By the way, I confirm the new pal code binary fixes both this GDB issue
and the IPI warning message problem from my other thread.

Thanks,

Brad

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Steve Reinhardt
Sent: Wednesday, June 04, 2008 1:53 PM
To: M5 users mailing list
Subject: Re: [m5-users] Config File for Linux 2.6.22

Looks like it was a problem with using the wrong PAL.  Turns out that
tsb_osfpal isn't in the m5_system_2.0b3 tarball, and the one in
zizzer:/z/m5/system/stable is broken (out of date).  We've got the one
from /dist/m5/system now and it seems to be working.

I'll put a link up on the wiki for the working tsb_osfpal.

Steve

On Wed, Jun 4, 2008 at 7:01 AM, nathan binkert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The very low phisical address 0x10134 indicates that this code is
> either in the console, or in the PAL.  The reason you're hitting the
> fencepost is probably because gdb can't make any sense out of what the
> stack should be because the console and the PAL don't exactly follow
> normal ABIs.  What stage of the system are you in?  I can imagine you
> being in the console code if either your CPUs haven't spun up yet
> because you're still booting, or if they're idle.  You can nm the
> console and PAL binaries to figure out what's up.  You can also load
> the symbols for those into GDB in addition to (or instead of) the
> linux kernel.  If this error is only on CPUs > the fourth, then it's
> probably because you're using the wrong PAL.
>
>  Nate
>
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