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author | Srikant Patnaik | 2015-01-13 15:08:24 +0530 |
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committer | Srikant Patnaik | 2015-01-13 15:08:24 +0530 |
commit | 97327692361306d1e6259021bc425e32832fdb50 (patch) | |
tree | fe9088f3248ec61e24f404f21b9793cb644b7f01 /Documentation/parisc/debugging | |
parent | 2d05a8f663478a44e088d122e0d62109bbc801d0 (diff) | |
parent | a3a8b90b61e21be3dde9101c4e86c881e0f06210 (diff) | |
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dirty fix to merging
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/parisc/debugging')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/parisc/debugging | 39 |
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diff --git a/Documentation/parisc/debugging b/Documentation/parisc/debugging new file mode 100644 index 00000000..d7285940 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/parisc/debugging @@ -0,0 +1,39 @@ +okay, here are some hints for debugging the lower-level parts of +linux/parisc. + + +1. Absolute addresses + +A lot of the assembly code currently runs in real mode, which means +absolute addresses are used instead of virtual addresses as in the +rest of the kernel. To translate an absolute address to a virtual +address you can lookup in System.map, add __PAGE_OFFSET (0x10000000 +currently). + + +2. HPMCs + +When real-mode code tries to access non-existent memory, you'll get +an HPMC instead of a kernel oops. To debug an HPMC, try to find +the System Responder/Requestor addresses. The System Requestor +address should match (one of the) processor HPAs (high addresses in +the I/O range); the System Responder address is the address real-mode +code tried to access. + +Typical values for the System Responder address are addresses larger +than __PAGE_OFFSET (0x10000000) which mean a virtual address didn't +get translated to a physical address before real-mode code tried to +access it. + + +3. Q bit fun + +Certain, very critical code has to clear the Q bit in the PSW. What +happens when the Q bit is cleared is the CPU does not update the +registers interruption handlers read to find out where the machine +was interrupted - so if you get an interruption between the instruction +that clears the Q bit and the RFI that sets it again you don't know +where exactly it happened. If you're lucky the IAOQ will point to the +instrucion that cleared the Q bit, if you're not it points anywhere +at all. Usually Q bit problems will show themselves in unexplainable +system hangs or running off the end of physical memory. |