Re: [PATCH] arm64/debug: Fix registers on sleeping tasks
From: Mark Rutland
Date: Fri Mar 02 2018 - 13:16:46 EST
On Fri, Mar 02, 2018 at 06:01:31PM +0000, Will Deacon wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 01, 2018 at 11:38:03AM -0800, Douglas Anderson wrote:
> > This is the equivalent of commit 001bf455d206 ("ARM: 8428/1: kgdb: Fix
> > registers on sleeping tasks") but for arm64. Nuff said.
>
> It's a pity that 001bf455d206 doesn't explain *why* past_pt_regs doesn't
> work.
The task_pt_regs are the userspace regs at the highest address on the
kernel stack:
#define task_pt_regs(p) \
((struct pt_regs *)(THREAD_SIZE + task_stack_page(p)) - 1)
... for kernel tasks, that's meaningless, and for user tasks, that won't
correspond to kernel state.
> > diff --git a/arch/arm64/kernel/kgdb.c b/arch/arm64/kernel/kgdb.c
> > index 2122cd187f19..01285d4dcdc3 100644
> > --- a/arch/arm64/kernel/kgdb.c
> > +++ b/arch/arm64/kernel/kgdb.c
> > @@ -138,14 +138,26 @@ int dbg_set_reg(int regno, void *mem, struct pt_regs *regs)
> > void
> > sleeping_thread_to_gdb_regs(unsigned long *gdb_regs, struct task_struct *task)
> > {
> > - struct pt_regs *thread_regs;
> > + struct thread_struct *thread = &task->thread;
> > + struct cpu_context *cpu_context = &thread->cpu_context;
We can do this in one go:
struct cpu_context *cpu_context = &task->thread.cpu_context;
... since we don't need the thread variable otherwise.
> >
> > /* Initialize to zero */
> > memset((char *)gdb_regs, 0, NUMREGBYTES);
> > - thread_regs = task_pt_regs(task);
> > - memcpy((void *)gdb_regs, (void *)thread_regs->regs, GP_REG_BYTES);
> > - /* Special case for PSTATE (check comments in asm/kgdb.h for details) */
> > - dbg_get_reg(33, gdb_regs + GP_REG_BYTES, thread_regs);
> > +
> > + gdb_regs[19] = cpu_context->x19;
> > + gdb_regs[20] = cpu_context->x20;
> > + gdb_regs[21] = cpu_context->x21;
> > + gdb_regs[22] = cpu_context->x22;
> > + gdb_regs[23] = cpu_context->x23;
> > + gdb_regs[24] = cpu_context->x24;
> > + gdb_regs[25] = cpu_context->x25;
> > + gdb_regs[26] = cpu_context->x26;
> > + gdb_regs[27] = cpu_context->x27;
> > + gdb_regs[28] = cpu_context->x28;
> > + gdb_regs[29] = cpu_context->fp;
> > +
> > + gdb_regs[31] = cpu_context->sp;
> > + gdb_regs[32] = cpu_context->pc;
Are the other reg fields initialised elsewhere?
We might want to zero them here.
Thanks,
Mark.