Re: [PATCH] arm64: translate register values to physical addresses in kernel panics

From: Catalin Marinas
Date: Fri Sep 09 2022 - 06:37:44 EST


On Fri, Aug 12, 2022 at 11:35:30AM -0700, Peter Collingbourne wrote:
> When debugging a kernel panic it is sometimes useful to know the physical
> address of any virtual addresses stored in registers. Therefore, pass
> all register values through AT S1E1R and print the resulting PAR_EL1
> value next to the register.

I don't see much value in this but I haven't come across a use-case yet.
For page faults the kernel prints the content of the PTE and that's what
I'm usually interested in.

> Not sure if this should land in this form (I imagine there could be
> all kinds of parsers that are expecting the existing format) but
> maybe behind an option. Let me know what you think.

While that's not considered user ABI, there might be some scripts
parsing it, though I suspect they don't pay attention to the registers
(I might be wrong though).

> +static unsigned long at(unsigned long addr)
> +{
> + unsigned long pa;
> +
> + __asm__ __volatile__("at s1e1r, %1\n"
> + "mrs %0, par_el1\n"
> + : "=r"(pa)
> + : "r"(addr)
> + : "memory");
> + return pa;
> +}

This should take the translation fault into account. If PAR_EL1.F is 1,
the other bits can't be treated as a physical address. Also if you want
the actual address, it's also worth masking out the non-relevant bits
from PAR_EL1 and adding the offset from 'addr' into the lower 12 bits.

> void __show_regs(struct pt_regs *regs)
> {
> int i, top_reg;
> @@ -231,10 +243,10 @@ void __show_regs(struct pt_regs *regs)
> i = top_reg;
>
> while (i >= 0) {
> - printk("x%-2d: %016llx", i, regs->regs[i]);
> + printk("x%-2d: %016llx (%016llx)", i, regs->regs[i], at(regs->regs[i]));
>
> while (i-- % 3)
> - pr_cont(" x%-2d: %016llx", i, regs->regs[i]);
> + pr_cont(" x%-2d: %016llx (%016llx)", i, regs->regs[i], at(regs->regs[i]));

How long are the lines printed here? Maybe a better option without
cluttering the register values is to do another pass through the
register and print the potential VA->PA translations (only those kernel
addresses that do not fault). If one is interested they could look them
up on the following lines.

--
Catalin