cvs commit: src/sys/alpha/alpha support.s src/sys/i386/i386
swtch.s src/sys/kern kern_shutdown.c src/sys/sys systm.h
Don Lewis
truckman at FreeBSD.org
Tue Jan 20 18:51:25 PST 2004
On 20 Jan, Nate Lawson wrote:
> On Wed, 21 Jan 2004, Greg 'groggy' Lehey wrote:
>> On Tuesday, 20 January 2004 at 11:31:03 -0800, Nate Lawson wrote:
>> > * GDB over Ethernet
>>
>> We have GDB over firewire. Ethernet would be nice too, but firewire
>> actually does more. Take a look at gdb(4) (new man page).
>
> I'm glad to have this. More machines have ethernet than firewire ports
> though.
>
>> > We don't need file/line added to the panic message since panic
>> > messages are unambiguous.
>>
>> You still need to grep for them.
>
> There are basically two kinds of panics: assertions and page faults.
> Assertions, whether KASSERT or explicit checks/panic calls, give a unique,
> easily identified message ("foo driver: invalid mbuf length, %d"). If
> this is not obvious enough even without grep, then the panic message
> should be fixed. There is no difference between "vi +line file.c" and
> "vi file.c /msg", hence phk's commit is not useful in this case.
>
> Page faults are much harder to track down from the start. You find
> whether or not it was a NULL pointer, the curproc, and PC. So the next
> step is to have them recompile with options DDB or preferably -g and type
> "tr" at the DDB prompt. The changes to panic do not help this case at all
> since you get the file and line of the page fault handler.
I'll put in a request for page faults to report the file and line number
where the trap occurred ;-)
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