Re: [PATCH] add blockconsole version 1.1
From: Borislav Petkov
Date: Wed Jul 18 2012 - 17:45:22 EST
On Wed, Jul 18, 2012 at 02:53:35PM -0400, JÃrn Engel wrote:
[ â ]
> > $ ./mkblockconsole /dev/sdc
> >
> > <reboot>
>
> You can also run hdparm -z <dev> instead. Or replug the device. Main
> danger of hdparm is that running the command twice will cause two
> instances of blockconsole to use the same device. Not sure how to
> solve that problem - or if.
Actually, I meant <reboot> in the sense here that I wanted to test the
case where user has a prepared stick and wants to catch full boot log of
the booting system.
> > So why is that first megabyte full of zeros there?
>
> It gives you some scratch space to store information in.
How? By me writing something in that empty line in vim? Or something
else storing stuff there?
> How useful that actually is may be a matter of opinion. But
> independent of that, you will find large amounts of zeroes all over.
> Every time you reboot, the new blockconsole will start writing at a
> megabyte-aligned offset and whatever remains of the last megabyte
> should be zero-filled as well.
Ah, those are the tiles you're talking about in the docs, right?
> Vim treats this as a single line, which makes it only mildly annoying
> to me.
Ok, I should try that.
> > Other than that, it works like a charm and I like the idea that no
> > kernel cmdline args are needed.
> >
> > Also, you might want to add a step-by-step fast howto to the docs with
> > concrete steps like the above so that people can try this out faster.
>
> I will try to find a quiet moment for that. If you happened to beat
> me to it, you certainly won't hear any complaints.
Oh, I didn't mean anything involved but rather a quick steps write-up
(steps can always be expanded and made more verbose later):
Blocksonsole in three easy steps
================================
1. Find an unused USB stick and prepare it for blockconsole by writing
the blockconsole signature to it:
$ ./mkblockconsole /dev/sdc
[ Assuming /dev/sdc is the device node of the USB stick you just mounted. ]
2. USB stick is ready for use, replug it so that the kernel can start
logging to it.
3. After you've done logging, read out the logs from it like this:
$ ./bcon_tail
[ This creates a file called /var/log/bcon.<random number> which
contains the logs. Open it with a sane editor like vim which can
display zeroed gaps as a single line and start staring at the logs. ]
---
Something like the above, just slap it at the beginning of
Documentation/block/blockconsole.txt for impatient people like me and
that's it :-).
Thanks.
--
Regards/Gruss,
Boris.
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