Carl Jacobsen <cjacob...@storix.com> writes: > I've got a SUSE 15.1 install (on ppc64le) that kernel panics on a very > simple > test program, built in a slightly unusual way. > > I'm compiling on SUSE 12, using gcc 4.8.3. I'm linking to a static > copy of libcrypto.a (from openssl-1.1.1g), built without threads. > I have a 10 line C test program that compiles and runs fine on the > SUSE 12 system. If I compile the same program on SUSE 15.1 (with > gcc 7.4.1), it runs fine on SUSE 15.1. > > But, if I run the version that I compiled on SUSE 12, on the SUSE 15.1 > system, the call to RAND_status() gets to a malloc() and then panics. > (And, of course, if I just compile a call to malloc(), that runs fine > on both systems.) Here's the test program, it's really just a call to > RAND_status(): > > #include <stdio.h> > #include <openssl/rand.h> > > int main(int argc, char **argv) > { > int has_enough_data = RAND_status(); > printf("The PRNG %s been seeded with enough data\n", > has_enough_data ? "HAS" : "has NOT"); > return 0; > } > > openssl is configured/built with: > ./config no-shared no-dso no-threads -fPIC -ggdb3 -debug -static > make > > and the test program is compiled with: > gcc -ggdb3 -o rand_test rand_test.c libcrypto.a > > The kernel on SUSE 12 is: 3.12.28-4-default > And glibc is: 2.19 > > The kernel on SUSE 15.1 is: 4.12.14-197.18-default > And glibc is: 2.26 > > In a previous iteration it was panicking in pthread_once(), so > I compiled openssl without pthreads support, and now it panics > calling malloc().
What's the panic look like? cheers