1================================================= 2Using kgdb, kdb and the kernel debugger internals 3================================================= 4 5:Author: Jason Wessel 6 7Introduction 8============ 9 10The kernel has two different debugger front ends (kdb and kgdb) which 11interface to the debug core. It is possible to use either of the 12debugger front ends and dynamically transition between them if you 13configure the kernel properly at compile and runtime. 14 15Kdb is simplistic shell-style interface which you can use on a system 16console with a keyboard or serial console. You can use it to inspect 17memory, registers, process lists, dmesg, and even set breakpoints to 18stop in a certain location. Kdb is not a source level debugger, although 19you can set breakpoints and execute some basic kernel run control. Kdb 20is mainly aimed at doing some analysis to aid in development or 21diagnosing kernel problems. You can access some symbols by name in 22kernel built-ins or in kernel modules if the code was built with 23``CONFIG_KALLSYMS``. 24 25Kgdb is intended to be used as a source level debugger for the Linux 26kernel. It is used along with gdb to debug a Linux kernel. The 27expectation is that gdb can be used to "break in" to the kernel to 28inspect memory, variables and look through call stack information 29similar to the way an application developer would use gdb to debug an 30application. It is possible to place breakpoints in kernel code and 31perform some limited execution stepping. 32 33Two machines are required for using kgdb. One of these machines is a 34development machine and the other is the target machine. The kernel to 35be debugged runs on the target machine. The development machine runs an 36instance of gdb against the vmlinux file which contains the symbols (not 37a boot image such as bzImage, zImage, uImage...). In gdb the developer 38specifies the connection parameters and connects to kgdb. The type of 39connection a developer makes with gdb depends on the availability of 40kgdb I/O modules compiled as built-ins or loadable kernel modules in the 41test machine's kernel. 42 43Compiling a kernel 44================== 45 46- In order to enable compilation of kdb, you must first enable kgdb. 47 48- The kgdb test compile options are described in the kgdb test suite 49 chapter. 50 51Kernel config options for kgdb 52------------------------------ 53 54To enable ``CONFIG_KGDB`` you should look under 55:menuselection:`Kernel hacking --> Kernel debugging` and select 56:menuselection:`KGDB: kernel debugger`. 57 58While it is not a hard requirement that you have symbols in your vmlinux 59file, gdb tends not to be very useful without the symbolic data, so you 60will want to turn on ``CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO`` which is called 61:menuselection:`Compile the kernel with debug info` in the config menu. 62 63It is advised, but not required, that you turn on the 64``CONFIG_FRAME_POINTER`` kernel option which is called :menuselection:`Compile 65the kernel with frame pointers` in the config menu. This option inserts code 66into the compiled executable which saves the frame information in registers 67or on the stack at different points which allows a debugger such as gdb to 68more accurately construct stack back traces while debugging the kernel. 69 70If the architecture that you are using supports the kernel option 71``CONFIG_STRICT_KERNEL_RWX``, you should consider turning it off. This 72option will prevent the use of software breakpoints because it marks 73certain regions of the kernel's memory space as read-only. If kgdb 74supports it for the architecture you are using, you can use hardware 75breakpoints if you desire to run with the ``CONFIG_STRICT_KERNEL_RWX`` 76option turned on, else you need to turn off this option. 77 78Next you should choose one or more I/O drivers to interconnect the debugging 79host and debugged target. Early boot debugging requires a KGDB I/O 80driver that supports early debugging and the driver must be built into 81the kernel directly. Kgdb I/O driver configuration takes place via 82kernel or module parameters which you can learn more about in the 83section that describes the parameter kgdboc. 84 85Here is an example set of ``.config`` symbols to enable or disable for kgdb:: 86 87 # CONFIG_STRICT_KERNEL_RWX is not set 88 CONFIG_FRAME_POINTER=y 89 CONFIG_KGDB=y 90 CONFIG_KGDB_SERIAL_CONSOLE=y 91 92Kernel config options for kdb 93----------------------------- 94 95Kdb is quite a bit more complex than the simple gdbstub sitting on top 96of the kernel's debug core. Kdb must implement a shell, and also adds 97some helper functions in other parts of the kernel, responsible for 98printing out interesting data such as what you would see if you ran 99``lsmod``, or ``ps``. In order to build kdb into the kernel you follow the 100same steps as you would for kgdb. 101 102The main config option for kdb is ``CONFIG_KGDB_KDB`` which is called 103:menuselection:`KGDB_KDB: include kdb frontend for kgdb` in the config menu. 104In theory you would have already also selected an I/O driver such as the 105``CONFIG_KGDB_SERIAL_CONSOLE`` interface if you plan on using kdb on a 106serial port, when you were configuring kgdb. 107 108If you want to use a PS/2-style keyboard with kdb, you would select 109``CONFIG_KDB_KEYBOARD`` which is called :menuselection:`KGDB_KDB: keyboard as 110input device` in the config menu. The ``CONFIG_KDB_KEYBOARD`` option is not 111used for anything in the gdb interface to kgdb. The ``CONFIG_KDB_KEYBOARD`` 112option only works with kdb. 113 114Here is an example set of ``.config`` symbols to enable/disable kdb:: 115 116 # CONFIG_STRICT_KERNEL_RWX is not set 117 CONFIG_FRAME_POINTER=y 118 CONFIG_KGDB=y 119 CONFIG_KGDB_SERIAL_CONSOLE=y 120 CONFIG_KGDB_KDB=y 121 CONFIG_KDB_KEYBOARD=y 122 123Kernel Debugger Boot Arguments 124============================== 125 126This section describes the various runtime kernel parameters that affect 127the configuration of the kernel debugger. The following chapter covers 128using kdb and kgdb as well as providing some examples of the 129configuration parameters. 130 131Kernel parameter: kgdboc 132------------------------ 133 134The kgdboc driver was originally an abbreviation meant to stand for 135"kgdb over console". Today it is the primary mechanism to configure how 136to communicate from gdb to kgdb as well as the devices you want to use 137to interact with the kdb shell. 138 139For kgdb/gdb, kgdboc is designed to work with a single serial port. It 140is intended to cover the circumstance where you want to use a serial 141console as your primary console as well as using it to perform kernel 142debugging. It is also possible to use kgdb on a serial port which is not 143designated as a system console. Kgdboc may be configured as a kernel 144built-in or a kernel loadable module. You can only make use of 145``kgdbwait`` and early debugging if you build kgdboc into the kernel as 146a built-in. 147 148Optionally you can elect to activate kms (Kernel Mode Setting) 149integration. When you use kms with kgdboc and you have a video driver 150that has atomic mode setting hooks, it is possible to enter the debugger 151on the graphics console. When the kernel execution is resumed, the 152previous graphics mode will be restored. This integration can serve as a 153useful tool to aid in diagnosing crashes or doing analysis of memory 154with kdb while allowing the full graphics console applications to run. 155 156kgdboc arguments 157~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 158 159Usage:: 160 161 kgdboc=[kms][[,]kbd][[,]serial_device][,baud] 162 163The order listed above must be observed if you use any of the optional 164configurations together. 165 166Abbreviations: 167 168- kms = Kernel Mode Setting 169 170- kbd = Keyboard 171 172You can configure kgdboc to use the keyboard, and/or a serial device 173depending on if you are using kdb and/or kgdb, in one of the following 174scenarios. The order listed above must be observed if you use any of the 175optional configurations together. Using kms + only gdb is generally not 176a useful combination. 177 178Using loadable module or built-in 179^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 180 1811. As a kernel built-in: 182 183 Use the kernel boot argument:: 184 185 kgdboc=<tty-device>,[baud] 186 1872. As a kernel loadable module: 188 189 Use the command:: 190 191 modprobe kgdboc kgdboc=<tty-device>,[baud] 192 193 Here are two examples of how you might format the kgdboc string. The 194 first is for an x86 target using the first serial port. The second 195 example is for the ARM Versatile AB using the second serial port. 196 197 1. ``kgdboc=ttyS0,115200`` 198 199 2. ``kgdboc=ttyAMA1,115200`` 200 201Configure kgdboc at runtime with sysfs 202^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 203 204At run time you can enable or disable kgdboc by writing parameters 205into sysfs. Here are two examples: 206 2071. Enable kgdboc on ttyS0:: 208 209 echo ttyS0 > /sys/module/kgdboc/parameters/kgdboc 210 2112. Disable kgdboc:: 212 213 echo "" > /sys/module/kgdboc/parameters/kgdboc 214 215.. note:: 216 217 You do not need to specify the baud if you are configuring the 218 console on tty which is already configured or open. 219 220More examples 221^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 222 223You can configure kgdboc to use the keyboard, and/or a serial device 224depending on if you are using kdb and/or kgdb, in one of the following 225scenarios. 226 2271. kdb and kgdb over only a serial port:: 228 229 kgdboc=<serial_device>[,baud] 230 231 Example:: 232 233 kgdboc=ttyS0,115200 234 2352. kdb and kgdb with keyboard and a serial port:: 236 237 kgdboc=kbd,<serial_device>[,baud] 238 239 Example:: 240 241 kgdboc=kbd,ttyS0,115200 242 2433. kdb with a keyboard:: 244 245 kgdboc=kbd 246 2474. kdb with kernel mode setting:: 248 249 kgdboc=kms,kbd 250 2515. kdb with kernel mode setting and kgdb over a serial port:: 252 253 kgdboc=kms,kbd,ttyS0,115200 254 255.. note:: 256 257 Kgdboc does not support interrupting the target via the gdb remote 258 protocol. You must manually send a :kbd:`SysRq-G` unless you have a proxy 259 that splits console output to a terminal program. A console proxy has a 260 separate TCP port for the debugger and a separate TCP port for the 261 "human" console. The proxy can take care of sending the :kbd:`SysRq-G` 262 for you. 263 264When using kgdboc with no debugger proxy, you can end up connecting the 265debugger at one of two entry points. If an exception occurs after you 266have loaded kgdboc, a message should print on the console stating it is 267waiting for the debugger. In this case you disconnect your terminal 268program and then connect the debugger in its place. If you want to 269interrupt the target system and forcibly enter a debug session you have 270to issue a :kbd:`Sysrq` sequence and then type the letter :kbd:`g`. Then you 271disconnect the terminal session and connect gdb. Your options if you 272don't like this are to hack gdb to send the :kbd:`SysRq-G` for you as well as 273on the initial connect, or to use a debugger proxy that allows an 274unmodified gdb to do the debugging. 275 276Kernel parameter: ``kgdboc_earlycon`` 277------------------------------------- 278 279If you specify the kernel parameter ``kgdboc_earlycon`` and your serial 280driver registers a boot console that supports polling (doesn't need 281interrupts and implements a nonblocking read() function) kgdb will attempt 282to work using the boot console until it can transition to the regular 283tty driver specified by the ``kgdboc`` parameter. 284 285Normally there is only one boot console (especially that implements the 286read() function) so just adding ``kgdboc_earlycon`` on its own is 287sufficient to make this work. If you have more than one boot console you 288can add the boot console's name to differentiate. Note that names that 289are registered through the boot console layer and the tty layer are not 290the same for the same port. 291 292For instance, on one board to be explicit you might do:: 293 294 kgdboc_earlycon=qcom_geni kgdboc=ttyMSM0 295 296If the only boot console on the device was "qcom_geni", you could simplify:: 297 298 kgdboc_earlycon kgdboc=ttyMSM0 299 300Kernel parameter: ``kgdbwait`` 301------------------------------ 302 303The Kernel command line option ``kgdbwait`` makes kgdb wait for a 304debugger connection during booting of a kernel. You can only use this 305option if you compiled a kgdb I/O driver into the kernel and you 306specified the I/O driver configuration as a kernel command line option. 307The kgdbwait parameter should always follow the configuration parameter 308for the kgdb I/O driver in the kernel command line else the I/O driver 309will not be configured prior to asking the kernel to use it to wait. 310 311The kernel will stop and wait as early as the I/O driver and 312architecture allows when you use this option. If you build the kgdb I/O 313driver as a loadable kernel module kgdbwait will not do anything. 314 315Kernel parameter: ``kgdbcon`` 316----------------------------- 317 318The ``kgdbcon`` feature allows you to see printk() messages inside gdb 319while gdb is connected to the kernel. Kdb does not make use of the kgdbcon 320feature. 321 322Kgdb supports using the gdb serial protocol to send console messages to 323the debugger when the debugger is connected and running. There are two 324ways to activate this feature. 325 3261. Activate with the kernel command line option:: 327 328 kgdbcon 329 3302. Use sysfs before configuring an I/O driver:: 331 332 echo 1 > /sys/module/debug_core/parameters/kgdb_use_con 333 334.. note:: 335 336 If you do this after you configure the kgdb I/O driver, the 337 setting will not take effect until the next point the I/O is 338 reconfigured. 339 340.. important:: 341 342 You cannot use kgdboc + kgdbcon on a tty that is an 343 active system console. An example of incorrect usage is:: 344 345 console=ttyS0,115200 kgdboc=ttyS0 kgdbcon 346 347It is possible to use this option with kgdboc on a tty that is not a 348system console. 349 350Run time parameter: ``kgdbreboot`` 351---------------------------------- 352 353The kgdbreboot feature allows you to change how the debugger deals with 354the reboot notification. You have 3 choices for the behavior. The 355default behavior is always set to 0. 356 357.. tabularcolumns:: |p{0.4cm}|p{11.5cm}|p{5.6cm}| 358 359.. flat-table:: 360 :widths: 1 10 8 361 362 * - 1 363 - ``echo -1 > /sys/module/debug_core/parameters/kgdbreboot`` 364 - Ignore the reboot notification entirely. 365 366 * - 2 367 - ``echo 0 > /sys/module/debug_core/parameters/kgdbreboot`` 368 - Send the detach message to any attached debugger client. 369 370 * - 3 371 - ``echo 1 > /sys/module/debug_core/parameters/kgdbreboot`` 372 - Enter the debugger on reboot notify. 373 374Kernel parameter: ``nokaslr`` 375----------------------------- 376 377If the architecture that you are using enables KASLR by default, 378you should consider turning it off. KASLR randomizes the 379virtual address where the kernel image is mapped and confuses 380gdb which resolves addresses of kernel symbols from the symbol table 381of vmlinux. 382 383Using kdb 384========= 385 386Quick start for kdb on a serial port 387------------------------------------ 388 389This is a quick example of how to use kdb. 390 3911. Configure kgdboc at boot using kernel parameters:: 392 393 console=ttyS0,115200 kgdboc=ttyS0,115200 nokaslr 394 395 OR 396 397 Configure kgdboc after the kernel has booted; assuming you are using 398 a serial port console:: 399 400 echo ttyS0 > /sys/module/kgdboc/parameters/kgdboc 401 4022. Enter the kernel debugger manually or by waiting for an oops or 403 fault. There are several ways you can enter the kernel debugger 404 manually; all involve using the :kbd:`SysRq-G`, which means you must have 405 enabled ``CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ=y`` in your kernel config. 406 407 - When logged in as root or with a super user session you can run:: 408 409 echo g > /proc/sysrq-trigger 410 411 - Example using minicom 2.2 412 413 Press: :kbd:`CTRL-A` :kbd:`f` :kbd:`g` 414 415 - When you have telneted to a terminal server that supports sending 416 a remote break 417 418 Press: :kbd:`CTRL-]` 419 420 Type in: ``send break`` 421 422 Press: :kbd:`Enter` :kbd:`g` 423 4243. From the kdb prompt you can run the ``help`` command to see a complete 425 list of the commands that are available. 426 427 Some useful commands in kdb include: 428 429 =========== ================================================================= 430 ``lsmod`` Shows where kernel modules are loaded 431 ``ps`` Displays only the active processes 432 ``ps A`` Shows all the processes 433 ``summary`` Shows kernel version info and memory usage 434 ``bt`` Get a backtrace of the current process using dump_stack() 435 ``dmesg`` View the kernel syslog buffer 436 ``go`` Continue the system 437 =========== ================================================================= 438 4394. When you are done using kdb you need to consider rebooting the system 440 or using the ``go`` command to resuming normal kernel execution. If you 441 have paused the kernel for a lengthy period of time, applications 442 that rely on timely networking or anything to do with real wall clock 443 time could be adversely affected, so you should take this into 444 consideration when using the kernel debugger. 445 446Quick start for kdb using a keyboard connected console 447------------------------------------------------------ 448 449This is a quick example of how to use kdb with a keyboard. 450 4511. Configure kgdboc at boot using kernel parameters:: 452 453 kgdboc=kbd 454 455 OR 456 457 Configure kgdboc after the kernel has booted:: 458 459 echo kbd > /sys/module/kgdboc/parameters/kgdboc 460 4612. Enter the kernel debugger manually or by waiting for an oops or 462 fault. There are several ways you can enter the kernel debugger 463 manually; all involve using the :kbd:`SysRq-G`, which means you must have 464 enabled ``CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ=y`` in your kernel config. 465 466 - When logged in as root or with a super user session you can run:: 467 468 echo g > /proc/sysrq-trigger 469 470 - Example using a laptop keyboard: 471 472 Press and hold down: :kbd:`Alt` 473 474 Press and hold down: :kbd:`Fn` 475 476 Press and release the key with the label: :kbd:`SysRq` 477 478 Release: :kbd:`Fn` 479 480 Press and release: :kbd:`g` 481 482 Release: :kbd:`Alt` 483 484 - Example using a PS/2 101-key keyboard 485 486 Press and hold down: :kbd:`Alt` 487 488 Press and release the key with the label: :kbd:`SysRq` 489 490 Press and release: :kbd:`g` 491 492 Release: :kbd:`Alt` 493 4943. Now type in a kdb command such as ``help``, ``dmesg``, ``bt`` or ``go`` to 495 continue kernel execution. 496 497Using kgdb / gdb 498================ 499 500In order to use kgdb you must activate it by passing configuration 501information to one of the kgdb I/O drivers. If you do not pass any 502configuration information kgdb will not do anything at all. Kgdb will 503only actively hook up to the kernel trap hooks if a kgdb I/O driver is 504loaded and configured. If you unconfigure a kgdb I/O driver, kgdb will 505unregister all the kernel hook points. 506 507All kgdb I/O drivers can be reconfigured at run time, if 508``CONFIG_SYSFS`` and ``CONFIG_MODULES`` are enabled, by echo'ing a new 509config string to ``/sys/module/<driver>/parameter/<option>``. The driver 510can be unconfigured by passing an empty string. You cannot change the 511configuration while the debugger is attached. Make sure to detach the 512debugger with the ``detach`` command prior to trying to unconfigure a 513kgdb I/O driver. 514 515Connecting with gdb to a serial port 516------------------------------------ 517 5181. Configure kgdboc 519 520 Configure kgdboc at boot using kernel parameters:: 521 522 kgdboc=ttyS0,115200 523 524 OR 525 526 Configure kgdboc after the kernel has booted:: 527 528 echo ttyS0 > /sys/module/kgdboc/parameters/kgdboc 529 5302. Stop kernel execution (break into the debugger) 531 532 In order to connect to gdb via kgdboc, the kernel must first be 533 stopped. There are several ways to stop the kernel which include 534 using kgdbwait as a boot argument, via a :kbd:`SysRq-G`, or running the 535 kernel until it takes an exception where it waits for the debugger to 536 attach. 537 538 - When logged in as root or with a super user session you can run:: 539 540 echo g > /proc/sysrq-trigger 541 542 - Example using minicom 2.2 543 544 Press: :kbd:`CTRL-A` :kbd:`f` :kbd:`g` 545 546 - When you have telneted to a terminal server that supports sending 547 a remote break 548 549 Press: :kbd:`CTRL-]` 550 551 Type in: ``send break`` 552 553 Press: :kbd:`Enter` :kbd:`g` 554 5553. Connect from gdb 556 557 Example (using a directly connected port):: 558 559 % gdb ./vmlinux 560 (gdb) set serial baud 115200 561 (gdb) target remote /dev/ttyS0 562 563 564 Example (kgdb to a terminal server on TCP port 2012):: 565 566 % gdb ./vmlinux 567 (gdb) target remote 192.168.2.2:2012 568 569 570 Once connected, you can debug a kernel the way you would debug an 571 application program. 572 573 If you are having problems connecting or something is going seriously 574 wrong while debugging, it will most often be the case that you want 575 to enable gdb to be verbose about its target communications. You do 576 this prior to issuing the ``target remote`` command by typing in:: 577 578 set debug remote 1 579 580Remember if you continue in gdb, and need to "break in" again, you need 581to issue an other :kbd:`SysRq-G`. It is easy to create a simple entry point by 582putting a breakpoint at ``sys_sync`` and then you can run ``sync`` from a 583shell or script to break into the debugger. 584 585kgdb and kdb interoperability 586============================= 587 588It is possible to transition between kdb and kgdb dynamically. The debug 589core will remember which you used the last time and automatically start 590in the same mode. 591 592Switching between kdb and kgdb 593------------------------------ 594 595Switching from kgdb to kdb 596~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 597 598There are two ways to switch from kgdb to kdb: you can use gdb to issue 599a maintenance packet, or you can blindly type the command ``$3#33``. 600Whenever the kernel debugger stops in kgdb mode it will print the 601message ``KGDB or $3#33 for KDB``. It is important to note that you have 602to type the sequence correctly in one pass. You cannot type a backspace 603or delete because kgdb will interpret that as part of the debug stream. 604 6051. Change from kgdb to kdb by blindly typing:: 606 607 $3#33 608 6092. Change from kgdb to kdb with gdb:: 610 611 maintenance packet 3 612 613 .. note:: 614 615 Now you must kill gdb. Typically you press :kbd:`CTRL-Z` and issue 616 the command:: 617 618 kill -9 % 619 620Change from kdb to kgdb 621~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 622 623There are two ways you can change from kdb to kgdb. You can manually 624enter kgdb mode by issuing the kgdb command from the kdb shell prompt, 625or you can connect gdb while the kdb shell prompt is active. The kdb 626shell looks for the typical first commands that gdb would issue with the 627gdb remote protocol and if it sees one of those commands it 628automatically changes into kgdb mode. 629 6301. From kdb issue the command:: 631 632 kgdb 633 6342. At the kdb prompt, disconnect the terminal program and connect gdb in 635 its place. 636 637Running kdb commands from gdb 638----------------------------- 639 640It is possible to run a limited set of kdb commands from gdb, using the 641gdb monitor command. You don't want to execute any of the run control or 642breakpoint operations, because it can disrupt the state of the kernel 643debugger. You should be using gdb for breakpoints and run control 644operations if you have gdb connected. The more useful commands to run 645are things like lsmod, dmesg, ps or possibly some of the memory 646information commands. To see all the kdb commands you can run 647``monitor help``. 648 649Example:: 650 651 (gdb) monitor ps 652 1 idle process (state I) and 653 27 sleeping system daemon (state M) processes suppressed, 654 use 'ps A' to see all. 655 Task Addr Pid Parent [*] cpu State Thread Command 656 657 0xc78291d0 1 0 0 0 S 0xc7829404 init 658 0xc7954150 942 1 0 0 S 0xc7954384 dropbear 659 0xc78789c0 944 1 0 0 S 0xc7878bf4 sh 660 (gdb) 661 662kgdb Test Suite 663=============== 664 665When kgdb is enabled in the kernel config you can also elect to enable 666the config parameter ``KGDB_TESTS``. Turning this on will enable a special 667kgdb I/O module which is designed to test the kgdb internal functions. 668 669The kgdb tests are mainly intended for developers to test the kgdb 670internals as well as a tool for developing a new kgdb architecture 671specific implementation. These tests are not really for end users of the 672Linux kernel. The primary source of documentation would be to look in 673the ``drivers/misc/kgdbts.c`` file. 674 675The kgdb test suite can also be configured at compile time to run the 676core set of tests by setting the kernel config parameter 677``KGDB_TESTS_ON_BOOT``. This particular option is aimed at automated 678regression testing and does not require modifying the kernel boot config 679arguments. If this is turned on, the kgdb test suite can be disabled by 680specifying ``kgdbts=`` as a kernel boot argument. 681 682Kernel Debugger Internals 683========================= 684 685Architecture Specifics 686---------------------- 687 688The kernel debugger is organized into a number of components: 689 6901. The debug core 691 692 The debug core is found in ``kernel/debugger/debug_core.c``. It 693 contains: 694 695 - A generic OS exception handler which includes sync'ing the 696 processors into a stopped state on an multi-CPU system. 697 698 - The API to talk to the kgdb I/O drivers 699 700 - The API to make calls to the arch-specific kgdb implementation 701 702 - The logic to perform safe memory reads and writes to memory while 703 using the debugger 704 705 - A full implementation for software breakpoints unless overridden 706 by the arch 707 708 - The API to invoke either the kdb or kgdb frontend to the debug 709 core. 710 711 - The structures and callback API for atomic kernel mode setting. 712 713 .. note:: kgdboc is where the kms callbacks are invoked. 714 7152. kgdb arch-specific implementation 716 717 This implementation is generally found in ``arch/*/kernel/kgdb.c``. As 718 an example, ``arch/x86/kernel/kgdb.c`` contains the specifics to 719 implement HW breakpoint as well as the initialization to dynamically 720 register and unregister for the trap handlers on this architecture. 721 The arch-specific portion implements: 722 723 - contains an arch-specific trap catcher which invokes 724 kgdb_handle_exception() to start kgdb about doing its work 725 726 - translation to and from gdb specific packet format to struct pt_regs 727 728 - Registration and unregistration of architecture specific trap 729 hooks 730 731 - Any special exception handling and cleanup 732 733 - NMI exception handling and cleanup 734 735 - (optional) HW breakpoints 736 7373. gdbstub frontend (aka kgdb) 738 739 The gdbstub is located in ``kernel/debug/gdbstub.c``. It contains: 740 741 - All the logic to implement the gdb serial protocol 742 7434. kdb frontend 744 745 The kdb debugger shell is broken down into a number of components. 746 The kdb core is located in kernel/debug/kdb. There are a number of 747 helper functions in some of the other kernel components to make it 748 possible for kdb to examine and report information about the kernel 749 without taking locks that could cause a kernel deadlock. The kdb core 750 implements the following functionality. 751 752 - A simple shell 753 754 - The kdb core command set 755 756 - A registration API to register additional kdb shell commands. 757 758 - A good example of a self-contained kdb module is the ``ftdump`` 759 command for dumping the ftrace buffer. See: 760 ``kernel/trace/trace_kdb.c`` 761 762 - For an example of how to dynamically register a new kdb command 763 you can build the kdb_hello.ko kernel module from 764 ``samples/kdb/kdb_hello.c``. To build this example you can set 765 ``CONFIG_SAMPLES=y`` and ``CONFIG_SAMPLE_KDB=m`` in your kernel 766 config. Later run ``modprobe kdb_hello`` and the next time you 767 enter the kdb shell, you can run the ``hello`` command. 768 769 - The implementation for kdb_printf() which emits messages directly 770 to I/O drivers, bypassing the kernel log. 771 772 - SW / HW breakpoint management for the kdb shell 773 7745. kgdb I/O driver 775 776 Each kgdb I/O driver has to provide an implementation for the 777 following: 778 779 - configuration via built-in or module 780 781 - dynamic configuration and kgdb hook registration calls 782 783 - read and write character interface 784 785 - A cleanup handler for unconfiguring from the kgdb core 786 787 - (optional) Early debug methodology 788 789 Any given kgdb I/O driver has to operate very closely with the 790 hardware and must do it in such a way that does not enable interrupts 791 or change other parts of the system context without completely 792 restoring them. The kgdb core will repeatedly "poll" a kgdb I/O 793 driver for characters when it needs input. The I/O driver is expected 794 to return immediately if there is no data available. Doing so allows 795 for the future possibility to touch watchdog hardware in such a way 796 as to have a target system not reset when these are enabled. 797 798If you are intent on adding kgdb architecture specific support for a new 799architecture, the architecture should define ``HAVE_ARCH_KGDB`` in the 800architecture specific Kconfig file. This will enable kgdb for the 801architecture, and at that point you must create an architecture specific 802kgdb implementation. 803 804There are a few flags which must be set on every architecture in their 805``asm/kgdb.h`` file. These are: 806 807- ``NUMREGBYTES``: 808 The size in bytes of all of the registers, so that we 809 can ensure they will all fit into a packet. 810 811- ``BUFMAX``: 812 The size in bytes of the buffer GDB will read into. This must 813 be larger than NUMREGBYTES. 814 815- ``CACHE_FLUSH_IS_SAFE``: 816 Set to 1 if it is always safe to call 817 flush_cache_range or flush_icache_range. On some architectures, 818 these functions may not be safe to call on SMP since we keep other 819 CPUs in a holding pattern. 820 821There are also the following functions for the common backend, found in 822``kernel/kgdb.c``, that must be supplied by the architecture-specific 823backend unless marked as (optional), in which case a default function 824maybe used if the architecture does not need to provide a specific 825implementation. 826 827.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/kgdb.h 828 :internal: 829 830kgdboc internals 831---------------- 832 833kgdboc and uarts 834~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 835 836The kgdboc driver is actually a very thin driver that relies on the 837underlying low level to the hardware driver having "polling hooks" to 838which the tty driver is attached. In the initial implementation of 839kgdboc the serial_core was changed to expose a low level UART hook for 840doing polled mode reading and writing of a single character while in an 841atomic context. When kgdb makes an I/O request to the debugger, kgdboc 842invokes a callback in the serial core which in turn uses the callback in 843the UART driver. 844 845When using kgdboc with a UART, the UART driver must implement two 846callbacks in the struct uart_ops. 847Example from ``drivers/8250.c``:: 848 849 850 #ifdef CONFIG_CONSOLE_POLL 851 .poll_get_char = serial8250_get_poll_char, 852 .poll_put_char = serial8250_put_poll_char, 853 #endif 854 855 856Any implementation specifics around creating a polling driver use the 857``#ifdef CONFIG_CONSOLE_POLL``, as shown above. Keep in mind that 858polling hooks have to be implemented in such a way that they can be 859called from an atomic context and have to restore the state of the UART 860chip on return such that the system can return to normal when the 861debugger detaches. You need to be very careful with any kind of lock you 862consider, because failing here is most likely going to mean pressing the 863reset button. 864 865kgdboc and keyboards 866~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 867 868The kgdboc driver contains logic to configure communications with an 869attached keyboard. The keyboard infrastructure is only compiled into the 870kernel when ``CONFIG_KDB_KEYBOARD=y`` is set in the kernel configuration. 871 872The core polled keyboard driver for PS/2 type keyboards is in 873``drivers/char/kdb_keyboard.c``. This driver is hooked into the debug core 874when kgdboc populates the callback in the array called 875:c:expr:`kdb_poll_funcs[]`. The kdb_get_kbd_char() is the top-level 876function which polls hardware for single character input. 877 878kgdboc and kms 879~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 880 881The kgdboc driver contains logic to request the graphics display to 882switch to a text context when you are using ``kgdboc=kms,kbd``, provided 883that you have a video driver which has a frame buffer console and atomic 884kernel mode setting support. 885 886Every time the kernel debugger is entered it calls 887kgdboc_pre_exp_handler() which in turn calls con_debug_enter() 888in the virtual console layer. On resuming kernel execution, the kernel 889debugger calls kgdboc_post_exp_handler() which in turn calls 890con_debug_leave(). 891 892Any video driver that wants to be compatible with the kernel debugger 893and the atomic kms callbacks must implement the ``mode_set_base_atomic``, 894``fb_debug_enter`` and ``fb_debug_leave operations``. For the 895``fb_debug_enter`` and ``fb_debug_leave`` the option exists to use the 896generic drm fb helper functions or implement something custom for the 897hardware. The following example shows the initialization of the 898.mode_set_base_atomic operation in 899drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_display.c:: 900 901 902 static const struct drm_crtc_helper_funcs intel_helper_funcs = { 903 [...] 904 .mode_set_base_atomic = intel_pipe_set_base_atomic, 905 [...] 906 }; 907 908 909Here is an example of how the i915 driver initializes the 910fb_debug_enter and fb_debug_leave functions to use the generic drm 911helpers in ``drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_fb.c``:: 912 913 914 static struct fb_ops intelfb_ops = { 915 [...] 916 .fb_debug_enter = drm_fb_helper_debug_enter, 917 .fb_debug_leave = drm_fb_helper_debug_leave, 918 [...] 919 }; 920 921 922Credits 923======= 924 925The following people have contributed to this document: 926 9271. Amit Kale <amitkale@linsyssoft.com> 928 9292. Tom Rini <trini@kernel.crashing.org> 930 931In March 2008 this document was completely rewritten by: 932 933- Jason Wessel <jason.wessel@windriver.com> 934 935In Jan 2010 this document was updated to include kdb. 936 937- Jason Wessel <jason.wessel@windriver.com> 938