1 ================================================================ 2 Documentation for Kdump - The kexec-based Crash Dumping Solution 3 ================================================================ 4 5 This document includes overview, setup, installation, and analysis 6 information. 7 8 Overview 9 ======== 10 11 Kdump uses kexec to quickly boot to a dump-capture kernel whenever a 12 dump of the system kernel's memory needs to be taken (for example, when 13 the system panics). The system kernel's memory image is preserved across 14 the reboot and is accessible to the dump-capture kernel. 15 16 You can use common commands, such as cp, scp or makedumpfile to copy 17 the memory image to a dump file on the local disk, or across the network 18 to a remote system. 19 20 Kdump and kexec are currently supported on the x86, x86_64, ppc64, 21 s390x, arm and arm64 architectures. 22 23 When the system kernel boots, it reserves a small section of memory for 24 the dump-capture kernel. This ensures that ongoing Direct Memory Access 25 (DMA) from the system kernel does not corrupt the dump-capture kernel. 26 The kexec -p command loads the dump-capture kernel into this reserved 27 memory. 28 29 On x86 machines, the first 640 KB of physical memory is needed for boot, 30 regardless of where the kernel loads. For simpler handling, the whole 31 low 1M is reserved to avoid any later kernel or device driver writing 32 data into this area. Like this, the low 1M can be reused as system RAM 33 by kdump kernel without extra handling. 34 35 On PPC64 machines first 32KB of physical memory is needed for booting 36 regardless of where the kernel is loaded and to support 64K page size 37 kexec backs up the first 64KB memory. 38 39 For s390x, when kdump is triggered, the crashkernel region is exchanged 40 with the region [0, crashkernel region size] and then the kdump kernel 41 runs in [0, crashkernel region size]. Therefore no relocatable kernel is 42 needed for s390x. 43 44 All of the necessary information about the system kernel's core image is 45 encoded in the ELF format, and stored in a reserved area of memory 46 before a crash. The physical address of the start of the ELF header is 47 passed to the dump-capture kernel through the elfcorehdr= boot 48 parameter. Optionally the size of the ELF header can also be passed 49 when using the elfcorehdr=[size[KMG]@]offset[KMG] syntax. 50 51 With the dump-capture kernel, you can access the memory image through 52 /proc/vmcore. This exports the dump as an ELF-format file that you can 53 write out using file copy commands such as cp or scp. You can also use 54 makedumpfile utility to analyze and write out filtered contents with 55 options, e.g with '-d 31' it will only write out kernel data. Further, 56 you can use analysis tools such as the GNU Debugger (GDB) and the Crash 57 tool to debug the dump file. This method ensures that the dump pages are 58 correctly ordered. 59 60 Setup and Installation 61 ====================== 62 63 Install kexec-tools 64 ------------------- 65 66 1) Login as the root user. 67 68 2) Download the kexec-tools user-space package from the following URL: 69 70 http://kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/kernel/kexec/kexec-tools.tar.gz 71 72 This is a symlink to the latest version. 73 74 The latest kexec-tools git tree is available at: 75 76 - git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/utils/kernel/kexec/kexec-tools.git 77 - http://www.kernel.org/pub/scm/utils/kernel/kexec/kexec-tools.git 78 79 There is also a gitweb interface available at 80 http://www.kernel.org/git/?p=utils/kernel/kexec/kexec-tools.git 81 82 More information about kexec-tools can be found at 83 http://horms.net/projects/kexec/ 84 85 3) Unpack the tarball with the tar command, as follows:: 86 87 tar xvpzf kexec-tools.tar.gz 88 89 4) Change to the kexec-tools directory, as follows:: 90 91 cd kexec-tools-VERSION 92 93 5) Configure the package, as follows:: 94 95 ./configure 96 97 6) Compile the package, as follows:: 98 99 make 100 101 7) Install the package, as follows:: 102 103 make install 104 105 106 Build the system and dump-capture kernels 107 ----------------------------------------- 108 There are two possible methods of using Kdump. 109 110 1) Build a separate custom dump-capture kernel for capturing the 111 kernel core dump. 112 113 2) Or use the system kernel binary itself as dump-capture kernel and there is 114 no need to build a separate dump-capture kernel. This is possible 115 only with the architectures which support a relocatable kernel. As 116 of today, i386, x86_64, ppc64, arm and arm64 architectures support 117 relocatable kernel. 118 119 Building a relocatable kernel is advantageous from the point of view that 120 one does not have to build a second kernel for capturing the dump. But 121 at the same time one might want to build a custom dump capture kernel 122 suitable to his needs. 123 124 Following are the configuration setting required for system and 125 dump-capture kernels for enabling kdump support. 126 127 System kernel config options 128 ---------------------------- 129 130 1) Enable "kexec system call" or "kexec file based system call" in 131 "Processor type and features.":: 132 133 CONFIG_KEXEC=y or CONFIG_KEXEC_FILE=y 134 135 And both of them will select KEXEC_CORE:: 136 137 CONFIG_KEXEC_CORE=y 138 139 2) Enable "sysfs file system support" in "Filesystem" -> "Pseudo 140 filesystems." This is usually enabled by default:: 141 142 CONFIG_SYSFS=y 143 144 Note that "sysfs file system support" might not appear in the "Pseudo 145 filesystems" menu if "Configure standard kernel features (expert users)" 146 is not enabled in "General Setup." In this case, check the .config file 147 itself to ensure that sysfs is turned on, as follows:: 148 149 grep 'CONFIG_SYSFS' .config 150 151 3) Enable "Compile the kernel with debug info" in "Kernel hacking.":: 152 153 CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO=Y 154 155 This causes the kernel to be built with debug symbols. The dump 156 analysis tools require a vmlinux with debug symbols in order to read 157 and analyze a dump file. 158 159 Dump-capture kernel config options (Arch Independent) 160 ----------------------------------------------------- 161 162 1) Enable "kernel crash dumps" support under "Processor type and 163 features":: 164 165 CONFIG_CRASH_DUMP=y 166 167 And this will select VMCORE_INFO and CRASH_RESERVE:: 168 CONFIG_VMCORE_INFO=y 169 CONFIG_CRASH_RESERVE=y 170 171 2) Enable "/proc/vmcore support" under "Filesystems" -> "Pseudo filesystems":: 172 173 CONFIG_PROC_VMCORE=y 174 175 (CONFIG_PROC_VMCORE is set by default when CONFIG_CRASH_DUMP is selected.) 176 177 Dump-capture kernel config options (Arch Dependent, i386 and x86_64) 178 -------------------------------------------------------------------- 179 180 1) On i386, enable high memory support under "Processor type and 181 features":: 182 183 CONFIG_HIGHMEM64G=y 184 185 or:: 186 187 CONFIG_HIGHMEM4G 188 189 2) With CONFIG_SMP=y, usually nr_cpus=1 need specified on the kernel 190 command line when loading the dump-capture kernel because one 191 CPU is enough for kdump kernel to dump vmcore on most of systems. 192 193 However, you can also specify nr_cpus=X to enable multiple processors 194 in kdump kernel. 195 196 With CONFIG_SMP=n, the above things are not related. 197 198 3) A relocatable kernel is suggested to be built by default. If not yet, 199 enable "Build a relocatable kernel" support under "Processor type and 200 features":: 201 202 CONFIG_RELOCATABLE=y 203 204 4) Use a suitable value for "Physical address where the kernel is 205 loaded" (under "Processor type and features"). This only appears when 206 "kernel crash dumps" is enabled. A suitable value depends upon 207 whether kernel is relocatable or not. 208 209 If you are using a relocatable kernel use CONFIG_PHYSICAL_START=0x100000 210 This will compile the kernel for physical address 1MB, but given the fact 211 kernel is relocatable, it can be run from any physical address hence 212 kexec boot loader will load it in memory region reserved for dump-capture 213 kernel. 214 215 Otherwise it should be the start of memory region reserved for 216 second kernel using boot parameter "crashkernel=Y@X". Here X is 217 start of memory region reserved for dump-capture kernel. 218 Generally X is 16MB (0x1000000). So you can set 219 CONFIG_PHYSICAL_START=0x1000000 220 221 5) Make and install the kernel and its modules. DO NOT add this kernel 222 to the boot loader configuration files. 223 224 Dump-capture kernel config options (Arch Dependent, ppc64) 225 ---------------------------------------------------------- 226 227 1) Enable "Build a kdump crash kernel" support under "Kernel" options:: 228 229 CONFIG_CRASH_DUMP=y 230 231 2) Enable "Build a relocatable kernel" support:: 232 233 CONFIG_RELOCATABLE=y 234 235 Make and install the kernel and its modules. 236 237 Dump-capture kernel config options (Arch Dependent, arm) 238 ---------------------------------------------------------- 239 240 - To use a relocatable kernel, 241 Enable "AUTO_ZRELADDR" support under "Boot" options:: 242 243 AUTO_ZRELADDR=y 244 245 Dump-capture kernel config options (Arch Dependent, arm64) 246 ---------------------------------------------------------- 247 248 - Please note that kvm of the dump-capture kernel will not be enabled 249 on non-VHE systems even if it is configured. This is because the CPU 250 will not be reset to EL2 on panic. 251 252 crashkernel syntax 253 =========================== 254 1) crashkernel=size@offset 255 256 Here 'size' specifies how much memory to reserve for the dump-capture kernel 257 and 'offset' specifies the beginning of this reserved memory. For example, 258 "crashkernel=64M@16M" tells the system kernel to reserve 64 MB of memory 259 starting at physical address 0x01000000 (16MB) for the dump-capture kernel. 260 261 The crashkernel region can be automatically placed by the system 262 kernel at run time. This is done by specifying the base address as 0, 263 or omitting it all together:: 264 265 crashkernel=256M@0 266 267 or:: 268 269 crashkernel=256M 270 271 If the start address is specified, note that the start address of the 272 kernel will be aligned to a value (which is Arch dependent), so if the 273 start address is not then any space below the alignment point will be 274 wasted. 275 276 2) range1:size1[,range2:size2,...][@offset] 277 278 While the "crashkernel=size[@offset]" syntax is sufficient for most 279 configurations, sometimes it's handy to have the reserved memory dependent 280 on the value of System RAM -- that's mostly for distributors that pre-setup 281 the kernel command line to avoid a unbootable system after some memory has 282 been removed from the machine. 283 284 The syntax is:: 285 286 crashkernel=<range1>:<size1>[,<range2>:<size2>,...][@offset] 287 range=start-[end] 288 289 For example:: 290 291 crashkernel=512M-2G:64M,2G-:128M 292 293 This would mean: 294 295 1) if the RAM is smaller than 512M, then don't reserve anything 296 (this is the "rescue" case) 297 2) if the RAM size is between 512M and 2G (exclusive), then reserve 64M 298 3) if the RAM size is larger than 2G, then reserve 128M 299 300 3) crashkernel=size,high and crashkernel=size,low 301 302 If memory above 4G is preferred, crashkernel=size,high can be used to 303 fulfill that. With it, physical memory is allowed to be allocated from top, 304 so could be above 4G if system has more than 4G RAM installed. Otherwise, 305 memory region will be allocated below 4G if available. 306 307 When crashkernel=X,high is passed, kernel could allocate physical memory 308 region above 4G, low memory under 4G is needed in this case. There are 309 three ways to get low memory: 310 311 1) Kernel will allocate at least 256M memory below 4G automatically 312 if crashkernel=Y,low is not specified. 313 2) Let user specify low memory size instead. 314 3) Specified value 0 will disable low memory allocation:: 315 316 crashkernel=0,low 317 318 Boot into System Kernel 319 ----------------------- 320 1) Update the boot loader (such as grub, yaboot, or lilo) configuration 321 files as necessary. 322 323 2) Boot the system kernel with the boot parameter "crashkernel=Y@X". 324 325 On x86 and x86_64, use "crashkernel=Y[@X]". Most of the time, the 326 start address 'X' is not necessary, kernel will search a suitable 327 area. Unless an explicit start address is expected. 328 329 On ppc64, use "crashkernel=128M@32M". 330 331 On s390x, typically use "crashkernel=xxM". The value of xx is dependent 332 on the memory consumption of the kdump system. In general this is not 333 dependent on the memory size of the production system. 334 335 On arm, the use of "crashkernel=Y@X" is no longer necessary; the 336 kernel will automatically locate the crash kernel image within the 337 first 512MB of RAM if X is not given. 338 339 On arm64, use "crashkernel=Y[@X]". Note that the start address of 340 the kernel, X if explicitly specified, must be aligned to 2MiB (0x200000). 341 342 Load the Dump-capture Kernel 343 ============================ 344 345 After booting to the system kernel, dump-capture kernel needs to be 346 loaded. 347 348 Based on the architecture and type of image (relocatable or not), one 349 can choose to load the uncompressed vmlinux or compressed bzImage/vmlinuz 350 of dump-capture kernel. Following is the summary. 351 352 For i386 and x86_64: 353 354 - Use bzImage/vmlinuz if kernel is relocatable. 355 - Use vmlinux if kernel is not relocatable. 356 357 For ppc64: 358 359 - Use vmlinux 360 361 For s390x: 362 363 - Use image or bzImage 364 365 For arm: 366 367 - Use zImage 368 369 For arm64: 370 371 - Use vmlinux or Image 372 373 If you are using an uncompressed vmlinux image then use following command 374 to load dump-capture kernel:: 375 376 kexec -p <dump-capture-kernel-vmlinux-image> \ 377 --initrd=<initrd-for-dump-capture-kernel> --args-linux \ 378 --append="root=<root-dev> <arch-specific-options>" 379 380 If you are using a compressed bzImage/vmlinuz, then use following command 381 to load dump-capture kernel:: 382 383 kexec -p <dump-capture-kernel-bzImage> \ 384 --initrd=<initrd-for-dump-capture-kernel> \ 385 --append="root=<root-dev> <arch-specific-options>" 386 387 If you are using a compressed zImage, then use following command 388 to load dump-capture kernel:: 389 390 kexec --type zImage -p <dump-capture-kernel-bzImage> \ 391 --initrd=<initrd-for-dump-capture-kernel> \ 392 --dtb=<dtb-for-dump-capture-kernel> \ 393 --append="root=<root-dev> <arch-specific-options>" 394 395 If you are using an uncompressed Image, then use following command 396 to load dump-capture kernel:: 397 398 kexec -p <dump-capture-kernel-Image> \ 399 --initrd=<initrd-for-dump-capture-kernel> \ 400 --append="root=<root-dev> <arch-specific-options>" 401 402 Following are the arch specific command line options to be used while 403 loading dump-capture kernel. 404 405 For i386 and x86_64: 406 407 "1 irqpoll nr_cpus=1 reset_devices" 408 409 For ppc64: 410 411 "1 maxcpus=1 noirqdistrib reset_devices" 412 413 For s390x: 414 415 "1 nr_cpus=1 cgroup_disable=memory" 416 417 For arm: 418 419 "1 maxcpus=1 reset_devices" 420 421 For arm64: 422 423 "1 nr_cpus=1 reset_devices" 424 425 Notes on loading the dump-capture kernel: 426 427 * By default, the ELF headers are stored in ELF64 format to support 428 systems with more than 4GB memory. On i386, kexec automatically checks if 429 the physical RAM size exceeds the 4 GB limit and if not, uses ELF32. 430 So, on non-PAE systems, ELF32 is always used. 431 432 The --elf32-core-headers option can be used to force the generation of ELF32 433 headers. This is necessary because GDB currently cannot open vmcore files 434 with ELF64 headers on 32-bit systems. 435 436 * The "irqpoll" boot parameter reduces driver initialization failures 437 due to shared interrupts in the dump-capture kernel. 438 439 * You must specify <root-dev> in the format corresponding to the root 440 device name in the output of mount command. 441 442 * Boot parameter "1" boots the dump-capture kernel into single-user 443 mode without networking. If you want networking, use "3". 444 445 * We generally don't have to bring up a SMP kernel just to capture the 446 dump. Hence generally it is useful either to build a UP dump-capture 447 kernel or specify maxcpus=1 option while loading dump-capture kernel. 448 Note, though maxcpus always works, you had better replace it with 449 nr_cpus to save memory if supported by the current ARCH, such as x86. 450 451 * You should enable multi-cpu support in dump-capture kernel if you intend 452 to use multi-thread programs with it, such as parallel dump feature of 453 makedumpfile. Otherwise, the multi-thread program may have a great 454 performance degradation. To enable multi-cpu support, you should bring up an 455 SMP dump-capture kernel and specify maxcpus/nr_cpus options while loading it. 456 457 * For s390x there are two kdump modes: If a ELF header is specified with 458 the elfcorehdr= kernel parameter, it is used by the kdump kernel as it 459 is done on all other architectures. If no elfcorehdr= kernel parameter is 460 specified, the s390x kdump kernel dynamically creates the header. The 461 second mode has the advantage that for CPU and memory hotplug, kdump has 462 not to be reloaded with kexec_load(). 463 464 * For s390x systems with many attached devices the "cio_ignore" kernel 465 parameter should be used for the kdump kernel in order to prevent allocation 466 of kernel memory for devices that are not relevant for kdump. The same 467 applies to systems that use SCSI/FCP devices. In that case the 468 "allow_lun_scan" zfcp module parameter should be set to zero before 469 setting FCP devices online. 470 471 Kernel Panic 472 ============ 473 474 After successfully loading the dump-capture kernel as previously 475 described, the system will reboot into the dump-capture kernel if a 476 system crash is triggered. Trigger points are located in panic(), 477 die(), die_nmi() and in the sysrq handler (ALT-SysRq-c). 478 479 The following conditions will execute a crash trigger point: 480 481 If a hard lockup is detected and "NMI watchdog" is configured, the system 482 will boot into the dump-capture kernel ( die_nmi() ). 483 484 If die() is called, and it happens to be a thread with pid 0 or 1, or die() 485 is called inside interrupt context or die() is called and panic_on_oops is set, 486 the system will boot into the dump-capture kernel. 487 488 On powerpc systems when a soft-reset is generated, die() is called by all cpus 489 and the system will boot into the dump-capture kernel. 490 491 For testing purposes, you can trigger a crash by using "ALT-SysRq-c", 492 "echo c > /proc/sysrq-trigger" or write a module to force the panic. 493 494 Write Out the Dump File 495 ======================= 496 497 After the dump-capture kernel is booted, write out the dump file with 498 the following command:: 499 500 cp /proc/vmcore <dump-file> 501 502 or use scp to write out the dump file between hosts on a network, e.g:: 503 504 scp /proc/vmcore remote_username@remote_ip:<dump-file> 505 506 You can also use makedumpfile utility to write out the dump file 507 with specified options to filter out unwanted contents, e.g:: 508 509 makedumpfile -l --message-level 1 -d 31 /proc/vmcore <dump-file> 510 511 Analysis 512 ======== 513 514 Before analyzing the dump image, you should reboot into a stable kernel. 515 516 You can do limited analysis using GDB on the dump file copied out of 517 /proc/vmcore. Use the debug vmlinux built with -g and run the following 518 command:: 519 520 gdb vmlinux <dump-file> 521 522 Stack trace for the task on processor 0, register display, and memory 523 display work fine. 524 525 Note: GDB cannot analyze core files generated in ELF64 format for x86. 526 On systems with a maximum of 4GB of memory, you can generate 527 ELF32-format headers using the --elf32-core-headers kernel option on the 528 dump kernel. 529 530 You can also use the Crash utility to analyze dump files in Kdump 531 format. Crash is available at the following URL: 532 533 https://github.com/crash-utility/crash 534 535 Crash document can be found at: 536 https://crash-utility.github.io/ 537 538 Trigger Kdump on WARN() 539 ======================= 540 541 The kernel parameter, panic_on_warn, calls panic() in all WARN() paths. This 542 will cause a kdump to occur at the panic() call. In cases where a user wants 543 to specify this during runtime, /proc/sys/kernel/panic_on_warn can be set to 1 544 to achieve the same behaviour. 545 546 Trigger Kdump on add_taint() 547 ============================ 548 549 The kernel parameter panic_on_taint facilitates a conditional call to panic() 550 from within add_taint() whenever the value set in this bitmask matches with the 551 bit flag being set by add_taint(). 552 This will cause a kdump to occur at the add_taint()->panic() call. 553 554 Contact 555 ======= 556 557 - kexec@lists.infradead.org 558 559 GDB macros 560 ========== 561 562 .. include:: gdbmacros.txt 563 :literal:
Linux® is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States and other countries.
TOMOYO® is a registered trademark of NTT DATA CORPORATION.