xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/gdb.4 (revision c7046f76)
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25.\" $FreeBSD$
26.\"
27.Dd May 17, 2016
28.Dt GDB 4
29.Os
30.Sh NAME
31.Nm gdb
32.Nd external kernel debugger
33.Sh SYNOPSIS
34.Cd "makeoptions DEBUG=-g"
35.Cd "options DDB"
36.Sh DESCRIPTION
37The
38.Nm
39kernel debugger is a variation of
40.Xr gdb 1 Pq Pa ports/devel/gdb
41which understands some aspects of the
42.Fx
43kernel environment.
44It can be used in a number of ways:
45.Bl -bullet
46.It
47It can be used to examine the memory of the processor on which it runs.
48.It
49It can be used to analyse a processor dump after a panic.
50.It
51It can be used to debug another system interactively via a serial or firewire
52link.
53In this mode, the processor can be stopped and single stepped.
54.It
55With a firewire link, it can be used to examine the memory of a remote system
56without the participation of that system.
57In this mode, the processor cannot be stopped and single stepped, but it can be
58of use when the remote system has crashed and is no longer responding.
59.El
60.Pp
61When used for remote debugging,
62.Nm
63requires the presence of the
64.Xr ddb 4
65kernel debugger.
66Commands exist to switch between
67.Nm
68and
69.Xr ddb 4 .
70.Sh PREPARING FOR DEBUGGING
71When debugging kernels, it is practically essential to have built a kernel with
72debugging symbols
73.Pq Cd "makeoptions DEBUG=-g" .
74It is easiest to perform operations from the kernel build directory, by default
75.Pa /usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC .
76.Pp
77First, ensure you have a copy of the debug macros in the directory:
78.Pp
79.Dl "make gdbinit"
80.Pp
81This command performs some transformations on the macros installed in
82.Pa /usr/src/tools/debugscripts
83to adapt them to the local environment.
84.Ss "Inspecting the environment of the local machine"
85To look at and change the contents of the memory of the system you are running
86on,
87.Pp
88.Dl "gdb -k -wcore kernel.debug /dev/mem"
89.Pp
90In this mode, you need the
91.Fl k
92flag to indicate to
93.Xr gdb 1 Pq Pa ports/devel/gdb
94that the
95.Dq "dump file"
96.Pa /dev/mem
97is a kernel data file.
98You can look at live data, and if you include the
99.Fl wcore
100option, you can change it at your peril.
101The system does not stop (obviously), so a number of things will not work.
102You can set breakpoints, but you cannot
103.Dq continue
104execution, so they will not work.
105.Ss "Debugging a crash dump"
106By default, crash dumps are stored in the directory
107.Pa /var/crash .
108Investigate them from the kernel build directory with:
109.Pp
110.Dl "gdb -k kernel.debug /var/crash/vmcore.29"
111.Pp
112In this mode, the system is obviously stopped, so you can only look at it.
113.Ss "Debugging a live system with a remote link"
114In the following discussion, the term
115.Dq "local system"
116refers to the system running the debugger, and
117.Dq "remote system"
118refers to the live system being debugged.
119.Pp
120To debug a live system with a remote link, the kernel must be compiled with the
121option
122.Cd "options DDB" .
123The option
124.Cd "options BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER"
125enables the debugging machine stop the debugged machine once a connection has
126been established by pressing
127.Ql ^C .
128.Ss "Debugging a live system with a remote serial link"
129When using a serial port for the remote link on the i386 platform, the serial
130port must be identified by setting the flag bit
131.Li 0x80
132for the specified interface.
133Generally, this port will also be used as a serial console (flag bit
134.Li 0x10 ) ,
135so the entry in
136.Pa /boot/device.hints
137should be:
138.Pp
139.Dl hint.sio.0.flags="0x90"
140.Ss "Debugging a live system with a remote firewire link"
141As with serial debugging, to debug a live system with a firewire link, the
142kernel must be compiled with the option
143.Cd "options DDB" .
144.Pp
145A number of steps must be performed to set up a firewire link:
146.Bl -bullet
147.It
148Ensure that both systems have
149.Xr firewire 4
150support, and that the kernel of the remote system includes the
151.Xr dcons 4
152and
153.Xr dcons_crom 4
154drivers.
155If they are not compiled into the kernel, load the KLDs:
156.Pp
157.Dl "kldload firewire"
158.Pp
159On the remote system only:
160.Bd -literal -offset indent
161kldload dcons
162kldload dcons_crom
163.Ed
164.Pp
165You should see something like this in the
166.Xr dmesg 8
167output of the remote system:
168.Bd -literal -offset indent
169fwohci0: BUS reset
170fwohci0: node_id=0x8800ffc0, gen=2, non CYCLEMASTER mode
171firewire0: 2 nodes, maxhop <= 1, cable IRM = 1
172firewire0: bus manager 1
173firewire0: New S400 device ID:00c04f3226e88061
174dcons_crom0: <dcons configuration ROM> on firewire0
175dcons_crom0: bus_addr 0x22a000
176.Ed
177.Pp
178It is a good idea to load these modules at boot time with the following entry in
179.Pa /boot/loader.conf :
180.Pp
181.Dl dcons_crom_enable="YES"
182.Pp
183This ensures that all three modules are loaded.
184There is no harm in loading
185.Xr dcons 4
186and
187.Xr dcons_crom 4
188on the local system, but if you only want to load the
189.Xr firewire 4
190module, include the following in
191.Pa /boot/loader.conf :
192.Pp
193.Dl firewire_enable="YES"
194.It
195Next, use
196.Xr fwcontrol 8
197to find the firewire node corresponding to the remote machine.
198On the local machine you might see:
199.Bd -literal -offset indent
200# fwcontrol
2012 devices (info_len=2)
202node        EUI64        status
203   1  0x00c04f3226e88061      0
204   0  0x000199000003622b      1
205.Ed
206.Pp
207The first node is always the local system, so in this case, node 0 is the remote
208system.
209If there are more than two systems, check from the other end to find which node
210corresponds to the remote system.
211On the remote machine, it looks like this:
212.Bd -literal -offset indent
213# fwcontrol
2142 devices (info_len=2)
215node        EUI64        status
216   0  0x000199000003622b      0
217   1  0x00c04f3226e88061      1
218.Ed
219.It
220Next, establish a firewire connection with
221.Xr dconschat 8 :
222.Pp
223.Dl "dconschat -br -G 5556 -t 0x000199000003622b"
224.Pp
225.Li 0x000199000003622b
226is the EUI64 address of the remote node, as determined from the output of
227.Xr fwcontrol 8
228above.
229When started in this manner,
230.Xr dconschat 8
231establishes a local tunnel connection from port
232.Li localhost:5556
233to the remote debugger.
234You can also establish a console port connection with the
235.Fl C
236option to the same invocation
237.Xr dconschat 8 .
238See the
239.Xr dconschat 8
240manpage for further details.
241.Pp
242The
243.Xr dconschat 8
244utility
245does not return control to the user.
246It displays error messages and console output for the remote system, so it is a
247good idea to start it in its own window.
248.It
249Finally, establish connection:
250.Bd -literal -offset indent
251# gdb kernel.debug
252GNU gdb 5.2.1 (FreeBSD)
253.Em "(political statements omitted)"
254Ready to go.  Enter 'tr' to connect to the remote target
255with /dev/cuau0, 'tr /dev/cuau1' to connect to a different port
256or 'trf portno' to connect to the remote target with the firewire
257interface.  portno defaults to 5556.
258
259Type 'getsyms' after connection to load kld symbols.
260
261If you are debugging a local system, you can use 'kldsyms' instead
262to load the kld symbols.  That is a less obnoxious interface.
263(gdb) trf
2640xc21bd378 in ?? ()
265.Ed
266.Pp
267The
268.Ic trf
269macro assumes a connection on port 5556.
270If you want to use a different port (by changing the invocation of
271.Xr dconschat 8
272above), use the
273.Ic tr
274macro instead.
275For example, if you want to use port 4711, run
276.Xr dconschat 8
277like this:
278.Pp
279.Dl "dconschat -br -G 4711 -t 0x000199000003622b"
280.Pp
281Then establish connection with:
282.Bd -literal -offset indent
283(gdb) tr localhost:4711
2840xc21bd378 in ?? ()
285.Ed
286.El
287.Ss "Non-cooperative debugging a live system with a remote firewire link"
288In addition to the conventional debugging via firewire described in the previous
289section, it is possible to debug a remote system without its cooperation, once
290an initial connection has been established.
291This corresponds to debugging a local machine using
292.Pa /dev/mem .
293It can be very useful if a system crashes and the debugger no longer responds.
294To use this method, set the
295.Xr sysctl 8
296variables
297.Va hw.firewire.fwmem.eui64_hi
298and
299.Va hw.firewire.fwmem.eui64_lo
300to the upper and lower halves of the EUI64 ID of the remote system,
301respectively.
302From the previous example, the remote machine shows:
303.Bd -literal -offset indent
304# fwcontrol
3052 devices (info_len=2)
306node        EUI64        status
307   0  0x000199000003622b      0
308   1  0x00c04f3226e88061      1
309.Ed
310.Pp
311Enter:
312.Bd -literal -offset indent
313# sysctl -w hw.firewire.fwmem.eui64_hi=0x00019900
314hw.firewire.fwmem.eui64_hi: 0 -> 104704
315# sysctl -w hw.firewire.fwmem.eui64_lo=0x0003622b
316hw.firewire.fwmem.eui64_lo: 0 -> 221739
317.Ed
318.Pp
319Note that the variables must be explicitly stated in hexadecimal.
320After this, you can examine the remote machine's state with the following input:
321.Bd -literal -offset indent
322# gdb -k kernel.debug /dev/fwmem0.0
323GNU gdb 5.2.1 (FreeBSD)
324.Em "(messages omitted)"
325Reading symbols from /boot/kernel/dcons.ko...done.
326Loaded symbols for /boot/kernel/dcons.ko
327Reading symbols from /boot/kernel/dcons_crom.ko...done.
328Loaded symbols for /boot/kernel/dcons_crom.ko
329#0  sched_switch (td=0xc0922fe0) at /usr/src/sys/kern/sched_4bsd.c:621
3300xc21bd378 in ?? ()
331.Ed
332.Pp
333In this case, it is not necessary to load the symbols explicitly.
334The remote system continues to run.
335.Sh COMMANDS
336The user interface to
337.Nm
338is via
339.Xr gdb 1 Pq Pa ports/devel/gdb ,
340so
341.Xr gdb 1 Pq Pa ports/devel/gdb
342commands also work.
343This section discusses only the extensions for kernel debugging that get
344installed in the kernel build directory.
345.Ss "Debugging environment"
346The following macros manipulate the debugging environment:
347.Bl -tag -width indent
348.It Ic ddb
349Switch back to
350.Xr ddb 4 .
351This command is only meaningful when performing remote debugging.
352.It Ic getsyms
353Display
354.Ic kldstat
355information for the target machine and invite user to paste it back in.
356This is required because
357.Nm
358does not allow data to be passed to shell scripts.
359It is necessary for remote debugging and crash dumps; for local memory debugging
360use
361.Ic kldsyms
362instead.
363.It Ic kldsyms
364Read in the symbol tables for the debugging machine.
365This does not work for
366remote debugging and crash dumps; use
367.Ic getsyms
368instead.
369.It Ic tr Ar interface
370Debug a remote system via the specified serial or firewire interface.
371.It Ic tr0
372Debug a remote system via serial interface
373.Pa /dev/cuau0 .
374.It Ic tr1
375Debug a remote system via serial interface
376.Pa /dev/cuau1 .
377.It Ic trf
378Debug a remote system via firewire interface at default port 5556.
379.El
380.Pp
381The commands
382.Ic tr0 , tr1
383and
384.Ic trf
385are convenience commands which invoke
386.Ic tr .
387.Ss "The current process environment"
388The following macros are convenience functions intended to make things easier
389than the standard
390.Xr gdb 1 Pq Pa ports/devel/gdb
391commands.
392.Bl -tag -width indent
393.It Ic f0
394Select stack frame 0 and show assembler-level details.
395.It Ic f1
396Select stack frame 1 and show assembler-level details.
397.It Ic f2
398Select stack frame 2 and show assembler-level details.
399.It Ic f3
400Select stack frame 3 and show assembler-level details.
401.It Ic f4
402Select stack frame 4 and show assembler-level details.
403.It Ic f5
404Select stack frame 5 and show assembler-level details.
405.It Ic xb
406Show 12 words in hex, starting at current
407.Va ebp
408value.
409.It Ic xi
410List the next 10 instructions from the current
411.Va eip
412value.
413.It Ic xp
414Show the register contents and the first four parameters of the current stack
415frame.
416.It Ic xp0
417Show the first parameter of current stack frame in various formats.
418.It Ic xp1
419Show the second parameter of current stack frame in various formats.
420.It Ic xp2
421Show the third parameter of current stack frame in various formats.
422.It Ic xp3
423Show the fourth parameter of current stack frame in various formats.
424.It Ic xp4
425Show the fifth parameter of current stack frame in various formats.
426.It Ic xs
427Show the last 12 words on stack in hexadecimal.
428.It Ic xxp
429Show the register contents and the first ten parameters.
430.It Ic z
431Single step 1 instruction (over calls) and show next instruction.
432.It Ic zs
433Single step 1 instruction (through calls) and show next instruction.
434.El
435.Ss "Examining other processes"
436The following macros access other processes.
437The
438.Nm
439debugger
440does not understand the concept of multiple processes, so they effectively
441bypass the entire
442.Nm
443environment.
444.Bl -tag -width indent
445.It Ic btp Ar pid
446Show a backtrace for the process
447.Ar pid .
448.It Ic btpa
449Show backtraces for all processes in the system.
450.It Ic btpp
451Show a backtrace for the process previously selected with
452.Ic defproc .
453.It Ic btr Ar ebp
454Show a backtrace from the
455.Ar ebp
456address specified.
457.It Ic defproc Ar pid
458Specify the PID of the process for some other commands in this section.
459.It Ic fr Ar frame
460Show frame
461.Ar frame
462of the stack of the process previously selected with
463.Ic defproc .
464.It Ic pcb Ar proc
465Show some PCB contents of the process
466.Ar proc .
467.El
468.Ss "Examining data structures"
469You can use standard
470.Xr gdb 1 Pq Pa ports/devel/gdb
471commands to look at most data structures.
472The macros in this section are
473convenience functions which typically display the data in a more readable
474format, or which omit less interesting parts of the structure.
475.Bl -tag -width indent
476.It Ic bp
477Show information about the buffer header pointed to by the variable
478.Va bp
479in the current frame.
480.It Ic bpd
481Show the contents
482.Pq Vt "char *"
483of
484.Va bp->data
485in the current frame.
486.It Ic bpl
487Show detailed information about the buffer header
488.Pq Vt "struct bp"
489pointed at by the local variable
490.Va bp .
491.It Ic bpp Ar bp
492Show summary information about the buffer header
493.Pq Vt "struct bp"
494pointed at by the parameter
495.Ar bp .
496.It Ic bx
497Print a number of fields from the buffer header pointed at in by the pointer
498.Ar bp
499in the current environment.
500.It Ic vdev
501Show some information of the
502.Vt vnode
503pointed to by the local variable
504.Va vp .
505.El
506.Ss "Miscellaneous macros"
507.Bl -tag -width indent
508.It Ic checkmem
509Check unallocated memory for modifications.
510This assumes that the kernel has been compiled with
511.Cd "options DIAGNOSTIC" .
512This causes the contents of free memory to be set to
513.Li 0xdeadc0de .
514.It Ic dmesg
515Print the system message buffer.
516This corresponds to the
517.Xr dmesg 8
518utility.
519This macro used to be called
520.Ic msgbuf .
521It can take a very long time over a serial line,
522and it is even slower via firewire
523or local memory due to inefficiencies in
524.Nm .
525When debugging a crash dump or over firewire, it is not necessary to start
526.Nm
527to access the message buffer: instead, use an appropriate variation of
528.Bd -literal -offset indent
529dmesg -M /var/crash/vmcore.0 -N kernel.debug
530dmesg -M /dev/fwmem0.0 -N kernel.debug
531.Ed
532.It Ic kldstat
533Equivalent of the
534.Xr kldstat 8
535utility without options.
536.It Ic pname
537Print the command name of the current process.
538.It Ic ps
539Show process status.
540This corresponds in concept, but not in appearance, to the
541.Xr ps 1
542utility.
543When debugging a crash dump or over firewire, it is not necessary to start
544.Nm
545to display the
546.Xr ps 1
547output: instead, use an appropriate variation of
548.Bd -literal -offset indent
549ps -M /var/crash/vmcore.0 -N kernel.debug
550ps -M /dev/fwmem0.0 -N kernel.debug
551.Ed
552.It Ic y
553Kludge for writing macros.
554When writing macros, it is convenient to paste them
555back into the
556.Nm
557window.
558Unfortunately, if the macro is already defined,
559.Nm
560insists on asking
561.Pp
562.Dl "Redefine foo?"
563.Pp
564It will not give up until you answer
565.Ql y .
566This command is that answer.
567It does nothing else except to print a warning
568message to remind you to remove it again.
569.El
570.Sh SEE ALSO
571.Xr gdb 1 Pq Pa ports/devel/gdb ,
572.Xr ps 1 ,
573.Xr ddb 4 ,
574.Xr firewire 4 ,
575.Xr dconschat 8 ,
576.Xr dmesg 8 ,
577.Xr fwcontrol 8 ,
578.Xr kldload 8
579.Sh AUTHORS
580This man page was written by
581.An Greg Lehey Aq Mt grog@FreeBSD.org .
582.Sh BUGS
583The
584.Xr gdb 1 Pq Pa ports/devel/gdb
585debugger
586was never designed to debug kernels, and it is not a very good match.
587Many problems exist.
588.Pp
589The
590.Nm
591implementation is very inefficient, and many operations are slow.
592.Pp
593Serial debugging is even slower, and race conditions can make it difficult to
594run the link at more than 9600 bps.
595Firewire connections do not have this problem.
596.Pp
597The debugging macros
598.Dq just grew.
599In general, the person who wrote them did so while looking for a specific
600problem, so they may not be general enough, and they may behave badly when used
601in ways for which they were not intended, even if those ways make sense.
602.Pp
603Many of these commands only work on the ia32 architecture.
604