| TEXTDUMP(4) | Device Drivers Manual | TEXTDUMP(4) |
textdump —
textdump kernel dumping facility
options DDB
options KDB
options TEXTDUMP_PREFERRED
options TEXTDUMP_VERBOSE
The textdump facility allows the capture
of kernel debugging information to disk in a human-readable rather than the
machine-readable form normally used with kernel memory dumps and minidumps.
This representation, while less complete in that it does not capture full
kernel state, can provide debugging information in a more compact, portable,
and persistent form than a traditional dump. By combining
textdump with other ddb(4)
facilities, such as scripting and output capture, detailed bug information
can be captured in a fully automated manner.
textdump data is stored in a dump
partition in the same style as a regular memory dump, and will be
automatically extracted by savecore(8) if present on
boot.
textdump files are stored in the
tar(5) format, and consist of one or more text files, each
storing a particular type of debugging output. The following parts may be
present:
debug.ddb.textdump.do_ddb sysctl.options
INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE has been compiled into the kernel. May be
disabled by clearing the
debug.ddb.textdump.do_config sysctl.debug.ddb.textdump.do_msgbuf sysctl.debug.ddb.textdump.do_panic sysctl.debug.ddb.textdump.do_version sysctl.Kernel textdumps may be extracted using tar(1).
The textdump facility is enabled as part
of the kernel debugger using options KDB and
options DDB. By default, kernel dumps generated on
panic or via explicit requests for a dump will be regular memory dumps;
however, by using the textdump set command in
ddb(4), or by setting the
debug.ddb.textdump.pending sysctl to 1 using
sysctl(8), it is possible to request that the next dump be
a textdump. One may also directly trigger a textdump in
ddb(4) by running the command textdump
dump.
If at the ddb(4) command line, the commands
textdump set, textdump
status, and textdump unset may be used to
set, query, and clear the textdump pending flag.
As with regular kernel dumps, a dump partition must be automatically or manually configured using dumpon(8).
Additional kernel config(8) options:
TEXTDUMP_PREFERREDtextdump set ddb(8)
commands.TEXTDUMP_VERBOSEIn the following example, the script
kdb.enter.panic will run when the kernel debugger is
entered as a result of a panic, enable output capture, dump several useful
pieces of debugging information, and then invoke panic in order to force a
kernel dump to be written out followed by a reboot:
script kdb.enter.panic=textdump set; capture on; show allpcpu; bt; ps; alltrace; show alllocks; call doadump; reset
In the following example, the script
kdb.enter.witness will run when the kernel debugger
is entered as a result of a witness violation, printing lock-related
information for the user:
script kdb.enter.witness=show locks
These scripts may also be configured using the ddb(8) utility.
tar(1), ddb(4), tar(5), ddb(8), dumpon(8), savecore(8), sysctl(8)
The textdump facility first appeared in
FreeBSD 7.1.
The textdump facility was created by
Robert N. M. Watson.
| December 24, 2008 | Debian |