diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'kernel')
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_debugger.c | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_private.h | 5 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_support.c | 329 |
3 files changed, 28 insertions, 307 deletions
diff --git a/kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_debugger.c b/kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_debugger.c index 0220afda3200..e91fc3e4edd5 100644 --- a/kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_debugger.c +++ b/kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_debugger.c @@ -140,7 +140,6 @@ int kdb_stub(struct kgdb_state *ks) */ kdb_common_deinit_state(); KDB_STATE_CLEAR(PAGER); - kdbnearsym_cleanup(); if (error == KDB_CMD_KGDB) { if (KDB_STATE(DOING_KGDB)) KDB_STATE_CLEAR(DOING_KGDB); diff --git a/kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_private.h b/kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_private.h index 170c69aedebb..8dbc840113c9 100644 --- a/kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_private.h +++ b/kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_private.h @@ -109,7 +109,6 @@ extern int kdbgetaddrarg(int, const char **, int*, unsigned long *, long *, char **); extern int kdbgetsymval(const char *, kdb_symtab_t *); extern int kdbnearsym(unsigned long, kdb_symtab_t *); -extern void kdbnearsym_cleanup(void); extern char *kdb_strdup(const char *str, gfp_t type); extern void kdb_symbol_print(unsigned long, const kdb_symtab_t *, unsigned int); @@ -233,10 +232,6 @@ extern struct task_struct *kdb_curr_task(int); #define GFP_KDB (in_dbg_master() ? GFP_ATOMIC : GFP_KERNEL) -extern void *debug_kmalloc(size_t size, gfp_t flags); -extern void debug_kfree(void *); -extern void debug_kusage(void); - extern struct task_struct *kdb_current_task; extern struct pt_regs *kdb_current_regs; diff --git a/kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_support.c b/kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_support.c index 9f50d22d68e6..c605b17b2a0d 100644 --- a/kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_support.c +++ b/kernel/debug/kdb/kdb_support.c @@ -52,48 +52,48 @@ int kdbgetsymval(const char *symname, kdb_symtab_t *symtab) } EXPORT_SYMBOL(kdbgetsymval); -static char *kdb_name_table[100]; /* arbitrary size */ - -/* - * kdbnearsym - Return the name of the symbol with the nearest address - * less than 'addr'. +/** + * kdbnearsym() - Return the name of the symbol with the nearest address + * less than @addr. + * @addr: Address to check for near symbol + * @symtab: Structure to receive results * - * Parameters: - * addr Address to check for symbol near - * symtab Structure to receive results - * Returns: - * 0 No sections contain this address, symtab zero filled - * 1 Address mapped to module/symbol/section, data in symtab - * Remarks: - * 2.6 kallsyms has a "feature" where it unpacks the name into a - * string. If that string is reused before the caller expects it - * then the caller sees its string change without warning. To - * avoid cluttering up the main kdb code with lots of kdb_strdup, - * tests and kfree calls, kdbnearsym maintains an LRU list of the - * last few unique strings. The list is sized large enough to - * hold active strings, no kdb caller of kdbnearsym makes more - * than ~20 later calls before using a saved value. + * WARNING: This function may return a pointer to a single statically + * allocated buffer (namebuf). kdb's unusual calling context (single + * threaded, all other CPUs halted) provides us sufficient locking for + * this to be safe. The only constraint imposed by the static buffer is + * that the caller must consume any previous reply prior to another call + * to lookup a new symbol. + * + * Note that, strictly speaking, some architectures may re-enter the kdb + * trap if the system turns out to be very badly damaged and this breaks + * the single-threaded assumption above. In these circumstances successful + * continuation and exit from the inner trap is unlikely to work and any + * user attempting this receives a prominent warning before being allowed + * to progress. In these circumstances we remain memory safe because + * namebuf[KSYM_NAME_LEN-1] will never change from '\0' although we do + * tolerate the possibility of garbled symbol display from the outer kdb + * trap. + * + * Return: + * * 0 - No sections contain this address, symtab zero filled + * * 1 - Address mapped to module/symbol/section, data in symtab */ int kdbnearsym(unsigned long addr, kdb_symtab_t *symtab) { int ret = 0; unsigned long symbolsize = 0; unsigned long offset = 0; -#define knt1_size 128 /* must be >= kallsyms table size */ - char *knt1 = NULL; + static char namebuf[KSYM_NAME_LEN]; kdb_dbg_printf(AR, "addr=0x%lx, symtab=%px\n", addr, symtab); memset(symtab, 0, sizeof(*symtab)); if (addr < 4096) goto out; - knt1 = debug_kmalloc(knt1_size, GFP_ATOMIC); - if (!knt1) { - kdb_func_printf("addr=0x%lx cannot kmalloc knt1\n", addr); - goto out; - } + symtab->sym_name = kallsyms_lookup(addr, &symbolsize , &offset, - (char **)(&symtab->mod_name), knt1); + (char **)(&symtab->mod_name), namebuf); if (offset > 8*1024*1024) { symtab->sym_name = NULL; addr = offset = symbolsize = 0; @@ -102,63 +102,14 @@ int kdbnearsym(unsigned long addr, kdb_symtab_t *symtab) symtab->sym_end = symtab->sym_start + symbolsize; ret = symtab->sym_name != NULL && *(symtab->sym_name) != '\0'; - if (ret) { - int i; - /* Another 2.6 kallsyms "feature". Sometimes the sym_name is - * set but the buffer passed into kallsyms_lookup is not used, - * so it contains garbage. The caller has to work out which - * buffer needs to be saved. - * - * What was Rusty smoking when he wrote that code? - */ - if (symtab->sym_name != knt1) { - strncpy(knt1, symtab->sym_name, knt1_size); - knt1[knt1_size-1] = '\0'; - } - for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(kdb_name_table); ++i) { - if (kdb_name_table[i] && - strcmp(kdb_name_table[i], knt1) == 0) - break; - } - if (i >= ARRAY_SIZE(kdb_name_table)) { - debug_kfree(kdb_name_table[0]); - memmove(kdb_name_table, kdb_name_table+1, - sizeof(kdb_name_table[0]) * - (ARRAY_SIZE(kdb_name_table)-1)); - } else { - debug_kfree(knt1); - knt1 = kdb_name_table[i]; - memmove(kdb_name_table+i, kdb_name_table+i+1, - sizeof(kdb_name_table[0]) * - (ARRAY_SIZE(kdb_name_table)-i-1)); - } - i = ARRAY_SIZE(kdb_name_table) - 1; - kdb_name_table[i] = knt1; - symtab->sym_name = kdb_name_table[i]; - knt1 = NULL; - } - if (symtab->mod_name == NULL) symtab->mod_name = "kernel"; kdb_dbg_printf(AR, "returns %d symtab->sym_start=0x%lx, symtab->mod_name=%px, symtab->sym_name=%px (%s)\n", ret, symtab->sym_start, symtab->mod_name, symtab->sym_name, symtab->sym_name); - out: - debug_kfree(knt1); return ret; } -void kdbnearsym_cleanup(void) -{ - int i; - for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(kdb_name_table); ++i) { - if (kdb_name_table[i]) { - debug_kfree(kdb_name_table[i]); - kdb_name_table[i] = NULL; - } - } -} - static char ks_namebuf[KSYM_NAME_LEN+1], ks_namebuf_prev[KSYM_NAME_LEN+1]; /* @@ -656,230 +607,6 @@ unsigned long kdb_task_state(const struct task_struct *p, unsigned long mask) return (mask & kdb_task_state_string(state)) != 0; } -/* Last ditch allocator for debugging, so we can still debug even when - * the GFP_ATOMIC pool has been exhausted. The algorithms are tuned - * for space usage, not for speed. One smallish memory pool, the free - * chain is always in ascending address order to allow coalescing, - * allocations are done in brute force best fit. - */ - -struct debug_alloc_header { - u32 next; /* offset of next header from start of pool */ - u32 size; - void *caller; -}; - -/* The memory returned by this allocator must be aligned, which means - * so must the header size. Do not assume that sizeof(struct - * debug_alloc_header) is a multiple of the alignment, explicitly - * calculate the overhead of this header, including the alignment. - * The rest of this code must not use sizeof() on any header or - * pointer to a header. - */ -#define dah_align 8 -#define dah_overhead ALIGN(sizeof(struct debug_alloc_header), dah_align) - -static u64 debug_alloc_pool_aligned[256*1024/dah_align]; /* 256K pool */ -static char *debug_alloc_pool = (char *)debug_alloc_pool_aligned; -static u32 dah_first, dah_first_call = 1, dah_used, dah_used_max; - -/* Locking is awkward. The debug code is called from all contexts, - * including non maskable interrupts. A normal spinlock is not safe - * in NMI context. Try to get the debug allocator lock, if it cannot - * be obtained after a second then give up. If the lock could not be - * previously obtained on this cpu then only try once. - * - * sparse has no annotation for "this function _sometimes_ acquires a - * lock", so fudge the acquire/release notation. - */ -static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(dap_lock); -static int get_dap_lock(void) - __acquires(dap_lock) -{ - static int dap_locked = -1; - int count; - if (dap_locked == smp_processor_id()) - count = 1; - else - count = 1000; - while (1) { - if (spin_trylock(&dap_lock)) { - dap_locked = -1; - return 1; - } - if (!count--) - break; - udelay(1000); - } - dap_locked = smp_processor_id(); - __acquire(dap_lock); - return 0; -} - -void *debug_kmalloc(size_t size, gfp_t flags) -{ - unsigned int rem, h_offset; - struct debug_alloc_header *best, *bestprev, *prev, *h; - void *p = NULL; - if (!get_dap_lock()) { - __release(dap_lock); /* we never actually got it */ - return NULL; - } - h = (struct debug_alloc_header *)(debug_alloc_pool + dah_first); - if (dah_first_call) { - h->size = sizeof(debug_alloc_pool_aligned) - dah_overhead; - dah_first_call = 0; - } - size = ALIGN(size, dah_align); - prev = best = bestprev = NULL; - while (1) { - if (h->size >= size && (!best || h->size < best->size)) { - best = h; - bestprev = prev; - if (h->size == size) - break; - } - if (!h->next) - break; - prev = h; - h = (struct debug_alloc_header *)(debug_alloc_pool + h->next); - } - if (!best) - goto out; - rem = best->size - size; - /* The pool must always contain at least one header */ - if (best->next == 0 && bestprev == NULL && rem < dah_overhead) - goto out; - if (rem >= dah_overhead) { - best->size = size; - h_offset = ((char *)best - debug_alloc_pool) + - dah_overhead + best->size; - h = (struct debug_alloc_header *)(debug_alloc_pool + h_offset); - h->size = rem - dah_overhead; - h->next = best->next; - } else - h_offset = best->next; - best->caller = __builtin_return_address(0); - dah_used += best->size; - dah_used_max = max(dah_used, dah_used_max); - if (bestprev) - bestprev->next = h_offset; - else - dah_first = h_offset; - p = (char *)best + dah_overhead; - memset(p, POISON_INUSE, best->size - 1); - *((char *)p + best->size - 1) = POISON_END; -out: - spin_unlock(&dap_lock); - return p; -} - -void debug_kfree(void *p) -{ - struct debug_alloc_header *h; - unsigned int h_offset; - if (!p) - return; - if ((char *)p < debug_alloc_pool || - (char *)p >= debug_alloc_pool + sizeof(debug_alloc_pool_aligned)) { - kfree(p); - return; - } - if (!get_dap_lock()) { - __release(dap_lock); /* we never actually got it */ - return; /* memory leak, cannot be helped */ - } - h = (struct debug_alloc_header *)((char *)p - dah_overhead); - memset(p, POISON_FREE, h->size - 1); - *((char *)p + h->size - 1) = POISON_END; - h->caller = NULL; - dah_used -= h->size; - h_offset = (char *)h - debug_alloc_pool; - if (h_offset < dah_first) { - h->next = dah_first; - dah_first = h_offset; - } else { - struct debug_alloc_header *prev; - unsigned int prev_offset; - prev = (struct debug_alloc_header *)(debug_alloc_pool + - dah_first); - while (1) { - if (!prev->next || prev->next > h_offset) - break; - prev = (struct debug_alloc_header *) - (debug_alloc_pool + prev->next); - } - prev_offset = (char *)prev - debug_alloc_pool; - if (prev_offset + dah_overhead + prev->size == h_offset) { - prev->size += dah_overhead + h->size; - memset(h, POISON_FREE, dah_overhead - 1); - *((char *)h + dah_overhead - 1) = POISON_END; - h = prev; - h_offset = prev_offset; - } else { - h->next = prev->next; - prev->next = h_offset; - } - } - if (h_offset + dah_overhead + h->size == h->next) { - struct debug_alloc_header *next; - next = (struct debug_alloc_header *) - (debug_alloc_pool + h->next); - h->size += dah_overhead + next->size; - h->next = next->next; - memset(next, POISON_FREE, dah_overhead - 1); - *((char *)next + dah_overhead - 1) = POISON_END; - } - spin_unlock(&dap_lock); -} - -void debug_kusage(void) -{ - struct debug_alloc_header *h_free, *h_used; -#ifdef CONFIG_IA64 - /* FIXME: using dah for ia64 unwind always results in a memory leak. - * Fix that memory leak first, then set debug_kusage_one_time = 1 for - * all architectures. - */ - static int debug_kusage_one_time; -#else - static int debug_kusage_one_time = 1; -#endif - if (!get_dap_lock()) { - __release(dap_lock); /* we never actually got it */ - return; - } - h_free = (struct debug_alloc_header *)(debug_alloc_pool + dah_first); - if (dah_first == 0 && - (h_free->size == sizeof(debug_alloc_pool_aligned) - dah_overhead || - dah_first_call)) - goto out; - if (!debug_kusage_one_time) - goto out; - debug_kusage_one_time = 0; - kdb_func_printf("debug_kmalloc memory leak dah_first %d\n", dah_first); - if (dah_first) { - h_used = (struct debug_alloc_header *)debug_alloc_pool; - kdb_func_printf("h_used %px size %d\n", h_used, h_used->size); - } - do { - h_used = (struct debug_alloc_header *) - ((char *)h_free + dah_overhead + h_free->size); - kdb_func_printf("h_used %px size %d caller %px\n", - h_used, h_used->size, h_used->caller); - h_free = (struct debug_alloc_header *) - (debug_alloc_pool + h_free->next); - } while (h_free->next); - h_used = (struct debug_alloc_header *) - ((char *)h_free + dah_overhead + h_free->size); - if ((char *)h_used - debug_alloc_pool != - sizeof(debug_alloc_pool_aligned)) - kdb_func_printf("h_used %px size %d caller %px\n", - h_used, h_used->size, h_used->caller); -out: - spin_unlock(&dap_lock); -} - /* Maintain a small stack of kdb_flags to allow recursion without disturbing * the global kdb state. */ |