xref: /openbsd/share/man/man4/ddb.4 (revision 09467b48)
1.\"	$OpenBSD: ddb.4,v 1.98 2020/06/17 10:55:24 sthen Exp $
2.\"	$NetBSD: ddb.4,v 1.5 1994/11/30 16:22:09 jtc Exp $
3.\"
4.\" Mach Operating System
5.\" Copyright (c) 1991,1990 Carnegie Mellon University
6.\" All Rights Reserved.
7.\"
8.\" Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute this software and its
9.\" documentation is hereby granted, provided that both the copyright
10.\" notice and this permission notice appear in all copies of the
11.\" software, derivative works or modified versions, and any portions
12.\" thereof, and that both notices appear in supporting documentation.
13.\"
14.\" CARNEGIE MELLON ALLOWS FREE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE IN ITS "AS IS"
15.\" CONDITION.  CARNEGIE MELLON DISCLAIMS ANY LIABILITY OF ANY KIND FOR
16.\" ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
17.\"
18.\" Carnegie Mellon requests users of this software to return to
19.\"
20.\"  Software Distribution Coordinator  or  Software.Distribution@CS.CMU.EDU
21.\"  School of Computer Science
22.\"  Carnegie Mellon University
23.\"  Pittsburgh PA 15213-3890
24.\"
25.\" any improvements or extensions that they make and grant Carnegie Mellon
26.\" the rights to redistribute these changes.
27.\"
28.Dd $Mdocdate: June 17 2020 $
29.Dt DDB 4
30.Os
31.Sh NAME
32.Nm ddb
33.Nd kernel debugger
34.Sh DESCRIPTION
35The
36.Nm
37debugger provides a means for debugging the kernel,
38and analysing the kernel after a system crash ("panic"), with a
39.Xr gdb 1 Ns \&-like
40syntax.
41.Pp
42.Nm
43is invoked upon a kernel panic when the
44.Xr sysctl 8
45.Va ddb.panic
46is set to 1.
47It may be invoked from the console when the sysctl
48.Va ddb.console
49is set to 1, using any of the following methods:
50.Bl -dash -offset 3n
51.It
52Using the key sequence
53.Li Ctrl-Alt-Esc .
54.It
55Sending a
56.Dv BREAK
57when using a serial console.
58.It
59Writing to the sysctl
60.Va ddb.trigger .
61.It
62For i386 and amd64 architectures,
63using the key sequence
64.Li Ctrl-Alt-Delete
65when the sysctl
66.Va machdep.kbdreset
67is set to 2.
68.El
69.Pp
70.Nm
71prompts for commands on the console with:
72.Pp
73.Dl ddb>
74.Pp
75The general syntax of a
76.Nm
77command is:
78.Bd -ragged -offset indent
79.Ar command
80.Oo Ic / Ns Ar modifiers Oc " "
81.Oo Ar address Oc Ns
82.Op Ic \&, Ns Ar count
83.Ed
84.Pp
85To save typing,
86.Nm
87makes use of a context inferred from previous commands.
88In this context,
89the current location is called
90.Va dot .
91.\" The
92.\" .Va dot
93.\" is displayed with
94.\" a hexadecimal format at a prompt.
95The
96.Ic examine ,
97.Ic search ,
98.Ic show struct ,
99and
100.Ic write
101commands update
102.Va dot
103to be that of the last address
104examined or the last location modified, and
105have intuitive effects on
106.Va next
107and
108.Va prev .
109All the other commands do not change
110.Va dot ,
111and set
112.Va next
113to be the same.
114(See
115.Sx VARIABLES . )
116.Pp
117.\" Specifying
118.\" .Ar address
119.\" in a command sets
120.\" .Va dot .
121An expression can be used in place of
122.Ar address
123(see
124.Sx EXPRESSIONS ) .
125Omitting
126.Ar address
127in a command uses the last value of
128.Va dot .
129A missing
130.Ar count
131is taken to be 1 for printing commands or \*(If
132for stack traces.
133Entering a blank line causes the last command to be repeated using
134.Va next
135in place of
136.Ar address ,
137a
138.Ar count
139of 1, and no modifiers.
140.Pp
141.Nm
142has a feature like
143.Xr more 1
144for the output.
145If the number of lines output in response to one command exceeds the number
146set in the
147.Va $lines
148variable, it displays the message
149.Ql "--db_more--"
150and waits for a response.
151.Pp
152The valid responses are:
153.Pp
154.Bl -tag -width 10n -offset indent -compact
155.It Aq Ic space
156One more page.
157.It Aq Ic return
158One more line.
159.It Ic q
160Abort the current command, and return to the command input mode.
161.El
162.Pp
163The following command line editing keys are provided:
164.Pp
165.Bl -tag -width 10n -offset indent -compact
166.It Ic ^b
167back one character
168.It Ic ^f
169forward one character
170.It Ic ^a
171beginning of line
172.It Ic ^e
173end of line
174.It Ic ^w
175erase word back
176.It Ic ^h | Aq Ic del
177erase previous character
178.It Ic ^d
179erase next character
180.It Ic ^k
181delete to end of line
182.It Ic ^u
183delete line
184.It Ic ^p
185previous in command history
186.It Ic ^n
187next in command history
188.It Ic ^r
189redraw line
190.It Ic ^t
191exchange the two characters to the left of the cursor
192.El
193.Sh COMMANDS
194The following commands may be typed at the
195.Ql ddb>
196prompt.
197Some commands consist of more than one word, and if only the first word
198or words are entered, the possible alternatives to complete the command
199are displayed and no other action is performed.
200.Bl -tag -width 10n
201.\" --------------------
202.It Ic help
203List the available commands.
204.\" --------------------
205.Tg examine
206.It Xo
207.Oo Ic e Oc Ns
208.Ic x Ns Op Ic amine
209.Op Cm /bhlqaAxzodurcsmiI
210.Op Ar addr Ns
211.Op Ic \&, Ns Ar count
212.Xc
213Display the contents at address
214.Ar addr
215according to the formats in the modifier.
216If no format is specified, the last formats specified for this command
217are used.
218.Pp
219The format characters are:
220.Pp
221.Bl -tag -width 4n -compact
222.It Cm /b
223look at by bytes (8 bits)
224.It Cm /h
225look at by half words (16 bits)
226.It Cm /l
227look at by long words (32 bits) (default)
228.It Cm /q
229look at by long longs (64 bits) (only available on 64-bit platforms)
230.It Cm /a
231print the location being displayed
232.It Cm /A
233print the location with a line number if possible
234.It Cm /x
235display in unsigned hex
236.It Cm /z
237display in signed hex
238.It Cm /o
239display in unsigned octal
240.It Cm /d
241display in signed decimal
242.It Cm /u
243display in unsigned decimal
244.It Cm /r
245display in current radix, signed
246.It Cm /c
247display low 8 bits as a character.
248Non-printing characters are displayed as an octal escape code (e.g., '\e000').
249.It Cm /s
250display the null-terminated string at the location.
251Non-printing characters are displayed as octal escapes.
252.It Cm /m
253display in unsigned hex with character dump at the end of each line.
254The location is also displayed in hex at the beginning of each line.
255.It Cm /i
256display as an instruction
257.It Cm /I
258display as an alternate format instruction depending on the
259machine:
260.Pp
261.Bl -tag -width powerpc_ -compact
262.It alpha
263Print affected register contents for every instruction.
264.It amd64 ,
265.It i386
266Do not skip padding to the next long word boundary for unconditional jumps.
267.It m88k
268Decode instructions for the opposite CPU model (e.g. m88110 when running on an
269m88100 processor).
270.El
271.El
272.Pp
273The value of
274.Va next
275is set to the
276.Ar addr
277plus the size of the data examined.
278.\" --------------------
279.Tg print
280.It Xo
281.Ic p Ns Op Ic rint
282.Op Cm /axzodurc
283.Op Ar addr
284.Xc
285Print
286.Ar addr
287according to the modifier character.
288The valid modifiers are a subset of those from the
289.Ic examine
290command, and act as described there.
291If no modifier is specified, the last one specified in a
292previous use of
293.Ic print
294is used.
295.Pp
296For example,
297.Bd -literal -offset indent
298print/x $eax
299.Ed
300.Pp
301will print something like this:
302.Bd -literal -offset indent
303xxxxxx
304.Ed
305.\" --------------------
306.Tg pprint
307.It Xo
308.Ic pp Ns Op Ic rint
309.Op Ar addr
310.Xc
311Pretty-print
312.Ar addr
313using CTF debug symbols included in the kernel binary image.
314The CTF section is normally added by running
315.Xr ctfstrip 1
316as part of building a new kernel.
317.\" --------------------
318.\" .It Xo Ic w Ns Op Cm /bhl
319.\" .Op Ar addr
320.\" .Ar expr Op expr ...
321.\" .Xc
322.Tg write
323.It Xo
324.Ic w Ns Op Ic rite
325.Op Cm /bhl
326.Op Ar addr
327.Ar expr Op Ar expr ...
328.Xc
329Write the value of each
330.Ar expr
331expression at succeeding locations start at
332.Ar addr .
333The write unit size can be specified using one of the modifiers:
334.Pp
335.Bl -tag -width 4n -offset indent -compact
336.It Cm /b
337byte (8 bits)
338.It Cm /h
339half word (16 bits)
340.It Cm /l
341long word (32 bits) (default)
342.El
343.Pp
344The value of
345.Va next
346is set to
347.Ar addr
348plus the size of values written.
349.Pp
350.Sy Warning :
351since there is no delimiter between expressions, the
352command may not parse as you expect.
353It is best to enclose each expression in parentheses.
354.\" --------------------
355.It Xo Ic set
356.Ic $ Ns Ar name
357.Op Ic =
358.Ar expr
359.Xc
360Set the named variable or register with the value of
361.Ar expr .
362For valid variable names,
363see
364.Sx VARIABLES .
365.\" --------------------
366.It Ic boot Ar how
367Reboot the machine depending on
368.Ar how :
369.Pp
370.Bl -tag -width "boot poweroff" -compact
371.It Ic boot sync
372Sync disks and reboot.
373.It Ic boot crash
374Dump core and reboot.
375.It Ic boot dump
376Sync disks, dump core and reboot.
377.It Ic boot halt
378Just halt.
379.It Ic boot reboot
380Just reboot.
381.It Ic boot poweroff
382Power down the machine whenever possible; if it fails, just halt.
383.El
384.\" --------------------
385.It Xo
386.Ic break
387.Op Ar addr Ns
388.Op Ic \&, Ns Ar count
389.Xc
390Set a break point at
391.Ar addr .
392If
393.Ar count
394is supplied,
395.Nm
396allows the breakpoint to be silently hit
397.Ar ( count No \- 1 )
398times before stopping at the
399break point.
400.\" --------------------
401.Tg delete
402.It Xo
403.Ic d Ns Op Ic elete
404.Op Ar addr
405.Xc
406Delete the break point set with the
407.Ic break
408command.
409.\" --------------------
410.\" .It Xo Ic s Ns Op Cm /p
411.\" .Op Ic \&, Ns Ar count
412.\" .Xc
413.Tg step
414.It Xo
415.Ic s Ns Op Ic tep
416.Op Cm /p
417.Op Ic \&, Ns Ar count
418.Xc
419Single step
420.Ar count
421times.
422If the
423.Cm /p
424modifier is specified, print each instruction at each step.
425Otherwise, only print the last instruction.
426.Pp
427.Sy Warning :
428depending on machine type, it may not be possible to
429single-step through some low-level code paths.
430On machines with software-emulated single-stepping (e.g., alpha),
431stepping through code executed by interrupt handlers will probably
432do the wrong thing.
433.\" --------------------
434.It Ic call Ar name Ns Xo
435.Ic \&( Ns Ar expr
436.Op Ic \&, Ar expr ...
437.Ic \&)
438.Xc
439Call the function named by
440.Ar name
441with the argument(s) listed in parentheses.
442Parentheses may be omitted if the function takes no arguments.
443The number of arguments is currently limited to 10.
444.\" --------------------
445.\" .It Ic c Ns Op Cm /c
446.Tg continue
447.It Xo
448.Ic c Ns Op Ic ontinue
449.Op Cm /c
450.Xc
451Continue execution until a breakpoint or watchpoint.
452If the
453.Cm /c
454modifier is given, instructions are counted while executing.
455.Pp
456.Sy Warning :
457when counting with
458.Cm /c ,
459.Nm
460is really silently single-stepping.
461This means that single-stepping on low-level code may cause strange
462behavior.
463.\" --------------------
464.It Xo
465.Ic watch
466.Ar addr
467.Op Ic \&, Ns Ar size
468.Xc
469Set a watchpoint for the region starting at
470.Ar addr .
471Execution stops and control returns to
472.Nm
473when an attempt is made to modify a watched region.
474The
475.Ar size
476argument defaults to 4.
477.Pp
478If you specify a wrong space address, the request is rejected
479with an error message.
480.Pp
481.Sy Warning :
482attempts to watch wired kernel memory
483may cause an unrecoverable error on some systems (e.g., i386).
484.\" --------------------
485.It Ic dwatch Ar addr
486Delete the watchpoint at address
487.Ar addr
488that was previously set with a
489.Ic watch
490command.
491.\" --------------------
492.It Xo
493.Ic hangman
494.Op Cm /s Ns Op Ic 0-9
495.Xc
496This is a tiny and handy tool for random kernel hangs analysis, of which its
497depth is controlled by the optional argument of the default value of five.
498It uses some sophisticated heuristics to spot the global symbol that
499caused the hang.
500Since the discovering algorithm is a probabilistic one,
501you may spend substantial time to figure the exact symbol name.
502This smart thing requires a little of your attention, the input it accepts
503is mostly of the same format as that of the famous
504.Xr hangman 6
505game, to which it, apparently, is obliged by the name.
506Hint: the
507.Xr nm 1
508utility might help.
509.\" --------------------
510.It Ic until Op Cm /p
511Stop at the next
512.Qq call
513or
514.Qq return
515instruction.
516If the
517.Cm /p
518modifier is specified,
519.Nm
520prints the call nesting depth and the
521cumulative instruction count at each call or return.
522Otherwise, it stays silent until the matching return is hit.
523.\" --------------------
524.It Ic match Op Cm /p
525Stop at the next matching return instruction.
526If the
527.Cm /p
528modifier is specified,
529.Nm
530prints the call nesting depth and the
531cumulative instruction count at each call or return.
532Otherwise, it remains mostly quiet.
533.\" --------------------
534.It Ic next Op Cm /p
535The
536.Ic next
537command is a synonym for
538.Ic match .
539.\" --------------------
540.It Ic kill Ar pid
541Send an uncatchable
542.Dv SIGABRT
543signal to the process specified by the
544.Ar pid
545argument.
546.\" --------------------
547.It Xo
548.Ic trace
549.Op Cm /tu
550.Op Ar frameaddr Ns
551.Op Ic \&, Ns Ar count
552.Xc
553Show the stack trace.
554The
555.Cm /t
556modifier interprets the
557.Ar frameaddr
558argument as the TID of a process and shows the stack trace of
559that process.
560.Ar frameaddr
561is subject to the radix; use the 0t prefix to enter a decimal TID.
562The
563.Cm /t
564modifier is not supported on all platforms.
565The
566.Cm /u
567modifier shows the stack trace of user space;
568if omitted, the kernel stack is traced instead.
569The
570.Ar count
571argument is the limit on the number of frames to be followed.
572If
573.Ar count
574is omitted, all frames are printed.
575.Pp
576.Sy Warning :
577user space stack trace is valid
578only if the machine dependent code supports it.
579.\" --------------------
580.It Xo
581.Ic search
582.Op Cm /bhl
583.Op Ar addr
584.Ar value
585.Op Ar mask
586.Op Ic \&, Ns Ar count
587.Xc
588Search memory for a value beginning at
589.Ar addr .
590This command might fail in interesting
591ways if it doesn't find the searched-for value.
592This is because
593.Nm
594doesn't always recover from touching bad memory.
595The optional
596.Ar count
597argument limits the search.
598The modifiers are the same as those of the
599.Ic write
600command.
601.Pp
602The
603.Va next
604address is set to the address where
605.Ar value
606is found, or just after where the search area finishes.
607.\" --------------------
608.It Ic show Ar what
609Displays various things, depending on
610.Ar what :
611.Bl -tag -width 4n
612.\" --------------------
613.It Ic show bcstats
614Prints the buffer cache statistics.
615.\" --------------------
616.It Ic show breaks
617Prints a list of all breakpoints that have been set with the
618.Ic break
619command.
620.\" --------------------
621.It Xo
622.Ic show buf
623.Op Cm /f
624.Ar addr
625.Xc
626Prints the
627.Li struct buf
628at
629.Ar addr .
630If the
631.Cm /f
632modifier is specified output will also include
633.Li softdep
634printout, if those are available.
635.\" --------------------
636.It Ic show extents
637Prints a detailed list of all extents.
638.\" --------------------
639.It Ic show locks Op Ar addr
640Prints the list of locks held by a thread.
641If an optional address is not specified,
642.Li curproc
643is assumed.
644The
645.Cm option WITNESS
646is required for this command to be available.
647.\" --------------------
648.It Ic show malloc Op Ar addr
649Prints malloc debugging information if available.
650If an optional address is specified, only information about that address
651is printed.
652.\" --------------------
653.It Xo
654.Ic show map
655.Op Cm /f
656.Ar addr
657.Xc
658Prints the
659.Li vm_map
660at
661.Ar addr .
662If the
663.Cm /f
664modifier is specified the complete map is printed.
665.\" --------------------
666.It Ic show mbuf Ar addr
667Prints the
668.Li struct mbuf
669header at
670.Ar addr .
671Depending on the mbuf flags
672.Li struct pkthdr
673and
674.Li struct m_ext
675are printed as well.
676.\" --------------------
677.It Xo
678.Ic show mount
679.Op Cm /f
680.Ar addr
681.Xc
682Prints the
683.Li struct mount
684at
685.Ar addr .
686If the
687.Cm /f
688modifier is specified prints out all
689.Li vnodes
690(see also
691.Cm show vnode )
692and also all
693.Li bufs
694(see also
695.Cm show buf )
696on all those vnodes.
697.\" --------------------
698.It Xo
699.Ic show nfsnode
700.Op Cm /f
701.Ar addr
702.Xc
703Prints the
704.Li struct nfsnode
705at
706.Ar addr .
707If the
708.Cm /f
709modifier is specified prints out additional
710information as well.
711.\" --------------------
712.It Xo
713.Ic show nfsreq
714.Op Cm /f
715.Ar addr
716.Xc
717Prints the
718.Li struct nfsreq
719at
720.Ar addr .
721If the
722.Cm /f
723modifier is specified prints out additional
724information as well.
725.\" --------------------
726.It Xo
727.Ic show object
728.Op Cm /f
729.Ar addr
730.Xc
731Prints the
732.Li vm_object
733at
734.Ar addr .
735If the
736.Cm /f
737modifier is specified the complete object is printed.
738.\" --------------------
739.It Xo
740.Ic show page
741.Op Cm /f
742.Ar addr
743.Xc
744Prints the
745.Li vm_page
746at
747.Ar addr .
748If the
749.Cm /f
750modifier is specified the complete page is printed.
751.\" --------------------
752.It Ic show panic
753Prints the panic string.
754.\" --------------------
755.It Xo
756.Ic show pool
757.Op Cm /p
758.Ar addr
759.Xc
760Prints the
761.Li pool
762at
763.Ar addr .
764Valid modifiers:
765.Bl -tag -width xxx -compact
766.It Cm /p
767Print the pagelist for this pool.
768.El
769.\" --------------------
770.It Ic show proc Op Ar addr
771Prints the
772.Li struct proc
773at
774.Ar addr .
775If an optional address is not specified
776.Li curproc
777is assumed.
778.\" --------------------
779.It Ic show registers Op Cm /u
780Display the register set.
781If the
782.Cm /u
783modifier is specified, it displays user registers (or the currently
784saved registers) instead of the kernel's.
785Note: The
786.Cm /u
787modifier is not supported on every machine, in which case
788incorrect information may be displayed.
789.\" --------------------
790.It Ic show socket Ar addr
791Prints the
792.Li struct socket
793at
794.Ar addr .
795If the socket is spliced, the
796.Li struct sosplice
797associated with the socket is printed as well.
798.\" --------------------
799.It Xo
800.Ic show struct
801.Ar name
802.Op addr
803.Xc
804Prints the content of the memory at
805.Ar addr
806as a struct
807.Ar name .
808Nested structures and bit fields are not printed.
809Character arrays are printed as bytes.
810.\" --------------------
811.It Ic show uvmexp
812Displays a selection of uvm counters and statistics.
813.\" --------------------
814.It Xo
815.Ic show vnode
816.Op Cm /f
817.Ar addr
818.Xc
819Prints the
820.Li struct vnode
821at
822.Ar addr .
823If the
824.Cm /f
825modifier is specified prints out all
826.Li bufs
827(see also
828.Cm show buf )
829currently attached to this
830.Li vnode .
831.\" --------------------
832.It Ic show watches
833Displays all watchpoints set with the
834.Ic watch
835command.
836.\" --------------------
837.It Ic show witness Op Cm /b
838Prints the current order list.
839If the
840.Cm /b
841modifier is specified, the list of found lock order violations is printed
842instead.
843The
844.Cm option WITNESS
845is required for this command to be available.
846.\" --------------------
847.It Ic show all procs Op Cm /anow
848Display information on all processes.
849.Pp
850.Bl -tag -width foo -compact
851.It Cm /n
852(Default) Show process information in a
853.Xr ps 1 Ns \&-like
854format.
855Information printed includes process ID, thread ID, parent
856process ID, UID, process status, process flags, process
857wait channel message and process command name.
858.It Cm /a
859Shows the kernel virtual addresses of each process'
860proc structure, u-area, and vmspace structure.
861The vmspace address is also the address of the process'
862.Li vm_map
863structure
864and can be used in the
865.Ic show map
866command.
867.It Cm /o
868Shows non-idle threads that were on CPU when ddb was entered.
869Information printed includes thread ID, process ID, UID, process flags,
870thread flags, current CPU, and command name.
871.It Cm /w
872Shows each thread's ID, command, process group,
873wait channel address, and wait channel message.
874.El
875.\" --------------------
876.It Ic show all bufs Op Cm /f
877Display information about all buffers in the system.
878.Pp
879.Bl -tag -width foo -compact
880.It Cm /f
881For each buffer, print a more detailed output.
882See the
883.Ic show buf
884command for more information.
885.El
886.\" --------------------
887.It Ic show all callout
888Display the contents of the callout table.
889.\" --------------------
890.It Ic show all pools Op Cm /a
891Display information about all system pools in a format similar to
892.Xr vmstat 8 .
893.Pp
894.Bl -tag -width foo -compact
895.It Cm /a
896Displays
897.Dq interesting
898address information.
899.El
900.\" --------------------
901.It Ic show all locks
902Prints the list of locks held by all threads in the system.
903The
904.Cm option WITNESS
905is required for this command to be available.
906.\" --------------------
907.It Ic show all mounts Op Cm /f
908Display information on all mounted filesystems.
909.Pp
910.Bl -tag -width foo -compact
911.It Cm /f
912For each filesystem, list all its struct vnode addresses.
913These addresses can be used in the
914.Ic show vnode
915command.
916.El
917.\" --------------------
918.It Ic show all nfsnodes Op Cm /f
919Display information about all nfsnodes in the system.
920.Pp
921.Bl -tag -width foo -compact
922.It Cm /f
923For each nfsnode, print a more detailed output.
924See the
925.Ic show nfsnode
926command for more information.
927.El
928.\" --------------------
929.It Ic show all nfsreqs Op Cm /f
930Display information for all outstanding NFS requests.
931.Pp
932.Bl -tag -width foo -compact
933.It Cm /f
934For each NFS requests, print a more detailed output.
935See the
936.Ic show nfsreq
937command for more information.
938.El
939.\" --------------------
940.It Ic show all vnodes Op Cm /f
941Display information about all vnodes in the system.
942.Pp
943.Bl -tag -width foo -compact
944.It Cm /f
945For each vnode, print a more detailed output.
946See the
947.Ic show vnode
948command for more information.
949.El
950.El
951.\" --------------------
952.It Ic callout
953A synonym for the
954.Ic show all callout
955command.
956.\" --------------------
957.It Ic ps Op Cm /anow
958A synonym for
959.Ic show all procs .
960.\" --------------------
961.Tg machine
962.It Xo
963.Ic mac Ns Op Ic hine
964.Ar subcommand Op Ar args ...
965.Xc
966Perform a platform-specific command.
967.Pp
968The following commands are supported by multiprocessor kernels on
969these platforms: amd64, i386, macppc, mips64, and sparc64.
970.Pp
971.Bl -tag -width "searchframe [addr]" -compact
972.It Ic cpuinfo
973Display the state of each CPU.
974.It Ic ddbcpu Ar N
975Stop the current CPU and start handling
976.Nm
977on the selected CPU.
978.It Ic startcpu Op Ar N
979Resume normal processing on the selected CPU,
980or all CPUs if none is specified.
981.It Ic stopcpu Op Ar N
982Stop normal processing on the selected CPU,
983or all CPUs (except the one handling
984.Nm )
985if none is specified.
986.El
987.Pp
988Other platform-specific commands:
989.\" .Pp
990.\" amd64:
991.Pp
992arm:
993.Bl -tag -width "searchframe [addr]" -compact
994.It Ic frame Ar addr
995Display the trapframe at
996.Ar addr .
997.El
998.Pp
999i386:
1000.Bl -tag -width "searchframe [addr]" -compact
1001.\" .It Ic acpi disasm Ar ??
1002.\" .It Ic acpi showval Ar ??
1003.\" .It Ic acpi tree Ar ??
1004.\" .It Ic acpi trace Ar ??
1005.\" Evil ACPI debugging magic.
1006.It Ic sysregs
1007Display the contents of the privileged registers:
1008.Va IDTR ,
1009.Va GDTR ,
1010.Va LDTR ,
1011.Va TR ,
1012.Va CR0 ,
1013.Va CR2 ,
1014.Va CR3 ,
1015and
1016.Va CR4 .
1017.\" (i386-only)
1018.El
1019.Pp
1020m88k:
1021.Bl -tag -width "searchframe [addr]" -compact
1022.It Ic ddbcpu Ar N
1023Stop the current CPU and start handling
1024.Nm
1025on the selected CPU.
1026.It Ic frame Ar addr
1027Display the trapframe at
1028.Ar addr .
1029.It Ic regs
1030Display the registers from when
1031.Nm
1032was entered.
1033.It Ic searchframe Op Ar addr
1034Search for and display stack exception frames,
1035starting from
1036.Ar addr
1037if given, else the address in register
1038.Va r31 ,
1039and stopping at the next 8k boundary.
1040.It Ic where
1041Display where the current CPU was stopped.
1042.El
1043.Pp
1044mips64:
1045.Bl -tag -width "searchframe [addr]" -compact
1046.It Xo
1047.Ic tlb Op Cm /p Ar asid
1048.Op Cm /c
1049.Op Ar tlb
1050.Xc
1051.It Ic trap Ar ??
1052.El
1053.Pp
1054sh:
1055.Bl -tag -width "searchframe [addr]" -compact
1056.It Ic cache Op Ar addr
1057Display the cache, starting from
1058.Ar addr ,
1059defaulting to 0.
1060.It Ic frame
1061Display the switch and trap frames.
1062.\" .It Ic stack
1063.It Ic tlb
1064Display the TLB.
1065.El
1066.Pp
1067sparc64:
1068.Bl -tag -width "searchframe [addr]" -compact
1069.It Ic ctx
1070Display the context addresses for all threads.
1071.\" .It Ic dtlb Ar 0,2
1072.\" .It Ic dtsb
1073.\" .It Ic esp
1074.\" .It Ic fpstate Op Ar addr
1075.\" .It Ic itlb Ar 0,1,2
1076.\" .It Ic kmap Op Ar addr
1077.\" .It Ic pcb Op Ar addr
1078.\" .It Ic pctx Ar pid
1079.\" .It Ic page Ar addr
1080.\" .It Ic phys Op Ar addr
1081.\" .It Ic pmap Op Ar addr
1082.\" .It Ic proc Op Ar addr
1083.\" .It Ic prom Ar ??
1084.\" .It Ic pv Ar addr
1085.\" .It Ic stack Op Ar addr
1086.\" .It Ic tf Op Ar addr
1087.\" .It Ic ts
1088.\" .It Ic traptrace Op Ar addr
1089.\" .It Ic watch Op Ar addr
1090.\" .It Ic window Op Ar winnum
1091.\" .It Ic xir Op Ar addr
1092.El
1093.\" --------------------
1094.El
1095.Sh VARIABLES
1096.Nm
1097denotes registers and variables by
1098.Ic $ Ns Va name .
1099Register names can be found with the
1100.Ic show registers
1101command.
1102.Pp
1103Some variable names are suffixed with numbers, and some may have a modifier
1104following a colon immediately after the variable name.
1105For example, register variables can have the
1106.Ql :u
1107modifier to indicate a
1108user register (e.g.,
1109.Ql $eax:u ) .
1110.Pp
1111Built-in debugger variables currently supported are:
1112.Bl -tag -width 10n -compact -offset indent
1113.It Va $radix
1114Input and output radix.
1115.It Va $maxoff
1116Addresses are printed as
1117.Ar symbol Ns Li + Ns Ar offset
1118unless
1119.Ar offset
1120is greater than
1121.Va $maxoff .
1122.It Va $maxwidth
1123The width of the displayed lines.
1124.It Va $lines
1125The number of lines to page.
1126This is used by the
1127.Dq more
1128feature.
1129.It Va $tabstops
1130Tab stop width.
1131.It Va $log
1132Controls whether the output of
1133.Nm
1134will also appear in the system message
1135buffer.
1136.El
1137.Pp
1138These variables can also be controlled outside
1139.Nm
1140via the
1141.Sq ddb
1142.Xr sysctl 8
1143hierarchy.
1144.Sh EXPRESSIONS
1145Almost all expression operators in C are supported except for
1146.Ql ~ ,
1147.Ql ^ ,
1148and unary
1149.Ql & .
1150Special rules for expressions in
1151.Nm
1152are:
1153.Bl -tag -width 15n -compact -offset indent
1154.It Ar identifier
1155The name of a symbol.
1156It is translated to the address (or value) of the symbol.
1157.Ql \&.
1158and
1159.Ql \&:
1160can be used in the identifier.
1161The following can be accepted as an identifier,
1162if supported by an object format dependent routine:
1163.Bl -item -offset indent -compact
1164.It
1165.Sm off
1166.Oo Ar filename Li \&: Oc Ar func
1167.Op \&: Ar linenumber
1168.It
1169.Op Ar filename \&:
1170.Ar variable
1171.It
1172.Ar filename
1173.Op \&: Ar linenumber
1174.Sm on
1175.El
1176The symbol may be prefixed with
1177.Sq Ar symboltablename Ns ::
1178(e.g.,
1179.Ql emulator::mach_msg_trap )
1180to specify other than kernel symbols.
1181.It Ar number
1182The radix is determined by the first two letters:
1183.Ql 0x :
1184hex,
1185.Ql 0o :
1186octal,
1187.Ql 0t :
1188decimal, otherwise, the value of
1189.Va $radix
1190is used.
1191.It Li \&.
1192.Va dot :
1193the current address.
1194.It Li +
1195.Va next :
1196the next address.
1197.It Li ..
1198The address of the start of the last line examined.
1199Unlike
1200.Va dot
1201or
1202.Va next ,
1203this is only changed by the
1204.Ic examine
1205or
1206.Ic write
1207command.
1208.It Li '
1209The last address explicitly specified.
1210.It Li $ Ns Ar variable
1211The value of a register or variable.
1212The name may be followed by a
1213.Ql \&:
1214and modifiers as described above with
1215.Ar identifier .
1216.It Ar expr Li # Ar expr
1217A binary operator which rounds up the left hand side to the next
1218multiple of right hand side.
1219.It Li * Ns Ar expr
1220Indirection.
1221It may be followed by a ':' and modifiers as described above.
1222.El
1223.Sh SEE ALSO
1224.Xr ctfstrip 1 ,
1225.Xr gdb 1 ,
1226.Xr nm 1 ,
1227.Xr witness 4 ,
1228.Xr sysctl.conf 5 ,
1229.Xr hangman 6 ,
1230.Xr crash 8 ,
1231.Xr sysctl 8 ,
1232.Xr extent 9 ,
1233.Xr pool 9 ,
1234.Xr uvm_init 9
1235.Sh HISTORY
1236This kernel facility first appeared in the MACH 2 operating system
1237developed by CMU.
1238Hangman (which stands for "hangs maniacal analyzer") first appeared in
1239.Ox 1.2 .
1240