db_textdump.c revision 193066
1/*-
2 * Copyright (c) 2007 Robert N. M. Watson
3 * All rights reserved.
4 *
5 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
7 * are met:
8 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
9 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
10 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
11 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
12 *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
13 *
14 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
15 * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
16 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
17 * ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
18 * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
19 * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
20 * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
21 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
22 * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
23 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
24 * SUCH DAMAGE.
25 */
26
27/*-
28 * Kernel text-dump support: write a series of text files to the dump
29 * partition for later recovery, including captured DDB output, kernel
30 * configuration, message buffer, and panic message.  This allows for a more
31 * compact representation of critical debugging information than traditional
32 * binary dumps, as well as allowing dump information to be used without
33 * access to kernel symbols, source code, etc.
34 *
35 * Storage Layout
36 * --------------
37 *
38 * Crash dumps are aligned to the end of the dump or swap partition in order
39 * to minimize the chances of swap duing fsck eating into the dump.  However,
40 * unlike a memory dump, we don't know the size of the textdump a priori, so
41 * can't just write it out sequentially in order from a known starting point
42 * calculated with respect to the end of the partition.  In order to address
43 * this, we actually write out the textdump in reverse block order, allowing
44 * us to directly align it to the end of the partition and then write out the
45 * dump header and trailer before and after it once done.  savecore(8) must
46 * know to reverse the order of the blocks in order to produce a readable
47 * file.
48 *
49 * Data is written out in the ustar file format so that we can write data
50 * incrementally as a stream without reference to previous files.
51 *
52 * TODO
53 * ----
54 *
55 * - Allow subsytems to register to submit files for inclusion in the text
56 *   dump in a generic way.
57 */
58
59#include <sys/cdefs.h>
60__FBSDID("$FreeBSD: head/sys/ddb/db_textdump.c 193066 2009-05-29 21:27:12Z jamie $");
61
62#include "opt_config.h"
63
64#include <sys/param.h>
65#include <sys/conf.h>
66#include <sys/kernel.h>
67#include <sys/kerneldump.h>
68#include <sys/msgbuf.h>
69#include <sys/sysctl.h>
70#include <sys/systm.h>
71
72#include <ddb/ddb.h>
73#include <ddb/db_lex.h>
74
75static SYSCTL_NODE(_debug_ddb, OID_AUTO, textdump, CTLFLAG_RW, 0,
76    "DDB textdump options");
77
78/*
79 * Don't touch the first SIZEOF_METADATA bytes on the dump device.  This is
80 * to protect us from metadata and metadata from us.
81 */
82#define	SIZEOF_METADATA		(64*1024)
83
84/*
85 * Data is written out as a series of files in the ustar tar format.  ustar
86 * is a simple streamed format consiting of a series of files prefixed with
87 * headers, and all padded to 512-byte block boundaries, which maps
88 * conveniently to our requirements.
89 */
90struct ustar_header {
91	char	uh_filename[100];
92	char	uh_mode[8];
93	char	uh_tar_owner[8];
94	char	uh_tar_group[8];
95	char	uh_size[12];
96	char	uh_mtime[12];
97	char	uh_sum[8];
98	char	uh_type;
99	char	uh_linkfile[100];
100	char	uh_ustar[6];
101	char	uh_version[2];
102	char	uh_owner[32];
103	char	uh_group[32];
104	char	uh_major[8];
105	char	uh_minor[8];
106	char	uh_filenameprefix[155];
107	char	uh_zeropad[12];
108} __packed;
109
110/*
111 * Various size assertions -- pretty much everything must be one block in
112 * size.
113 */
114CTASSERT(sizeof(struct kerneldumpheader) == TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE);
115CTASSERT(sizeof(struct ustar_header) == TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE);
116
117/*
118 * Is a textdump scheduled?  If so, the shutdown code will invoke our dumpsys
119 * routine instead of the machine-dependent kernel dump routine.
120 */
121int	textdump_pending;
122SYSCTL_INT(_debug_ddb_textdump, OID_AUTO, pending, CTLFLAG_RW,
123    &textdump_pending, 0,
124    "Perform textdump instead of regular kernel dump.");
125
126/*
127 * Various constants for tar headers and contents.
128 */
129#define	TAR_USER	"root"
130#define	TAR_GROUP	"wheel"
131#define	TAR_UID		"0"
132#define	TAR_GID		"0"
133#define	TAR_MODE	"0600"
134#define	TAR_USTAR	"ustar"
135
136#define	TAR_CONFIG_FILENAME	"config.txt"	/* Kernel configuration. */
137#define	TAR_MSGBUF_FILENAME	"msgbuf.txt"	/* Kernel messsage buffer. */
138#define	TAR_PANIC_FILENAME	"panic.txt"	/* Panic message. */
139#define	TAR_VERSION_FILENAME	"version.txt"	/* Kernel version. */
140
141/*
142 * Configure which files will be dumped.
143 */
144#ifdef INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE
145static int textdump_do_config = 1;
146SYSCTL_INT(_debug_ddb_textdump, OID_AUTO, do_config, CTLFLAG_RW,
147    &textdump_do_config, 0, "Dump kernel configuration in textdump");
148#endif
149
150static int textdump_do_ddb = 1;
151SYSCTL_INT(_debug_ddb_textdump, OID_AUTO, do_ddb, CTLFLAG_RW,
152    &textdump_do_ddb, 0, "Dump DDB captured output in textdump");
153
154static int textdump_do_msgbuf = 1;
155SYSCTL_INT(_debug_ddb_textdump, OID_AUTO, do_msgbuf, CTLFLAG_RW,
156    &textdump_do_msgbuf, 0, "Dump kernel message buffer in textdump");
157
158static int textdump_do_panic = 1;
159SYSCTL_INT(_debug_ddb_textdump, OID_AUTO, do_panic, CTLFLAG_RW,
160    &textdump_do_panic, 0, "Dump kernel panic message in textdump");
161
162static int textdump_do_version = 1;
163SYSCTL_INT(_debug_ddb_textdump, OID_AUTO, do_version, CTLFLAG_RW,
164    &textdump_do_version, 0, "Dump kernel version string in textdump");
165
166/*
167 * State related to incremental writing of blocks to disk.
168 */
169static off_t textdump_offset;		/* Offset of next sequential write. */
170static int textdump_error;		/* Carried write error, if any. */
171
172/*
173 * Statically allocate space to prepare block-sized headers and data.
174 */
175char textdump_block_buffer[TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE];
176static struct kerneldumpheader kdh;
177
178/*
179 * Calculate and fill in the checksum for a ustar header.
180 */
181static void
182ustar_checksum(struct ustar_header *uhp)
183{
184	u_int sum;
185	int i;
186
187	for (i = 0; i < sizeof(uhp->uh_sum); i++)
188		uhp->uh_sum[i] = ' ';
189	sum = 0;
190	for (i = 0; i < sizeof(*uhp); i++)
191		sum += ((u_char *)uhp)[i];
192	snprintf(uhp->uh_sum, sizeof(uhp->uh_sum), "%6o", sum);
193}
194
195/*
196 * Each file in the tarball has a block-sized header with its name and other,
197 * largely hard-coded, properties.
198 */
199void
200textdump_mkustar(char *block_buffer, const char *filename, u_int size)
201{
202	struct ustar_header *uhp;
203
204	uhp = (struct ustar_header *)block_buffer;
205	bzero(uhp, sizeof(*uhp));
206	strlcpy(uhp->uh_filename, filename, sizeof(uhp->uh_filename));
207	strlcpy(uhp->uh_mode, TAR_MODE, sizeof(uhp->uh_mode));
208	snprintf(uhp->uh_size, sizeof(uhp->uh_size), "%o", size);
209	strlcpy(uhp->uh_tar_owner, TAR_UID, sizeof(uhp->uh_tar_owner));
210	strlcpy(uhp->uh_tar_group, TAR_GID, sizeof(uhp->uh_tar_group));
211	strlcpy(uhp->uh_owner, TAR_USER, sizeof(uhp->uh_owner));
212	strlcpy(uhp->uh_group, TAR_GROUP, sizeof(uhp->uh_group));
213	snprintf(uhp->uh_mtime, sizeof(uhp->uh_mtime), "%lo",
214	    (unsigned long)time_second);
215	uhp->uh_type = 0;
216	strlcpy(uhp->uh_ustar, TAR_USTAR, sizeof(uhp->uh_ustar));
217	ustar_checksum(uhp);
218}
219
220/*
221 * textdump_writeblock() writes TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE-sized blocks of data to
222 * the space between di->mediaoffset and di->mediaoffset + di->mediasize.  It
223 * accepts an offset relative to di->mediaoffset.  If we're carrying any
224 * error from previous I/O, return that error and don't continue to try to
225 * write.  Most writers ignore the error and forge ahead on the basis that
226 * there's not much you can do.
227 */
228static int
229textdump_writeblock(struct dumperinfo *di, off_t offset, char *buffer)
230{
231
232	if (textdump_error)
233		return (textdump_error);
234	if (offset + TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE > di->mediasize)
235		return (EIO);
236	if (offset < SIZEOF_METADATA)
237		return (ENOSPC);
238	textdump_error = dump_write(di, buffer, 0, offset + di->mediaoffset,
239	    TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE);
240	return (textdump_error);
241}
242
243/*
244 * Interfaces to save and restore the dump offset, so that printers can go
245 * back to rewrite a header if required, while avoiding their knowing about
246 * the global layout of the blocks.
247 *
248 * If we ever want to support writing textdumps to tape or other
249 * stream-oriented target, we'll need to remove this.
250 */
251void
252textdump_saveoff(off_t *offsetp)
253{
254
255	*offsetp = textdump_offset;
256}
257
258void
259textdump_restoreoff(off_t offset)
260{
261
262	textdump_offset = offset;
263}
264
265/*
266 * Interface to write the "next block" relative to the current offset; since
267 * we write backwards from the end of the partition, we subtract, but there's
268 * no reason for the caller to know this.
269 */
270int
271textdump_writenextblock(struct dumperinfo *di, char *buffer)
272{
273	int error;
274
275	error = textdump_writeblock(di, textdump_offset, buffer);
276	textdump_offset -= TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE;
277	return (error);
278}
279
280#ifdef INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE
281extern char kernconfstring[];
282
283/*
284 * Dump kernel configuration.
285 */
286static void
287textdump_dump_config(struct dumperinfo *di)
288{
289	u_int count, fullblocks, len;
290
291	len = strlen(kernconfstring);
292	textdump_mkustar(textdump_block_buffer, TAR_CONFIG_FILENAME, len);
293	(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, textdump_block_buffer);
294
295	/*
296	 * Write out all full blocks directly from the string, and handle any
297	 * left-over bits by copying it to out to the local buffer and
298	 * zero-padding it.
299	 */
300	fullblocks = len / TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE;
301	for (count = 0; count < fullblocks; count++)
302		(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, kernconfstring + count *
303		    TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE);
304	if (len % TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE != 0) {
305		bzero(textdump_block_buffer, TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE);
306		bcopy(kernconfstring + count * TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE,
307		    textdump_block_buffer, len % TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE);
308		(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, textdump_block_buffer);
309	}
310}
311#endif /* INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE */
312
313/*
314 * Dump kernel message buffer.
315 */
316static void
317textdump_dump_msgbuf(struct dumperinfo *di)
318{
319	off_t end_offset, tarhdr_offset;
320	u_int i, len, offset, seq, total_len;
321	char buf[16];
322
323	/*
324	 * Write out a dummy tar header to advance the offset; we'll rewrite
325	 * it later once we know the true size.
326	 */
327	textdump_saveoff(&tarhdr_offset);
328	textdump_mkustar(textdump_block_buffer, TAR_MSGBUF_FILENAME, 0);
329	(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, textdump_block_buffer);
330
331	/*
332	 * Copy out the data in small chunks, but don't copy nuls that may be
333	 * present if the message buffer has not yet completely filled at
334	 * least once.
335	 */
336	total_len = 0;
337	offset = 0;
338        msgbuf_peekbytes(msgbufp, NULL, 0, &seq);
339        while ((len = msgbuf_peekbytes(msgbufp, buf, sizeof(buf), &seq)) > 0) {
340		for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
341			if (buf[i] == '\0')
342				continue;
343			textdump_block_buffer[offset] = buf[i];
344			offset++;
345			if (offset != sizeof(textdump_block_buffer))
346				continue;
347			(void)textdump_writenextblock(di,
348			    textdump_block_buffer);
349			total_len += offset;
350			offset = 0;
351		}
352        }
353	total_len += offset;	/* Without the zero-padding. */
354	if (offset != 0) {
355		bzero(textdump_block_buffer + offset,
356		    sizeof(textdump_block_buffer) - offset);
357		(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, textdump_block_buffer);
358	}
359
360	/*
361	 * Rewrite tar header to reflect how much was actually written.
362	 */
363	textdump_saveoff(&end_offset);
364	textdump_restoreoff(tarhdr_offset);
365	textdump_mkustar(textdump_block_buffer, TAR_MSGBUF_FILENAME,
366	    total_len);
367	(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, textdump_block_buffer);
368	textdump_restoreoff(end_offset);
369}
370
371static void
372textdump_dump_panic(struct dumperinfo *di)
373{
374	u_int len;
375
376	/*
377	 * Write out tar header -- we store up to one block of panic message.
378	 */
379	len = min(strlen(panicstr), TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE);
380	textdump_mkustar(textdump_block_buffer, TAR_PANIC_FILENAME, len);
381	(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, textdump_block_buffer);
382
383	/*
384	 * Zero-pad the panic string and write out block.
385	 */
386	bzero(textdump_block_buffer, sizeof(textdump_block_buffer));
387	bcopy(panicstr, textdump_block_buffer, len);
388	(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, textdump_block_buffer);
389}
390
391static void
392textdump_dump_version(struct dumperinfo *di)
393{
394	u_int len;
395
396	/*
397	 * Write out tar header -- at most one block of version information.
398	 */
399	len = min(strlen(version), TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE);
400	textdump_mkustar(textdump_block_buffer, TAR_VERSION_FILENAME, len);
401	(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, textdump_block_buffer);
402
403	/*
404	 * Zero pad the version string and write out block.
405	 */
406	bzero(textdump_block_buffer, sizeof(textdump_block_buffer));
407	bcopy(version, textdump_block_buffer, len);
408	(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, textdump_block_buffer);
409}
410
411/*
412 * Commit text dump to disk.
413 */
414void
415textdump_dumpsys(struct dumperinfo *di)
416{
417	off_t dumplen, trailer_offset;
418
419	if (di->blocksize != TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE) {
420		printf("Dump partition block size (%ju) not textdump "
421		    "block size (%ju)", (uintmax_t)di->blocksize,
422		    (uintmax_t)TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE);
423		return;
424	}
425
426	/*
427	 * We don't know a priori how large the dump will be, but we do know
428	 * that we need to reserve space for metadata and that we need two
429	 * dump headers.  Also leave room for one ustar header and one block
430	 * of data.
431	 */
432	if (di->mediasize < SIZEOF_METADATA + 2 * sizeof(kdh)) {
433		printf("Insufficient space on dump partition.\n");
434		return;
435	}
436	textdump_error = 0;
437
438	/*
439	 * Position the start of the dump so that we'll write the kernel dump
440	 * trailer immediately before the end of the partition, and then work
441	 * our way back.  We will rewrite this header later to reflect the
442	 * true size if things go well.
443	 */
444	textdump_offset = di->mediasize - sizeof(kdh);
445	textdump_saveoff(&trailer_offset);
446	mkdumpheader(&kdh, TEXTDUMPMAGIC, KERNELDUMP_TEXT_VERSION, 0, TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE);
447	(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, (char *)&kdh);
448
449	/*
450	 * Write a series of files in ustar format.
451	 */
452	if (textdump_do_ddb)
453		db_capture_dump(di);
454#ifdef INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE
455	if (textdump_do_config)
456		textdump_dump_config(di);
457#endif
458	if (textdump_do_msgbuf)
459		textdump_dump_msgbuf(di);
460	if (textdump_do_panic && panicstr != NULL)
461		textdump_dump_panic(di);
462	if (textdump_do_version)
463		textdump_dump_version(di);
464
465	/*
466	 * Now that we know the true size, we can write out the header, then
467	 * seek back to the end and rewrite the trailer with the correct
468	 * size.
469	 */
470	dumplen = trailer_offset - (textdump_offset + TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE);
471	mkdumpheader(&kdh, TEXTDUMPMAGIC, KERNELDUMP_TEXT_VERSION, dumplen,
472	    TEXTDUMP_BLOCKSIZE);
473	(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, (char *)&kdh);
474	textdump_restoreoff(trailer_offset);
475	(void)textdump_writenextblock(di, (char *)&kdh);
476
477	/*
478	 * Terminate the dump, report any errors, and clear the pending flag.
479	 */
480	if (textdump_error == 0)
481		(void)dump_write(di, NULL, 0, 0, 0);
482	if (textdump_error == ENOSPC)
483		printf("Insufficient space on dump partition\n");
484	else if (textdump_error != 0)
485		printf("Error %d writing dump\n", textdump_error);
486	else
487		printf("Textdump complete.\n");
488	textdump_pending = 0;
489}
490
491/*-
492 * DDB(4) command to manage textdumps:
493 *
494 * textdump set        - request a textdump
495 * textdump status     - print DDB output textdump status
496 * textdump unset      - clear textdump request
497 */
498static void
499db_textdump_usage(void)
500{
501
502	db_printf("textdump [unset|set|status]\n");
503}
504
505void
506db_textdump_cmd(db_expr_t addr, boolean_t have_addr, db_expr_t count,
507    char *modif)
508{
509	int t;
510
511	t = db_read_token();
512	if (t != tIDENT) {
513		db_textdump_usage();
514		return;
515	}
516	if (db_read_token() != tEOL) {
517		db_textdump_usage();
518		return;
519	}
520	if (strcmp(db_tok_string, "set") == 0) {
521		textdump_pending = 1;
522		db_printf("textdump set\n");
523	} else if (strcmp(db_tok_string, "status") == 0) {
524		if (textdump_pending)
525			db_printf("textdump is set\n");
526		else
527			db_printf("textdump is not set\n");
528	} else if (strcmp(db_tok_string, "unset") == 0) {
529		textdump_pending = 0;
530		db_printf("textdump unset\n");
531	} else
532		db_textdump_usage();
533}
534