OMAP3430SDP: Enable config options CONFIG_OMAP_RESET_CLOCKS and CONFIG_SUSPEND
[linux-ginger.git] / Documentation / DocBook / kgdb.tmpl
blob028a8444d95e252a4c0830b70eb6b71311509660
1 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2 <!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd" []>
5 <book id="kgdbOnLinux">
6 <bookinfo>
7 <title>Using kgdb and the kgdb Internals</title>
9 <authorgroup>
10 <author>
11 <firstname>Jason</firstname>
12 <surname>Wessel</surname>
13 <affiliation>
14 <address>
15 <email>jason.wessel@windriver.com</email>
16 </address>
17 </affiliation>
18 </author>
19 </authorgroup>
21 <authorgroup>
22 <author>
23 <firstname>Tom</firstname>
24 <surname>Rini</surname>
25 <affiliation>
26 <address>
27 <email>trini@kernel.crashing.org</email>
28 </address>
29 </affiliation>
30 </author>
31 </authorgroup>
33 <authorgroup>
34 <author>
35 <firstname>Amit S.</firstname>
36 <surname>Kale</surname>
37 <affiliation>
38 <address>
39 <email>amitkale@linsyssoft.com</email>
40 </address>
41 </affiliation>
42 </author>
43 </authorgroup>
45 <copyright>
46 <year>2008</year>
47 <holder>Wind River Systems, Inc.</holder>
48 </copyright>
49 <copyright>
50 <year>2004-2005</year>
51 <holder>MontaVista Software, Inc.</holder>
52 </copyright>
53 <copyright>
54 <year>2004</year>
55 <holder>Amit S. Kale</holder>
56 </copyright>
58 <legalnotice>
59 <para>
60 This file is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License
61 version 2. This program is licensed "as is" without any warranty of any
62 kind, whether express or implied.
63 </para>
65 </legalnotice>
66 </bookinfo>
68 <toc></toc>
69 <chapter id="Introduction">
70 <title>Introduction</title>
71 <para>
72 kgdb is a source level debugger for linux kernel. It is used along
73 with gdb to debug a linux kernel. The expectation is that gdb can
74 be used to "break in" to the kernel to inspect memory, variables
75 and look through call stack information similar to what an
76 application developer would use gdb for. It is possible to place
77 breakpoints in kernel code and perform some limited execution
78 stepping.
79 </para>
80 <para>
81 Two machines are required for using kgdb. One of these machines is a
82 development machine and the other is a test machine. The kernel
83 to be debugged runs on the test machine. The development machine
84 runs an instance of gdb against the vmlinux file which contains
85 the symbols (not boot image such as bzImage, zImage, uImage...).
86 In gdb the developer specifies the connection parameters and
87 connects to kgdb. Depending on which kgdb I/O modules exist in
88 the kernel for a given architecture, it may be possible to debug
89 the test machine's kernel with the development machine using a
90 rs232 or ethernet connection.
91 </para>
92 </chapter>
93 <chapter id="CompilingAKernel">
94 <title>Compiling a kernel</title>
95 <para>
96 To enable <symbol>CONFIG_KGDB</symbol> you should first turn on
97 "Prompt for development and/or incomplete code/drivers"
98 (CONFIG_EXPERIMENTAL) in "General setup", then under the
99 "Kernel debugging" select "KGDB: kernel debugging with remote gdb".
100 </para>
101 <para>
102 Next you should choose one of more I/O drivers to interconnect debugging
103 host and debugged target. Early boot debugging requires a KGDB
104 I/O driver that supports early debugging and the driver must be
105 built into the kernel directly. Kgdb I/O driver configuration
106 takes place via kernel or module parameters, see following
107 chapter.
108 </para>
109 <para>
110 The kgdb test compile options are described in the kgdb test suite chapter.
111 </para>
113 </chapter>
114 <chapter id="EnableKGDB">
115 <title>Enable kgdb for debugging</title>
116 <para>
117 In order to use kgdb you must activate it by passing configuration
118 information to one of the kgdb I/O drivers. If you do not pass any
119 configuration information kgdb will not do anything at all. Kgdb
120 will only actively hook up to the kernel trap hooks if a kgdb I/O
121 driver is loaded and configured. If you unconfigure a kgdb I/O
122 driver, kgdb will unregister all the kernel hook points.
123 </para>
124 <para>
125 All drivers can be reconfigured at run time, if
126 <symbol>CONFIG_SYSFS</symbol> and <symbol>CONFIG_MODULES</symbol>
127 are enabled, by echo'ing a new config string to
128 <constant>/sys/module/&lt;driver&gt;/parameter/&lt;option&gt;</constant>.
129 The driver can be unconfigured by passing an empty string. You cannot
130 change the configuration while the debugger is attached. Make sure
131 to detach the debugger with the <constant>detach</constant> command
132 prior to trying unconfigure a kgdb I/O driver.
133 </para>
134 <sect1 id="kgdbwait">
135 <title>Kernel parameter: kgdbwait</title>
136 <para>
137 The Kernel command line option <constant>kgdbwait</constant> makes
138 kgdb wait for a debugger connection during booting of a kernel. You
139 can only use this option you compiled a kgdb I/O driver into the
140 kernel and you specified the I/O driver configuration as a kernel
141 command line option. The kgdbwait parameter should always follow the
142 configuration parameter for the kgdb I/O driver in the kernel
143 command line else the I/O driver will not be configured prior to
144 asking the kernel to use it to wait.
145 </para>
146 <para>
147 The kernel will stop and wait as early as the I/O driver and
148 architecture will allow when you use this option. If you build the
149 kgdb I/O driver as a kernel module kgdbwait will not do anything.
150 </para>
151 </sect1>
152 <sect1 id="kgdboc">
153 <title>Kernel parameter: kgdboc</title>
154 <para>
155 The kgdboc driver was originally an abbreviation meant to stand for
156 "kgdb over console". Kgdboc is designed to work with a single
157 serial port. It was meant to cover the circumstance
158 where you wanted to use a serial console as your primary console as
159 well as using it to perform kernel debugging. Of course you can
160 also use kgdboc without assigning a console to the same port.
161 </para>
162 <sect2 id="UsingKgdboc">
163 <title>Using kgdboc</title>
164 <para>
165 You can configure kgdboc via sysfs or a module or kernel boot line
166 parameter depending on if you build with CONFIG_KGDBOC as a module
167 or built-in.
168 <orderedlist>
169 <listitem><para>From the module load or build-in</para>
170 <para><constant>kgdboc=&lt;tty-device&gt;,[baud]</constant></para>
171 <para>
172 The example here would be if your console port was typically ttyS0, you would use something like <constant>kgdboc=ttyS0,115200</constant> or on the ARM Versatile AB you would likely use <constant>kgdboc=ttyAMA0,115200</constant>
173 </para>
174 </listitem>
175 <listitem><para>From sysfs</para>
176 <para><constant>echo ttyS0 &gt; /sys/module/kgdboc/parameters/kgdboc</constant></para>
177 </listitem>
178 </orderedlist>
179 </para>
180 <para>
181 NOTE: Kgdboc does not support interrupting the target via the
182 gdb remote protocol. You must manually send a sysrq-g unless you
183 have a proxy that splits console output to a terminal problem and
184 has a separate port for the debugger to connect to that sends the
185 sysrq-g for you.
186 </para>
187 <para>When using kgdboc with no debugger proxy, you can end up
188 connecting the debugger for one of two entry points. If an
189 exception occurs after you have loaded kgdboc a message should print
190 on the console stating it is waiting for the debugger. In case you
191 disconnect your terminal program and then connect the debugger in
192 its place. If you want to interrupt the target system and forcibly
193 enter a debug session you have to issue a Sysrq sequence and then
194 type the letter <constant>g</constant>. Then you disconnect the
195 terminal session and connect gdb. Your options if you don't like
196 this are to hack gdb to send the sysrq-g for you as well as on the
197 initial connect, or to use a debugger proxy that allows an
198 unmodified gdb to do the debugging.
199 </para>
200 </sect2>
201 </sect1>
202 <sect1 id="kgdbcon">
203 <title>Kernel parameter: kgdbcon</title>
204 <para>
205 Kgdb supports using the gdb serial protocol to send console messages
206 to the debugger when the debugger is connected and running. There
207 are two ways to activate this feature.
208 <orderedlist>
209 <listitem><para>Activate with the kernel command line option:</para>
210 <para><constant>kgdbcon</constant></para>
211 </listitem>
212 <listitem><para>Use sysfs before configuring an io driver</para>
213 <para>
214 <constant>echo 1 &gt; /sys/module/kgdb/parameters/kgdb_use_con</constant>
215 </para>
216 <para>
217 NOTE: If you do this after you configure the kgdb I/O driver, the
218 setting will not take effect until the next point the I/O is
219 reconfigured.
220 </para>
221 </listitem>
222 </orderedlist>
223 </para>
224 <para>
225 IMPORTANT NOTE: Using this option with kgdb over the console
226 (kgdboc) or kgdb over ethernet (kgdboe) is not supported.
227 </para>
228 </sect1>
229 </chapter>
230 <chapter id="ConnectingGDB">
231 <title>Connecting gdb</title>
232 <para>
233 If you are using kgdboc, you need to have used kgdbwait as a boot
234 argument, issued a sysrq-g, or the system you are going to debug
235 has already taken an exception and is waiting for the debugger to
236 attach before you can connect gdb.
237 </para>
238 <para>
239 If you are not using different kgdb I/O driver other than kgdboc,
240 you should be able to connect and the target will automatically
241 respond.
242 </para>
243 <para>
244 Example (using a serial port):
245 </para>
246 <programlisting>
247 % gdb ./vmlinux
248 (gdb) set remotebaud 115200
249 (gdb) target remote /dev/ttyS0
250 </programlisting>
251 <para>
252 Example (kgdb to a terminal server):
253 </para>
254 <programlisting>
255 % gdb ./vmlinux
256 (gdb) target remote udp:192.168.2.2:6443
257 </programlisting>
258 <para>
259 Example (kgdb over ethernet):
260 </para>
261 <programlisting>
262 % gdb ./vmlinux
263 (gdb) target remote udp:192.168.2.2:6443
264 </programlisting>
265 <para>
266 Once connected, you can debug a kernel the way you would debug an
267 application program.
268 </para>
269 <para>
270 If you are having problems connecting or something is going
271 seriously wrong while debugging, it will most often be the case
272 that you want to enable gdb to be verbose about its target
273 communications. You do this prior to issuing the <constant>target
274 remote</constant> command by typing in: <constant>set remote debug 1</constant>
275 </para>
276 </chapter>
277 <chapter id="KGDBTestSuite">
278 <title>kgdb Test Suite</title>
279 <para>
280 When kgdb is enabled in the kernel config you can also elect to
281 enable the config parameter KGDB_TESTS. Turning this on will
282 enable a special kgdb I/O module which is designed to test the
283 kgdb internal functions.
284 </para>
285 <para>
286 The kgdb tests are mainly intended for developers to test the kgdb
287 internals as well as a tool for developing a new kgdb architecture
288 specific implementation. These tests are not really for end users
289 of the Linux kernel. The primary source of documentation would be
290 to look in the drivers/misc/kgdbts.c file.
291 </para>
292 <para>
293 The kgdb test suite can also be configured at compile time to run
294 the core set of tests by setting the kernel config parameter
295 KGDB_TESTS_ON_BOOT. This particular option is aimed at automated
296 regression testing and does not require modifying the kernel boot
297 config arguments. If this is turned on, the kgdb test suite can
298 be disabled by specifying "kgdbts=" as a kernel boot argument.
299 </para>
300 </chapter>
301 <chapter id="CommonBackEndReq">
302 <title>KGDB Internals</title>
303 <sect1 id="kgdbArchitecture">
304 <title>Architecture Specifics</title>
305 <para>
306 Kgdb is organized into three basic components:
307 <orderedlist>
308 <listitem><para>kgdb core</para>
309 <para>
310 The kgdb core is found in kernel/kgdb.c. It contains:
311 <itemizedlist>
312 <listitem><para>All the logic to implement the gdb serial protocol</para></listitem>
313 <listitem><para>A generic OS exception handler which includes sync'ing the processors into a stopped state on an multi cpu system.</para></listitem>
314 <listitem><para>The API to talk to the kgdb I/O drivers</para></listitem>
315 <listitem><para>The API to make calls to the arch specific kgdb implementation</para></listitem>
316 <listitem><para>The logic to perform safe memory reads and writes to memory while using the debugger</para></listitem>
317 <listitem><para>A full implementation for software breakpoints unless overridden by the arch</para></listitem>
318 </itemizedlist>
319 </para>
320 </listitem>
321 <listitem><para>kgdb arch specific implementation</para>
322 <para>
323 This implementation is generally found in arch/*/kernel/kgdb.c.
324 As an example, arch/x86/kernel/kgdb.c contains the specifics to
325 implement HW breakpoint as well as the initialization to
326 dynamically register and unregister for the trap handlers on
327 this architecture. The arch specific portion implements:
328 <itemizedlist>
329 <listitem><para>contains an arch specific trap catcher which
330 invokes kgdb_handle_exception() to start kgdb about doing its
331 work</para></listitem>
332 <listitem><para>translation to and from gdb specific packet format to pt_regs</para></listitem>
333 <listitem><para>Registration and unregistration of architecture specific trap hooks</para></listitem>
334 <listitem><para>Any special exception handling and cleanup</para></listitem>
335 <listitem><para>NMI exception handling and cleanup</para></listitem>
336 <listitem><para>(optional)HW breakpoints</para></listitem>
337 </itemizedlist>
338 </para>
339 </listitem>
340 <listitem><para>kgdb I/O driver</para>
341 <para>
342 Each kgdb I/O driver has to provide an implemenation for the following:
343 <itemizedlist>
344 <listitem><para>configuration via builtin or module</para></listitem>
345 <listitem><para>dynamic configuration and kgdb hook registration calls</para></listitem>
346 <listitem><para>read and write character interface</para></listitem>
347 <listitem><para>A cleanup handler for unconfiguring from the kgdb core</para></listitem>
348 <listitem><para>(optional) Early debug methodology</para></listitem>
349 </itemizedlist>
350 Any given kgdb I/O driver has to operate very closely with the
351 hardware and must do it in such a way that does not enable
352 interrupts or change other parts of the system context without
353 completely restoring them. The kgdb core will repeatedly "poll"
354 a kgdb I/O driver for characters when it needs input. The I/O
355 driver is expected to return immediately if there is no data
356 available. Doing so allows for the future possibility to touch
357 watch dog hardware in such a way as to have a target system not
358 reset when these are enabled.
359 </para>
360 </listitem>
361 </orderedlist>
362 </para>
363 <para>
364 If you are intent on adding kgdb architecture specific support
365 for a new architecture, the architecture should define
366 <constant>HAVE_ARCH_KGDB</constant> in the architecture specific
367 Kconfig file. This will enable kgdb for the architecture, and
368 at that point you must create an architecture specific kgdb
369 implementation.
370 </para>
371 <para>
372 There are a few flags which must be set on every architecture in
373 their &lt;asm/kgdb.h&gt; file. These are:
374 <itemizedlist>
375 <listitem>
376 <para>
377 NUMREGBYTES: The size in bytes of all of the registers, so
378 that we can ensure they will all fit into a packet.
379 </para>
380 <para>
381 BUFMAX: The size in bytes of the buffer GDB will read into.
382 This must be larger than NUMREGBYTES.
383 </para>
384 <para>
385 CACHE_FLUSH_IS_SAFE: Set to 1 if it is always safe to call
386 flush_cache_range or flush_icache_range. On some architectures,
387 these functions may not be safe to call on SMP since we keep other
388 CPUs in a holding pattern.
389 </para>
390 </listitem>
391 </itemizedlist>
392 </para>
393 <para>
394 There are also the following functions for the common backend,
395 found in kernel/kgdb.c, that must be supplied by the
396 architecture-specific backend unless marked as (optional), in
397 which case a default function maybe used if the architecture
398 does not need to provide a specific implementation.
399 </para>
400 !Iinclude/linux/kgdb.h
401 </sect1>
402 <sect1 id="kgdbocDesign">
403 <title>kgdboc internals</title>
404 <para>
405 The kgdboc driver is actually a very thin driver that relies on the
406 underlying low level to the hardware driver having "polling hooks"
407 which the to which the tty driver is attached. In the initial
408 implementation of kgdboc it the serial_core was changed to expose a
409 low level uart hook for doing polled mode reading and writing of a
410 single character while in an atomic context. When kgdb makes an I/O
411 request to the debugger, kgdboc invokes a call back in the serial
412 core which in turn uses the call back in the uart driver. It is
413 certainly possible to extend kgdboc to work with non-uart based
414 consoles in the future.
415 </para>
416 <para>
417 When using kgdboc with a uart, the uart driver must implement two callbacks in the <constant>struct uart_ops</constant>. Example from drivers/8250.c:<programlisting>
418 #ifdef CONFIG_CONSOLE_POLL
419 .poll_get_char = serial8250_get_poll_char,
420 .poll_put_char = serial8250_put_poll_char,
421 #endif
422 </programlisting>
423 Any implementation specifics around creating a polling driver use the
424 <constant>#ifdef CONFIG_CONSOLE_POLL</constant>, as shown above.
425 Keep in mind that polling hooks have to be implemented in such a way
426 that they can be called from an atomic context and have to restore
427 the state of the uart chip on return such that the system can return
428 to normal when the debugger detaches. You need to be very careful
429 with any kind of lock you consider, because failing here is most
430 going to mean pressing the reset button.
431 </para>
432 </sect1>
433 </chapter>
434 <chapter id="credits">
435 <title>Credits</title>
436 <para>
437 The following people have contributed to this document:
438 <orderedlist>
439 <listitem><para>Amit Kale<email>amitkale@linsyssoft.com</email></para></listitem>
440 <listitem><para>Tom Rini<email>trini@kernel.crashing.org</email></para></listitem>
441 </orderedlist>
442 In March 2008 this document was completely rewritten by:
443 <itemizedlist>
444 <listitem><para>Jason Wessel<email>jason.wessel@windriver.com</email></para></listitem>
445 </itemizedlist>
446 </para>
447 </chapter>
448 </book>