From: "Ken'ichi Ohmichi" <oomichi@mxs.nes.nec.co.jp>
To: Neil Horman <nhorman@redhat.com>
Cc: Bernhard Walle <bwalle@suse.de>,
kexec@lists.infradead.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: Determine version of kernel that produced vmcore
Date: Fri, 13 Jul 2007 20:05:33 +0900 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20070713200533oomichi@mail.jp.nec.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20070710120243.GA10121@hmsendeavour.rdu.redhat.com>
Hi all,
2007/07/10 08:02:43 -0400, Neil Horman <nhorman@redhat.com> wrote:
>> Besides Dan's plan, I'm planning the change of CONFIGFILE for distributors.
>> In the kernel building process, distributors need to make CONFIGFILE
>> on an older kernel (ex. RHEL5 kernel is built on RHEL4), and OSRELEASE
>> may be an older kernel. So OSRELEASE should be modified to the building
>> kernel version by hand, but it is not smart.
>>
>> To solve this problem, I'm proposing 2 plans.
>> Could you give me your opinion ?
>>
>> Plan 1:
>> A new option [--osrelease="string"] is added.
>> The OSRELEASE of CONFIGFILE is overwritten by "string".
>> In the kernel building process, distributors should specify "string"
>> as the building kernel version.
>>
>> Plan2:
>> Remove the OSRELEASE from CONFIGFILE.
>> Instead of checking the OSRELEASE, makedumpfile only checks whether the
>> area of /proc/vmcore specified by the symbol "system_utsname" in CONFIGFILE
>> is the string "2.6.". If CONFIGFILE and /proc/vmcore don't match, the
>> "system_utsname" must not point to the correct area in most cases.
>> Old makedumpfile needs OSRELEASE, and it cannot work by new CONFIGFILE.
>> But I think there are not any problems because old makedumpfile will not
>> read new CONFIGFILE. Now, CONFIGFILE is used only by RHEL5's kdump initramfs,
>> the CONFIGFILE is generated during 1st-kernel running. Even if CONFIGFILE
>> will be updated, makedumpfile can read the CONFIGFILE because makedumpfile
>> should be updated with CONFIGFILE.
>>
>>
>> I'd like to change the name of CONFIGFILE to mkdfinfo.
>>
>Why not, instead of either plan above, just redefine OSRELEASE to be the version
>of the kernel the config file was built against? i.e. when you build a config
>file, you need to specify a kernel to extract symbol information from, why not
>grab the utsname from that kernel and use that to set OSRELEASE? When you're
>building a config file the running kernel on the system isn't really relevent
>anyway.
Did you say "makedumpfile should get OSRELEASE from a vmlinux file,
and output it to a mkdfinfo file", right ?
If so, you are right. I'm creating the patch for it.
BTW, I'd like to remove PAGESIZE from a mkdfinfo file.
While 2nd-kernel is running, new makedumpfile comes to consider
2nd-kernel PAGESIZE as 1st-kernel PAGESIZE without getting PAGESIZE
from a mkdfinfo file.
In current implementation, makedumpfile considers 2nd-kernel PAGESIZE
as 1st-kernel PAGESIZE if a vmlinux file is specified instead of a
mkdfinfo file. On the other hand, makedumpfile can get 1st-kernel
PAGESIZE correctly if a mkdfinfo file is specified, because there
is the rule that a mkdfinfo file should be generated on 1st-kernel.
Now, I will change this rule for generating a mkdfinfo file on the
kernel-building environment. I feel considering 2nd-kernel PAGESIZE
as 1st-kernel PAGESIZE is better than considering the PAGESIZE of
kernel-building environment, because 1st-kernel and 2nd-kernel have
the same PAGESIZE in most cases such as relocatable kernel.
Please let me know your opinion.
Thanks
Ken'ichi Ohmichi
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2007-07-13 11:05 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 54+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2007-07-06 13:28 Determine version of kernel that produced vmcore Bernhard Walle
2007-07-06 14:58 ` Dan Aloni
2007-07-09 9:21 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-09 11:41 ` Dan Aloni
2007-07-09 20:49 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-10 4:45 ` Dan Aloni
2007-07-10 13:20 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-10 15:00 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-10 17:17 ` Neil Horman
2007-07-10 17:35 ` Dan Aloni
2007-07-10 18:26 ` Dan Aloni
2007-07-10 19:00 ` Neil Horman
2007-07-10 20:36 ` Dan Aloni
2007-07-11 11:57 ` Neil Horman
2007-07-10 6:48 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-10 8:14 ` Dan Aloni
2007-07-10 12:12 ` Neil Horman
2007-07-10 13:05 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-10 12:09 ` Neil Horman
2007-07-10 16:52 ` Dan Aloni
2007-07-11 6:07 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-11 7:32 ` Dan Aloni
2007-07-11 13:43 ` Ken'ichi Ohmichi
2007-07-13 3:58 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-13 7:49 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-13 3:43 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-11 8:58 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-10 3:13 ` Ken'ichi Ohmichi
2007-07-10 12:02 ` Neil Horman
2007-07-13 11:05 ` Ken'ichi Ohmichi [this message]
2007-07-13 13:15 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-16 4:19 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-16 11:57 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-16 12:25 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-16 12:27 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-16 12:28 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-16 12:36 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-18 14:07 ` Ken'ichi Ohmichi
2007-07-18 23:10 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-24 6:49 ` Ken'ichi Ohmichi
2007-07-19 14:12 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-19 16:39 ` Don Zickus
2007-07-19 16:49 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-19 16:59 ` Don Zickus
2007-07-23 5:01 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-23 11:47 ` Ken'ichi Ohmichi
2007-07-23 13:02 ` Dan Aloni
2007-07-23 15:58 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-24 6:40 ` Ken'ichi Ohmichi
2007-07-17 3:50 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-17 8:17 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-10 12:52 ` Bernhard Walle
2007-07-10 6:36 ` Vivek Goyal
2007-07-10 12:59 ` Bernhard Walle
Reply instructions:
You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:
* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
and reply-to-all from there: mbox
Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style
* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
switches of git-send-email(1):
git send-email \
--in-reply-to=20070713200533oomichi@mail.jp.nec.com \
--to=oomichi@mxs.nes.nec.co.jp \
--cc=bwalle@suse.de \
--cc=kexec@lists.infradead.org \
--cc=linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org \
--cc=nhorman@redhat.com \
/path/to/YOUR_REPLY
https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html
* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line
before the message body.
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox