On 08/26/2014 10:02, Ralf Baechle wrote: > On Tue, Aug 26, 2014 at 09:16:56AM -0400, Joshua Kinard wrote: > >> On 08/26/2014 08:03, Ralf Baechle wrote: >>> On Tue, Aug 26, 2014 at 07:06:56AM -0400, Joshua Kinard wrote: >>> >>>> o32 userland is the primary on both systems. However, the last SIGILL was >>>> under the 64k PAGE_SIZE kernel inside of an n32 chroot compiling the 'boost' >>>> package on the Octane, which I restarted that and it's not complained since. >>>> Also got SIGILL on the 16k PAGE_SIZE kernel when I booted 16k PAGE_SIZE the >>>> first time and ran 'ps'. Subsequent runs of 'ps' didn't reproduce the >>>> error. Also saw SIGILLs in the bootlog of the 16k PAGE_SIZE kernel when >>>> "rm" was ran once (couldn't reproduce) and when mdadm tried to put one of >>>> the arrays back together. Subsequent runs using similar argument lines >>>> don't reproduce once I got to a root shell. >>>> >>>> Being it's a Gentoo install...the o32 userland is pretty fresh. Especially >>>> on the Octane, where I literally rebuilt the old userland over 2-3 times >>>> just to make sure all the old 5-year cruft was gone. The n32 userland >>>> chroot is brand-spanking new. gcc-4.7.x only for now on both, because of >>>> PR61538 in gcc. Latest binutils. >>>> >>>> The O2 is chugging away happily so far in updating a bunch of packages. So >>>> I am leaning towards this being another quirk I have to hunt down in the >>>> Octane's code again. There isn't much in the Octane-specific code that >>>> deals with memory, though -- it seems the higher-level MIPS memory code >>>> handles most things just fine. >>> >>> Can you enable core dumps? I'm wondering about the EPC of the crashed >>> process. If it's at a function entry or the beginning of a page that >>> might indicate there is an issue with flushing caches after the containing >>> page got loaded. Also interesting to know if this possibly happened in a >>> signal trampoline or VDSO. >>> >>> These are just the usual suspects - nothing indicates this case is actually >>> related. >> >> (Missed the reply all on the last one) >> >> Enabled coredumps and got the 'shash' program to fail a second time (first >> program to do so)...so I'll rebuild that with debugging symbols and try to >> trip it up again later on. >> >> Is a core file from a binary w/o debugging of any value? > > Yes - it will contain registers etc. Just what really matters in this case. > We don't need the debug info because we're not interested in debugging the > application. > > Ralf Attached. I assume readelf and objdump are used to extract the register information? Most searches on Google keep pointing me to GDB as if I want to debug the program. -- Joshua Kinard Gentoo/MIPS kumba@gentoo.org 4096R/D25D95E3 2011-03-28 "The past tempts us, the present confuses us, the future frightens us. And our lives slip away, moment by moment, lost in that vast, terrible in-between." --Emperor Turhan, Centauri Republic