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<font color="#0000ff"><i>Open</i></font><font color="#000084">BSD</font></a>
<font color="#e00000">Crash Reports</font>
</h2>
<hr>
<p>
<h3>Minimum information for kernel problems</h3>
Familiarize yourself with
<a href="report.html">the general bug reporting procedures</a>
first.
All of that will apply.
When reporting a kernel panic or crash, please remember:
<ul>
<li><i>We need the console output on the screen</i>.
Capture it and save it.
Serial consoles are best, but if you are on a VGA console you can
<a href="faq/faq7.html">scroll the console back</a>
and take readable pictures with a phone or camera.<br>
<li><i>If the kernel panicked we need the traceback.</i>
It may be displayed on the screen.
If you are at a
<tt><a href="https://man.openbsd.org/ddb.4">ddb</a>></tt>
prompt, type <tt>trace</tt>.
If you are running SMP, use the <tt>mach ddbcpu N</tt> command for each
of the <tt>N</tt> processors you have and repeat the <tt>trace</tt>
command for each processor.<br>
<li><i>We need the process list.</i>
Use the command <tt>ps</tt> to get that.
</ul>
<i>
Reports without the above information are useless.
This is the minimum we need to be able to track down the issue.
</i>
<h3>Additional information you can send</h3>
In some situations more information is desirable.
Below are outlined some additional steps you can take in certain situations:
<ul>
<li><i>If your crash appears to involve filesystems.</i>
The following additional things would be helpful
<ul>
<li>The output of the
<tt><a href="https://man.openbsd.org/ddb.4">ddb</a>></tt> command
<tt>show uvm</tt>
<li>The output of the
<tt><a href="https://man.openbsd.org/ddb.4">ddb</a>></tt>
command <tt>show bcstats</tt>
<li>The output of the <tt>mount</tt> command from your running machine, so
we know what filesystems are mounted and how.
</ul>
<li> ... XXX boot crash? XXX
<li> ... XXX show regs? XXX
</ul>
<h3>Lost the panic message?</h3>
Under some circumstances, you may lose the very first message of a panic,
stating the reason for the panic.
<blockquote><pre>
ddb> <b>show panic</b>
0: kernel: page fault trap, code=0
ddb>
</pre></blockquote>
<h3>Note for SMP systems</h3>
You should get a trace from each processor as part of your report:
<blockquote><pre>
ddb{0}> <b>trace</b>
pool_get(d05e7c20,0,dab19ef8,d0169414,80) at pool_get+0x226
fxp_add_rfabuf(d0a62000,d3c12b00,dab19f10,dab19f10) at fxp_add_rfabuf+0xa5
fxp_intr(d0a62000) at fxp_intr+0x1e7
Xintr_ioapic0() at Xintr_ioapic0+0x6d
--- interrupt ---
idle_loop+0x21:
ddb{0}> <b>machine ddbcpu 1</b>
Stopped at Debugger+0x4: leave
ddb{1}> <b>trace</b>
Debugger(d0319e28,d05ff5a0,dab1bee8,d031cc6e,d0a61800) at Debugger+0x4
i386_ipi_db(d0a61800,d05ff5a0,dab1bef8,d01eb997) at i386_ipi_db+0xb
i386_ipi_handler(b0,d05f0058,dab10010,d01d0010,dab10010) at i386_ipi_handler+0x
4a
Xintripi() at Xintripi+0x47
--- interrupt ---
i386_softintlock(0,58,dab10010,dab10010,d01e0010) at i386_softintlock+0x37
Xintrltimer() at Xintrltimer+0x47
--- interrupt ---
idle_loop+0x21:
ddb{1}>
</pre></blockquote>
Repeat the <tt>machine ddbcpu x</tt> followed by <tt>trace</tt> for each
processor in your machine.
<h3>How do I gather further information from a kernel crash?</h3><p>
A typical kernel crash on OpenBSD might look like this:
<blockquote><pre>
kernel: page fault trap, code=0
Stopped at <b>pf_route+0x263</b>: mov 0x40(%edi),%edx
ddb>
</pre></blockquote>
This crash happened at offset <tt>0x263</tt> in the function <tt>pf_route</tt>.
<p>
The first command to run from the
<a href="https://man.openbsd.org/ddb">ddb(4)</a> prompt is <tt>trace</tt>:
<blockquote><pre>
ddb> <b>trace</b>
<b>pf_route</b>(e28cb7e4,e28bc978,2,1fad,d0b8b120) at <b>pf_route+0x263</b>
pf_test(2,1f4ad,e28cb7e4,b4c1) at pf_test+0x706
pf_route(e28cbb00,e28bc978,2,d0a65440,d0b8b120) at pf_route+0x207
pf_test(2,d0a65440,e28cbb00,d023c282) at pf_test+0x706
ip_output(d0b6a200,0,0,0,0) at ip_output+0xb67
icmp_send(d0b6a200,0,1,a012) at icmp_send+0x57
icmp_reflect(d0b6a200,0,1,0,3) at icmp_reflect+0x26b
icmp_input(d0b6a200,14,0,0,d0b6a200) at icmp_input+0x42c
ipv4_input(d0b6a200,e289f140,d0a489e0,e289f140) at ipv4_input+0x6eb
ipintr(10,10,e289f140,e289f140,e28cbd38) at ipintr+0x8d
Bad frame pointer: 0xe28cbcac
ddb>
</pre></blockquote>
This tells us what function calls lead to the crash.
<p>
To find out the particular line of C code that caused the crash, you can
do the following:
<p>
Find the source file where the crashing function is defined.
In this example, that would be <tt>pf_route()</tt> in <tt>/sys/net/pf.c</tt>.
Use <a href="https://man.openbsd.org/objdump">objdump(1)</a> to get the
disassembly:
<blockquote><pre>
$ <b>cd /sys/arch/$(uname -m)/compile/GENERIC</b>
$ <b>objdump -dlr obj/pf.o >/tmp/pf.dis</b>
</pre></blockquote>
In the output, grep for the function name:
<blockquote><pre>
$ <b>grep "<pf_route>:" /tmp/pf.dis</b>
0000<b>7d88</b> <pf_route>:
</pre></blockquote>
Take this first hex number <tt>7d88</tt> and add the offset <tt>0x263</tt> from
the <tt>Stopped at</tt> line:
<blockquote><pre>
$ <b>printf '%x\n' $((0x7d88 + 0x263))</b>
7feb
</pre></blockquote>
Scroll down to the line <tt>7feb</tt>.
The assembler instruction should match the one quoted in the <tt>Stopped at</tt>
line.
Then scroll up to the nearest C line number:
<blockquote><pre>
$ <b>more /tmp/pf.dis</b>
/sys/net/pf.c:<b>3872</b>
7fe7: 0f b7 43 02 movzwl 0x2(%ebx),%eax
<b>7feb</b>: 8b 57 40 <b>mov 0x40(%edi),%edx</b>
7fee: 39 d0 cmp %edx,%eax
7ff0: 0f 87 92 00 00 00 ja 8088 <pf_route+0x300>
</pre></blockquote>
So, it's precisely line <tt>3872</tt> of <tt>pf.c</tt> that crashes:
<blockquote><pre>
$ <b>nl -ba /sys/net/pf.c | sed -n 3872p</b>
3872 if ((u_int16_t)ip->ip_len <= ifp->if_mtu) {
</pre></blockquote>
The kernel that produced the crash output and the object file for objdump must
be compiled from the exact same source file, otherwise the offsets won't match.
<p>
If you provide both the ddb trace output and the relevant objdump section,
that's very helpful.
<p>
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