ns Ar offset
1139unless
1140.Ar offset
1141is greater than
1142.Va maxoff .
1143.It Va maxwidth
1144The width of the displayed line.
1145.It Va lines
1146The number of lines.
1147It is used by the built-in pager.
1148.It Va tabstops
1149Tab stop width.
1150.It Va work Ns Ar xx
1151Work variable;
1152.Ar xx
1153can take values from 0 to 31.
1154.El
1155.Sh EXPRESSIONS
1156Most expression operators in C are supported except
1157.Ql ~ ,
1158.Ql ^ ,
1159and unary
1160.Ql & .
1161Special rules in
1162.Nm
1163are:
1164.Bl -tag -width ".No Identifiers"
1165.It Identifiers
1166The name of a symbol is translated to the value of the symbol, which
1167is the address of the corresponding object.
1168.Ql \&.
1169and
1170.Ql \&:
1171can be used in the identifier.
1172If supported by an object format dependent routine,
1173.Sm off
1174.Oo Ar filename : Oc Ar func : lineno ,
1175.Sm on
1176.Oo Ar filename : Oc Ns Ar variable ,
1177and
1178.Oo Ar filename : Oc Ns Ar lineno
1179can be accepted as a symbol.
1180.It Numbers
1181Radix is determined by the first two letters:
1182.Ql 0x :
1183hex,
1184.Ql 0o :
1185octal,
1186.Ql 0t :
1187decimal; otherwise, follow current radix.
1188.It Li \&.
1189.Va dot
1190.It Li +
1191.Va next
1192.It Li ..
1193address of the start of the last line examined.
1194Unlike
1195.Va dot
1196or
1197.Va next ,
1198this is only changed by
1199.Ic examine
1200or
1201.Ic write
1202command.
1203.It Li '
1204last address explicitly specified.
1205.It Li $ Ns Ar variable
1206Translated to the value of the specified variable.
1207It may be followed by a
1208.Ql \&:
1209and modifiers as described above.
1210.It Ar a Ns Li # Ns Ar b
1211A binary operator which rounds up the left hand side to the next
1212multiple of right hand side.
1213.It Li * Ns Ar expr
1214Indirection.
1215It may be followed by a
1216.Ql \&:
1217and modifiers as described above.
1218.El
1219.Sh SCRIPTING
1220.Nm
1221supports a basic scripting facility to allow automating tasks or responses to
1222specific events.
1223Each script consists of a list of DDB commands to be executed sequentially,
1224and is assigned a unique name.
1225Certain script names have special meaning, and will be automatically run on
1226various
1227.Nm
1228events if scripts by those names have been defined.
1229.Pp
1230The
1231.Ic script
1232command may be used to define a script by name.
1233Scripts consist of a series of
1234.Nm
1235commands separated with the
1236.Ic ;
1237character.
1238For example:
1239.Bd -literal -offset indent
1240script kdb.enter.panic=bt; show pcpu
1241script lockinfo=show alllocks; show lockedvnods
1242.Ed
1243.Pp
1244The
1245.Ic scripts
1246command lists currently defined scripts.
1247.Pp
1248The
1249.Ic run
1250command execute a script by name.
1251For example:
1252.Bd -literal -offset indent
1253run lockinfo
1254.Ed
1255.Pp
1256The
1257.Ic unscript
1258command may be used to delete a script by name.
1259For example:
1260.Bd -literal -offset indent
1261unscript kdb.enter.panic
1262.Ed
1263.Pp
1264These functions may also be performed from userspace using the
1265.Xr ddb 8
1266command.
1267.Pp
1268Certain scripts are run automatically, if defined, for specific
1269.Nm
1270events.
1271The follow scripts are run when various events occur:
1272.Bl -tag -width kdb.enter.powerfail
1273.It Dv kdb.enter.acpi
1274The kernel debugger was entered as a result of an
1275.Xr acpi 4
1276event.
1277.It Dv kdb.enter.bootflags
1278The kernel debugger was entered at boot as a result of the debugger boot
1279flag being set.
1280.It Dv kdb.enter.break
1281The kernel debugger was entered as a result of a serial or console break.
1282.It Dv kdb.enter.cam
1283The kernel debugger was entered as a result of a
1284.Xr CAM 4
1285event.
1286.It Dv kdb.enter.mac
1287The kernel debugger was entered as a result of an assertion failure in the
1288.Xr mac_test 4
1289module of the
1290TrustedBSD MAC Framework.
1291.It Dv kdb.enter.ndis
1292The kernel debugger was entered as a result of an
1293.Xr ndis 4
1294breakpoint event.
1295.It Dv kdb.enter.netgraph
1296The kernel debugger was entered as a result of a
1297.Xr netgraph 4
1298event.
1299.It Dv kdb.enter.panic
1300.Xr panic 9
1301was called.
1302.It Dv kdb.enter.powerfail
1303The kernel debugger was entered as a result of a powerfail NMI on the sparc64
1304platform.
1305.It Dv kdb.enter.powerpc
1306The kernel debugger was entered as a result of an unimplemented interrupt
1307type on the powerpc platform.
1308.It Dv kdb.enter.sysctl
1309The kernel debugger was entered as a result of the
1310.Dv debug.kdb.enter
1311sysctl being set.
1312.It Dv kdb.enter.trapsig
1313The kernel debugger was entered as a result of a trapsig event on the sparc64
1314or sun4v platform.
1315.It Dv kdb.enter.unionfs
1316The kernel debugger was entered as a result of an assertion failure in the
1317union file system.
1318.It Dv kdb.enter.unknown
1319The kernel debugger was entered, but no reason has been set.
1320.It Dv kdb.enter.vfslock
1321The kernel debugger was entered as a result of a VFS lock violation.
1322.It Dv kdb.enter.watchdog
1323The kernel debugger was entered as a result of a watchdog firing.
1324.It Dv kdb.enter.witness
1325The kernel debugger was entered as a result of a
1326.Xr witness 4
1327violation.
1328.El
1329.Pp
1330In the event that none of these scripts is found,
1331.Nm
1332will attempt to execute a default script:
1333.Bl -tag -width kdb.enter.powerfail
1334.It Dv kdb.enter.default
1335The kernel debugger was entered, but a script exactly matching the reason for
1336entering was not defined.
1337This can be used as a catch-all to handle cases not specifically of interest;
1338for example,
1339.Dv kdb.enter.witness
1340might be defined to have special handling, and
1341.Dv kdb.enter.default
1342might be defined to simply panic and reboot.
1343.El
1344.Sh HINTS
1345On machines with an ISA expansion bus, a simple NMI generation card can be
1346constructed by connecting a push button between the A01 and B01 (CHCHK# and
1347GND) card fingers.
1348Momentarily shorting these two fingers together may cause the bridge chipset to
1349generate an NMI, which causes the kernel to pass control to
1350.Nm .
1351Some bridge chipsets do not generate a NMI on CHCHK#, so your mileage may vary.
1352The NMI allows one to break into the debugger on a wedged machine to
1353diagnose problems.
1354Other bus' bridge chipsets may be able to generate NMI using bus specific
1355methods.
1356.Sh FILES
1357Header files mention in this manual page can be found below
1358.Pa /usr/include
1359directory.
1360.Pp
1361.Bl -dash -compact
1362.It
1363.Pa sys/buf.h
1364.It
1365.Pa sys/domain.h
1366.It
1367.Pa netinet/in_pcb.h
1368.It
1369.Pa sys/socket.h
1370.It
1371.Pa sys/vnode.h
1372.El
1373.Sh SEE ALSO
1374.Xr gdb 1 ,
1375.Xr kgdb 1 ,
1376.Xr acpi 4 ,
1377.Xr CAM 4 ,
1378.Xr mac_test 4 ,
1379.Xr ndis 4 ,
1380.Xr netgraph 4 ,
1381.Xr textdump 4 ,
1382.Xr witness 4 ,
1383.Xr ddb 8 ,
1384.Xr sysctl 8 ,
1385.Xr panic 9 ,
1386.Xr witness 9
1387.Sh HISTORY
1388The
1389.Nm
1390debugger was developed for Mach, and ported to
1391.Bx 386 0.1 .
1392This manual page translated from
1393.Xr man 7
1394macros by
1395.An Garrett Wollman .
1396.Pp
1397.An Robert N. M. Watson
1398added support for
1399.Nm
1400output capture,
1401.Xr textdump 4
1402and scripting in
1403.Fx 8.0 .
1404