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Linux/Documentation/arch/s390/s390dbf.rst

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  1 ==================
  2 S390 Debug Feature
  3 ==================
  4 
  5 files:
  6       - arch/s390/kernel/debug.c
  7       - arch/s390/include/asm/debug.h
  8 
  9 Description:
 10 ------------
 11 The goal of this feature is to provide a kernel debug logging API
 12 where log records can be stored efficiently in memory, where each component
 13 (e.g. device drivers) can have one separate debug log.
 14 One purpose of this is to inspect the debug logs after a production system crash
 15 in order to analyze the reason for the crash.
 16 
 17 If the system still runs but only a subcomponent which uses dbf fails,
 18 it is possible to look at the debug logs on a live system via the Linux
 19 debugfs filesystem.
 20 
 21 The debug feature may also very useful for kernel and driver development.
 22 
 23 Design:
 24 -------
 25 Kernel components (e.g. device drivers) can register themselves at the debug
 26 feature with the function call :c:func:`debug_register()`.
 27 This function initializes a
 28 debug log for the caller. For each debug log exists a number of debug areas
 29 where exactly one is active at one time.  Each debug area consists of contiguous
 30 pages in memory. In the debug areas there are stored debug entries (log records)
 31 which are written by event- and exception-calls.
 32 
 33 An event-call writes the specified debug entry to the active debug
 34 area and updates the log pointer for the active area. If the end
 35 of the active debug area is reached, a wrap around is done (ring buffer)
 36 and the next debug entry will be written at the beginning of the active
 37 debug area.
 38 
 39 An exception-call writes the specified debug entry to the log and
 40 switches to the next debug area. This is done in order to be sure
 41 that the records which describe the origin of the exception are not
 42 overwritten when a wrap around for the current area occurs.
 43 
 44 The debug areas themselves are also ordered in form of a ring buffer.
 45 When an exception is thrown in the last debug area, the following debug
 46 entries are then written again in the very first area.
 47 
 48 There are four versions for the event- and exception-calls: One for
 49 logging raw data, one for text, one for numbers (unsigned int and long),
 50 and one for sprintf-like formatted strings.
 51 
 52 Each debug entry contains the following data:
 53 
 54 - Timestamp
 55 - Cpu-Number of calling task
 56 - Level of debug entry (0...6)
 57 - Return Address to caller
 58 - Flag, if entry is an exception or not
 59 
 60 The debug logs can be inspected in a live system through entries in
 61 the debugfs-filesystem. Under the toplevel directory "``s390dbf``" there is
 62 a directory for each registered component, which is named like the
 63 corresponding component. The debugfs normally should be mounted to
 64 ``/sys/kernel/debug`` therefore the debug feature can be accessed under
 65 ``/sys/kernel/debug/s390dbf``.
 66 
 67 The content of the directories are files which represent different views
 68 to the debug log. Each component can decide which views should be
 69 used through registering them with the function :c:func:`debug_register_view()`.
 70 Predefined views for hex/ascii and sprintf data are provided.
 71 It is also possible to define other views. The content of
 72 a view can be inspected simply by reading the corresponding debugfs file.
 73 
 74 All debug logs have an actual debug level (range from 0 to 6).
 75 The default level is 3. Event and Exception functions have a :c:data:`level`
 76 parameter. Only debug entries with a level that is lower or equal
 77 than the actual level are written to the log. This means, when
 78 writing events, high priority log entries should have a low level
 79 value whereas low priority entries should have a high one.
 80 The actual debug level can be changed with the help of the debugfs-filesystem
 81 through writing a number string "x" to the ``level`` debugfs file which is
 82 provided for every debug log. Debugging can be switched off completely
 83 by using "-" on the ``level`` debugfs file.
 84 
 85 Example::
 86 
 87         > echo "-" > /sys/kernel/debug/s390dbf/dasd/level
 88 
 89 It is also possible to deactivate the debug feature globally for every
 90 debug log. You can change the behavior using  2 sysctl parameters in
 91 ``/proc/sys/s390dbf``:
 92 
 93 There are currently 2 possible triggers, which stop the debug feature
 94 globally. The first possibility is to use the ``debug_active`` sysctl. If
 95 set to 1 the debug feature is running. If ``debug_active`` is set to 0 the
 96 debug feature is turned off.
 97 
 98 The second trigger which stops the debug feature is a kernel oops.
 99 That prevents the debug feature from overwriting debug information that
100 happened before the oops. After an oops you can reactivate the debug feature
101 by piping 1 to ``/proc/sys/s390dbf/debug_active``. Nevertheless, it's not
102 suggested to use an oopsed kernel in a production environment.
103 
104 If you want to disallow the deactivation of the debug feature, you can use
105 the ``debug_stoppable`` sysctl. If you set ``debug_stoppable`` to 0 the debug
106 feature cannot be stopped. If the debug feature is already stopped, it
107 will stay deactivated.
108 
109 Kernel Interfaces:
110 ------------------
111 
112 .. kernel-doc:: arch/s390/kernel/debug.c
113 .. kernel-doc:: arch/s390/include/asm/debug.h
114 
115 Predefined views:
116 -----------------
117 
118 .. code-block:: c
119 
120   extern struct debug_view debug_hex_ascii_view;
121 
122   extern struct debug_view debug_sprintf_view;
123 
124 Examples
125 --------
126 
127 .. code-block:: c
128 
129   /*
130    * hex_ascii-view Example
131    */
132 
133   #include <linux/init.h>
134   #include <asm/debug.h>
135 
136   static debug_info_t *debug_info;
137 
138   static int init(void)
139   {
140       /* register 4 debug areas with one page each and 4 byte data field */
141 
142       debug_info = debug_register("test", 1, 4, 4 );
143       debug_register_view(debug_info, &debug_hex_ascii_view);
144 
145       debug_text_event(debug_info, 4 , "one ");
146       debug_int_exception(debug_info, 4, 4711);
147       debug_event(debug_info, 3, &debug_info, 4);
148 
149       return 0;
150   }
151 
152   static void cleanup(void)
153   {
154       debug_unregister(debug_info);
155   }
156 
157   module_init(init);
158   module_exit(cleanup);
159 
160 .. code-block:: c
161 
162   /*
163    * sprintf-view Example
164    */
165 
166   #include <linux/init.h>
167   #include <asm/debug.h>
168 
169   static debug_info_t *debug_info;
170 
171   static int init(void)
172   {
173       /* register 4 debug areas with one page each and data field for */
174       /* format string pointer + 2 varargs (= 3 * sizeof(long))       */
175 
176       debug_info = debug_register("test", 1, 4, sizeof(long) * 3);
177       debug_register_view(debug_info, &debug_sprintf_view);
178 
179       debug_sprintf_event(debug_info, 2 , "first event in %s:%i\n",__FILE__,__LINE__);
180       debug_sprintf_exception(debug_info, 1, "pointer to debug info: %p\n",&debug_info);
181 
182       return 0;
183   }
184 
185   static void cleanup(void)
186   {
187       debug_unregister(debug_info);
188   }
189 
190   module_init(init);
191   module_exit(cleanup);
192 
193 Debugfs Interface
194 -----------------
195 Views to the debug logs can be investigated through reading the corresponding
196 debugfs-files:
197 
198 Example::
199 
200   > ls /sys/kernel/debug/s390dbf/dasd
201   flush  hex_ascii  level pages
202   > cat /sys/kernel/debug/s390dbf/dasd/hex_ascii | sort -k2,2 -s
203   00 00974733272:680099 2 - 02 0006ad7e  07 ea 4a 90 | ....
204   00 00974733272:682210 2 - 02 0006ade6  46 52 45 45 | FREE
205   00 00974733272:682213 2 - 02 0006adf6  07 ea 4a 90 | ....
206   00 00974733272:682281 1 * 02 0006ab08  41 4c 4c 43 | EXCP
207   01 00974733272:682284 2 - 02 0006ab16  45 43 4b 44 | ECKD
208   01 00974733272:682287 2 - 02 0006ab28  00 00 00 04 | ....
209   01 00974733272:682289 2 - 02 0006ab3e  00 00 00 20 | ...
210   01 00974733272:682297 2 - 02 0006ad7e  07 ea 4a 90 | ....
211   01 00974733272:684384 2 - 00 0006ade6  46 52 45 45 | FREE
212   01 00974733272:684388 2 - 00 0006adf6  07 ea 4a 90 | ....
213 
214 See section about predefined views for explanation of the above output!
215 
216 Changing the debug level
217 ------------------------
218 
219 Example::
220 
221 
222   > cat /sys/kernel/debug/s390dbf/dasd/level
223   3
224   > echo "5" > /sys/kernel/debug/s390dbf/dasd/level
225   > cat /sys/kernel/debug/s390dbf/dasd/level
226   5
227 
228 Flushing debug areas
229 --------------------
230 Debug areas can be flushed with piping the number of the desired
231 area (0...n) to the debugfs file "flush". When using "-" all debug areas
232 are flushed.
233 
234 Examples:
235 
236 1. Flush debug area 0::
237 
238      > echo "0" > /sys/kernel/debug/s390dbf/dasd/flush
239 
240 2. Flush all debug areas::
241 
242      > echo "-" > /sys/kernel/debug/s390dbf/dasd/flush
243 
244 Changing the size of debug areas
245 ------------------------------------
246 It is possible the change the size of debug areas through piping
247 the number of pages to the debugfs file "pages". The resize request will
248 also flush the debug areas.
249 
250 Example:
251 
252 Define 4 pages for the debug areas of debug feature "dasd"::
253 
254   > echo "4" > /sys/kernel/debug/s390dbf/dasd/pages
255 
256 Stopping the debug feature
257 --------------------------
258 Example:
259 
260 1. Check if stopping is allowed::
261 
262      > cat /proc/sys/s390dbf/debug_stoppable
263 
264 2. Stop debug feature::
265 
266      > echo 0 > /proc/sys/s390dbf/debug_active
267 
268 crash Interface
269 ----------------
270 The ``crash`` tool since v5.1.0 has a built-in command
271 ``s390dbf`` to display all the debug logs or export them to the file system.
272 With this tool it is possible
273 to investigate the debug logs on a live system and with a memory dump after
274 a system crash.
275 
276 Investigating raw memory
277 ------------------------
278 One last possibility to investigate the debug logs at a live
279 system and after a system crash is to look at the raw memory
280 under VM or at the Service Element.
281 It is possible to find the anchor of the debug-logs through
282 the ``debug_area_first`` symbol in the System map. Then one has
283 to follow the correct pointers of the data-structures defined
284 in debug.h and find the debug-areas in memory.
285 Normally modules which use the debug feature will also have
286 a global variable with the pointer to the debug-logs. Following
287 this pointer it will also be possible to find the debug logs in
288 memory.
289 
290 For this method it is recommended to use '16 * x + 4' byte (x = 0..n)
291 for the length of the data field in :c:func:`debug_register()` in
292 order to see the debug entries well formatted.
293 
294 
295 Predefined Views
296 ----------------
297 
298 There are two predefined views: hex_ascii and sprintf.
299 The hex_ascii view shows the data field in hex and ascii representation
300 (e.g. ``45 43 4b 44 | ECKD``).
301 
302 The sprintf view formats the debug entries in the same way as the sprintf
303 function would do. The sprintf event/exception functions write to the
304 debug entry a pointer to the format string (size = sizeof(long))
305 and for each vararg a long value. So e.g. for a debug entry with a format
306 string plus two varargs one would need to allocate a (3 * sizeof(long))
307 byte data area in the debug_register() function.
308 
309 IMPORTANT:
310   Using "%s" in sprintf event functions is dangerous. You can only
311   use "%s" in the sprintf event functions, if the memory for the passed string
312   is available as long as the debug feature exists. The reason behind this is
313   that due to performance considerations only a pointer to the string is stored
314   in  the debug feature. If you log a string that is freed afterwards, you will
315   get an OOPS when inspecting the debug feature, because then the debug feature
316   will access the already freed memory.
317 
318 NOTE:
319   If using the sprintf view do NOT use other event/exception functions
320   than the sprintf-event and -exception functions.
321 
322 The format of the hex_ascii and sprintf view is as follows:
323 
324 - Number of area
325 - Timestamp (formatted as seconds and microseconds since 00:00:00 Coordinated
326   Universal Time (UTC), January 1, 1970)
327 - level of debug entry
328 - Exception flag (* = Exception)
329 - Cpu-Number of calling task
330 - Return Address to caller
331 - data field
332 
333 A typical line of the hex_ascii view will look like the following (first line
334 is only for explanation and will not be displayed when 'cating' the view)::
335 
336   area  time           level exception cpu caller    data (hex + ascii)
337   --------------------------------------------------------------------------
338   00    00964419409:440690 1 -         00  88023fe
339 
340 
341 Defining views
342 --------------
343 
344 Views are specified with the 'debug_view' structure. There are defined
345 callback functions which are used for reading and writing the debugfs files:
346 
347 .. code-block:: c
348 
349   struct debug_view {
350         char name[DEBUG_MAX_PROCF_LEN];
351         debug_prolog_proc_t* prolog_proc;
352         debug_header_proc_t* header_proc;
353         debug_format_proc_t* format_proc;
354         debug_input_proc_t*  input_proc;
355         void*                private_data;
356   };
357 
358 where:
359 
360 .. code-block:: c
361 
362   typedef int (debug_header_proc_t) (debug_info_t* id,
363                                      struct debug_view* view,
364                                      int area,
365                                      debug_entry_t* entry,
366                                      char* out_buf);
367 
368   typedef int (debug_format_proc_t) (debug_info_t* id,
369                                      struct debug_view* view, char* out_buf,
370                                      const char* in_buf);
371   typedef int (debug_prolog_proc_t) (debug_info_t* id,
372                                      struct debug_view* view,
373                                      char* out_buf);
374   typedef int (debug_input_proc_t) (debug_info_t* id,
375                                     struct debug_view* view,
376                                     struct file* file, const char* user_buf,
377                                     size_t in_buf_size, loff_t* offset);
378 
379 
380 The "private_data" member can be used as pointer to view specific data.
381 It is not used by the debug feature itself.
382 
383 The output when reading a debugfs file is structured like this::
384 
385   "prolog_proc output"
386 
387   "header_proc output 1"  "format_proc output 1"
388   "header_proc output 2"  "format_proc output 2"
389   "header_proc output 3"  "format_proc output 3"
390   ...
391 
392 When a view is read from the debugfs, the Debug Feature calls the
393 'prolog_proc' once for writing the prolog.
394 Then 'header_proc' and 'format_proc' are called for each
395 existing debug entry.
396 
397 The input_proc can be used to implement functionality when it is written to
398 the view (e.g. like with ``echo "0" > /sys/kernel/debug/s390dbf/dasd/level``).
399 
400 For header_proc there can be used the default function
401 :c:func:`debug_dflt_header_fn()` which is defined in debug.h.
402 and which produces the same header output as the predefined views.
403 E.g::
404 
405   00 00964419409:440761 2 - 00 88023ec
406 
407 In order to see how to use the callback functions check the implementation
408 of the default views!
409 
410 Example:
411 
412 .. code-block:: c
413 
414   #include <asm/debug.h>
415 
416   #define UNKNOWNSTR "data: %08x"
417 
418   const char* messages[] =
419   {"This error...........\n",
420    "That error...........\n",
421    "Problem..............\n",
422    "Something went wrong.\n",
423    "Everything ok........\n",
424    NULL
425   };
426 
427   static int debug_test_format_fn(
428      debug_info_t *id, struct debug_view *view,
429      char *out_buf, const char *in_buf
430   )
431   {
432     int i, rc = 0;
433 
434     if (id->buf_size >= 4) {
435        int msg_nr = *((int*)in_buf);
436        if (msg_nr < sizeof(messages) / sizeof(char*) - 1)
437           rc += sprintf(out_buf, "%s", messages[msg_nr]);
438        else
439           rc += sprintf(out_buf, UNKNOWNSTR, msg_nr);
440     }
441     return rc;
442   }
443 
444   struct debug_view debug_test_view = {
445     "myview",                 /* name of view */
446     NULL,                     /* no prolog */
447     &debug_dflt_header_fn,    /* default header for each entry */
448     &debug_test_format_fn,    /* our own format function */
449     NULL,                     /* no input function */
450     NULL                      /* no private data */
451   };
452 
453 test:
454 =====
455 
456 .. code-block:: c
457 
458   debug_info_t *debug_info;
459   int i;
460   ...
461   debug_info = debug_register("test", 0, 4, 4);
462   debug_register_view(debug_info, &debug_test_view);
463   for (i = 0; i < 10; i ++)
464     debug_int_event(debug_info, 1, i);
465 
466 ::
467 
468   > cat /sys/kernel/debug/s390dbf/test/myview
469   00 00964419734:611402 1 - 00 88042ca   This error...........
470   00 00964419734:611405 1 - 00 88042ca   That error...........
471   00 00964419734:611408 1 - 00 88042ca   Problem..............
472   00 00964419734:611411 1 - 00 88042ca   Something went wrong.
473   00 00964419734:611414 1 - 00 88042ca   Everything ok........
474   00 00964419734:611417 1 - 00 88042ca   data: 00000005
475   00 00964419734:611419 1 - 00 88042ca   data: 00000006
476   00 00964419734:611422 1 - 00 88042ca   data: 00000007
477   00 00964419734:611425 1 - 00 88042ca   data: 00000008
478   00 00964419734:611428 1 - 00 88042ca   data: 00000009

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