On 8/20/19 11:21 PM, Donald Buczek wrote:
Dear Linux folks,

I'm investigating a problem, that the crash utility fails to work with our 
crash dumps:

     buczek@kreios:/mnt$ crash vmlinux crash.vmcore
     crash 7.2.6
     Copyright (C) 2002-2019  Red Hat, Inc.
     Copyright (C) 2004, 2005, 2006, 2010  IBM Corporation
     Copyright (C) 1999-2006  Hewlett-Packard Co
     Copyright (C) 2005, 2006, 2011, 2012  Fujitsu Limited
     Copyright (C) 2006, 2007  VA Linux Systems Japan K.K.
     Copyright (C) 2005, 2011  NEC Corporation
     Copyright (C) 1999, 2002, 2007  Silicon Graphics, Inc.
     Copyright (C) 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002  Mission Critical Linux, Inc.
     This program is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License,
     and you are welcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it under
     certain conditions.  Enter "help copying" to see the conditions.
     This program has absolutely no warranty.  Enter "help warranty" for 
details.
     GNU gdb (GDB) 7.6
     Copyright (C) 2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
     License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later 
<http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
     This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
     There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.  Type "show copying"
     and "show warranty" for details.
     This GDB was configured as "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"...
     crash: read error: kernel virtual address: ffff89807ff77000  type: "memory 
section root table"

The crash file is a copy of /dev/vmcore taken by a crashkernel after a 
sysctl-forced panic.

It looks to me, that  0xffff89807ff77000 is not readable, because the virtual 
addresses stored in the elf header of the dump file are off by 
0x0000008000000000:

     buczek@kreios:/mnt$ readelf -a crash.vmcore | grep LOAD | perl -lane 'printf 
"%s (%016x)\n",$_,hex($F[2])-hex($F[3])'
       LOAD           0x000000000000d000 0xffffffff81000000 0x000001007d000000 
(fffffeff04000000)
       LOAD           0x0000000001c33000 0xffff880000001000 0x0000000000001000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x0000000001cc1000 0xffff880000090000 0x0000000000090000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x0000000001cd1000 0xffff880000100000 0x0000000000100000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x0000000001cd2070 0xffff880000100070 0x0000000000100070 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x0000000019bd2000 0xffff880038000000 0x0000000038000000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x000000004e6a1000 0xffff88006ffff000 0x000000006ffff000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x000000004e6a2000 0xffff880100000000 0x0000000100000000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x0000001fcda22000 0xffff882080000000 0x0000002080000000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x0000003fcd9a2000 0xffff884080000000 0x0000004080000000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x0000005fcd922000 0xffff886080000000 0x0000006080000000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x0000007fcd8a2000 0xffff888080000000 0x0000008080000000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x0000009fcd822000 0xffff88a080000000 0x000000a080000000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x000000bfcd7a2000 0xffff88c080000000 0x000000c080000000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x000000dfcd722000 0xffff88e080000000 0x000000e080000000 
(ffff880000000000)
       LOAD           0x000000fc4d722000 0xffff88fe00000000 0x000000fe00000000 
(ffff880000000000)

(Columns are File offset, Virtual Address, Physical Address and computed 
offset).

I would expect the offset between the virtual and the physical address to be 
PAGE_OFFSET, which is 0xffff88800000000 on x86_64, not 0xffff880000000000. 
Unlike /proc/vmcore, /proc/kcore shows the same physical memory (of the last 
memory section above) with a correct offset:

     buczek@kreios:/mnt$ sudo readelf -a /proc/kcore | grep 0x000000fe00000000 | perl 
-lane 'printf "%s (%016x)\n",$_,hex($F[2])-hex($F[3])'
       LOAD           0x0000097e00004000 0xffff897e00000000 0x000000fe00000000 
(ffff888000000000)

The failing address 0xffff89807ff77000 happens to be at the end of the last 
memory section. It is the mem_section array, which crash wants to load and 
which is visible in the running system:

     buczek@kreios:/mnt$ sudo gdb vmlinux /proc/kcore
     [...]
     (gdb) print mem_section
     $1 = (struct mem_section **) 0xffff89807ff77000
     (gdb) print *mem_section
     $2 = (struct mem_section *) 0xffff88a07f37b000
     (gdb) print **mem_section
     $3 = {section_mem_map = 18446719884453740551, pageblock_flags = 
0xffff88a07f36f040}

I can read the same information from the crash dump, if I account for the 
0x0000008000000000 error:

     buczek@kreios:/mnt$ gdb vmlinux crash.vmcore
     [...]
     (gdb) print mem_section
     $1 = (struct mem_section **) 0xffff89807ff77000
     (gdb) print *mem_section
     Cannot access memory at address 0xffff89807ff77000
     (gdb) set $t=(struct mem_section **) ((char *)mem_section - 
0x0000008000000000)
     (gdb) print *$t
     $2 = (struct mem_section *) 0xffff88a07f37b000
     (gdb) set $s=(struct mem_section *)((char *)*$t - 0x0000008000000000 )
     (gdb) print *$s
     $3 = {section_mem_map = 18446719884453740551, pageblock_flags = 
0xffff88a07f36f040}

In the above example, the running kernel, the crashed kernel and the 
crashkernel are all the same 4.19.57 compilation. But I've tried with several 
other versions ( crashkernel 4.4, running kernel from 4.0 to linux master) with 
the same result.

The machine in the above example has several numa nodes (this is why there are 
so many LOAD headers). But I've tried this with a small kvm virtual machine and 
got the same result.

     buczek@kreios:/mnt/linux-4.19.57-286.x86_64/build$ grep RANDOMIZE_BASE 
.config
     # CONFIG_RANDOMIZE_BASE is not set
     buczek@kreios:/mnt/linux-4.19.57-286.x86_64/build$ grep SPARSEMEM .config
     CONFIG_ARCH_SPARSEMEM_ENABLE=y
     CONFIG_ARCH_SPARSEMEM_DEFAULT=y
     CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_MANUAL=y
     CONFIG_SPARSEMEM=y
     CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_EXTREME=y
     CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_VMEMMAP_ENABLE=y
     CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_VMEMMAP=y
     buczek@kreios:/mnt/linux-4.19.57-286.x86_64/build$ grep 
PAGE_TABLE_ISOLATION .config
     CONFIG_PAGE_TABLE_ISOLATION=y

Any ideas?

Donald

To answer my own question for the records:

Our kexec command line is

    /usr/sbin/kexec -p /boot/bzImage.crash --initrd=/boot/grub/initramfs.igz 
--command-line="root=LABEL=root ro console=ttyS1,115200n8 console=tty0 irqpoll 
nr_cpus=1 reset_devices panic=5 CRASH"

So we neither gave -s (--kexec-file-syscall) nor -a ( --kexec-syscall-auto ). 
For this reason, kexec used the kexec_load() syscall instead of the newer 
kexec_file_load syscall.

With kexec_load(), the elf headers for the crash, which include program header 
for the old system ram, are not computed by the kernel, but by the userspace 
program from kexec-tools.

Linux kernel commit d52888aa ("x86/mm: Move LDT remap out of KASLR region on 5-level 
paging") changed the base of the direct mapping from 0xffff880000000000 to 
0xffff888000000000. This was merged into v4.20-rc2.

kexec-tools, however, still has the old address hard coded:

    buczek@avaritia:/scratch/cluster/buczek/kexec-tools (master)$ git grep 
X86_64_PAGE_OFFSET
    kexec/arch/i386/crashdump-x86.c:                        
elf_info->page_offset = X86_64_PAGE_OFFSET_PRE_2_6_27;
    kexec/arch/i386/crashdump-x86.c:                        
elf_info->page_offset = X86_64_PAGE_OFFSET;
    kexec/arch/i386/crashdump-x86.h:#define X86_64_PAGE_OFFSET_PRE_2_6_27   
0xffff810000000000ULL
    kexec/arch/i386/crashdump-x86.h:#define X86_64_PAGE_OFFSET              
0xffff880000000000ULL

Best
  Donald

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