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- Using physical DMA provided by OHCI-1394 FireWire controllers for debugging
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Introduction
- ------------
- Basically all FireWire controllers which are in use today are compliant
- to the OHCI-1394 specification which defines the controller to be a PCI
- bus master which uses DMA to offload data transfers from the CPU and has
- a "Physical Response Unit" which executes specific requests by employing
- PCI-Bus master DMA after applying filters defined by the OHCI-1394 driver.
- Once properly configured, remote machines can send these requests to
- ask the OHCI-1394 controller to perform read and write requests on
- physical system memory and, for read requests, send the result of
- the physical memory read back to the requester.
- With that, it is possible to debug issues by reading interesting memory
- locations such as buffers like the printk buffer or the process table.
- Retrieving a full system memory dump is also possible over the FireWire,
- using data transfer rates in the order of 10MB/s or more.
- With most FireWire controllers, memory access is limited to the low 4 GB
- of physical address space. This can be a problem on IA64 machines where
- memory is located mostly above that limit, but it is rarely a problem on
- more common hardware such as x86, x86-64 and PowerPC.
- At least LSI FW643e and FW643e2 controllers are known to support access to
- physical addresses above 4 GB, but this feature is currently not enabled by
- Linux.
- Together with a early initialization of the OHCI-1394 controller for debugging,
- this facility proved most useful for examining long debugs logs in the printk
- buffer on to debug early boot problems in areas like ACPI where the system
- fails to boot and other means for debugging (serial port) are either not
- available (notebooks) or too slow for extensive debug information (like ACPI).
- Drivers
- -------
- The firewire-ohci driver in drivers/firewire uses filtered physical
- DMA by default, which is more secure but not suitable for remote debugging.
- Pass the remote_dma=1 parameter to the driver to get unfiltered physical DMA.
- Because the firewire-ohci driver depends on the PCI enumeration to be
- completed, an initialization routine which runs pretty early has been
- implemented for x86. This routine runs long before console_init() can be
- called, i.e. before the printk buffer appears on the console.
- To activate it, enable CONFIG_PROVIDE_OHCI1394_DMA_INIT (Kernel hacking menu:
- Remote debugging over FireWire early on boot) and pass the parameter
- "ohci1394_dma=early" to the recompiled kernel on boot.
- Tools
- -----
- firescope - Originally developed by Benjamin Herrenschmidt, Andi Kleen ported
- it from PowerPC to x86 and x86_64 and added functionality, firescope can now
- be used to view the printk buffer of a remote machine, even with live update.
- Bernhard Kaindl enhanced firescope to support accessing 64-bit machines
- from 32-bit firescope and vice versa:
- - http://v3.sk/~lkundrak/firescope/
- and he implemented fast system dump (alpha version - read README.txt):
- - http://halobates.de/firewire/firedump-0.1.tar.bz2
- There is also a gdb proxy for firewire which allows to use gdb to access
- data which can be referenced from symbols found by gdb in vmlinux:
- - http://halobates.de/firewire/fireproxy-0.33.tar.bz2
- The latest version of this gdb proxy (fireproxy-0.34) can communicate (not
- yet stable) with kgdb over an memory-based communication module (kgdbom).
- Getting Started
- ---------------
- The OHCI-1394 specification regulates that the OHCI-1394 controller must
- disable all physical DMA on each bus reset.
- This means that if you want to debug an issue in a system state where
- interrupts are disabled and where no polling of the OHCI-1394 controller
- for bus resets takes place, you have to establish any FireWire cable
- connections and fully initialize all FireWire hardware __before__ the
- system enters such state.
- Step-by-step instructions for using firescope with early OHCI initialization:
- 1) Verify that your hardware is supported:
- Load the firewire-ohci module and check your kernel logs.
- You should see a line similar to
- firewire_ohci 0000:15:00.1: added OHCI v1.0 device as card 2, 4 IR + 4 IT
- ... contexts, quirks 0x11
- when loading the driver. If you have no supported controller, many PCI,
- CardBus and even some Express cards which are fully compliant to OHCI-1394
- specification are available. If it requires no driver for Windows operating
- systems, it most likely is. Only specialized shops have cards which are not
- compliant, they are based on TI PCILynx chips and require drivers for Win-
- dows operating systems.
- The mentioned kernel log message contains the string "physUB" if the
- controller implements a writable Physical Upper Bound register. This is
- required for physical DMA above 4 GB (but not utilized by Linux yet).
- 2) Establish a working FireWire cable connection:
- Any FireWire cable, as long at it provides electrically and mechanically
- stable connection and has matching connectors (there are small 4-pin and
- large 6-pin FireWire ports) will do.
- If an driver is running on both machines you should see a line like
- firewire_core 0000:15:00.1: created device fw1: GUID 00061b0020105917, S400
- on both machines in the kernel log when the cable is plugged in
- and connects the two machines.
- 3) Test physical DMA using firescope:
- On the debug host, make sure that /dev/fw* is accessible,
- then start firescope:
- $ firescope
- Port 0 (/dev/fw1) opened, 2 nodes detected
- FireScope
- ---------
- Target : <unspecified>
- Gen : 1
- [Ctrl-T] choose target
- [Ctrl-H] this menu
- [Ctrl-Q] quit
- ------> Press Ctrl-T now, the output should be similar to:
- 2 nodes available, local node is: 0
- 0: ffc0, uuid: 00000000 00000000 [LOCAL]
- 1: ffc1, uuid: 00279000 ba4bb801
- Besides the [LOCAL] node, it must show another node without error message.
- 4) Prepare for debugging with early OHCI-1394 initialization:
- 4.1) Kernel compilation and installation on debug target
- Compile the kernel to be debugged with CONFIG_PROVIDE_OHCI1394_DMA_INIT
- (Kernel hacking: Provide code for enabling DMA over FireWire early on boot)
- enabled and install it on the machine to be debugged (debug target).
- 4.2) Transfer the System.map of the debugged kernel to the debug host
- Copy the System.map of the kernel be debugged to the debug host (the host
- which is connected to the debugged machine over the FireWire cable).
- 5) Retrieving the printk buffer contents:
- With the FireWire cable connected, the OHCI-1394 driver on the debugging
- host loaded, reboot the debugged machine, booting the kernel which has
- CONFIG_PROVIDE_OHCI1394_DMA_INIT enabled, with the option ohci1394_dma=early.
- Then, on the debugging host, run firescope, for example by using -A:
- firescope -A System.map-of-debug-target-kernel
- Note: -A automatically attaches to the first non-local node. It only works
- reliably if only connected two machines are connected using FireWire.
- After having attached to the debug target, press Ctrl-D to view the
- complete printk buffer or Ctrl-U to enter auto update mode and get an
- updated live view of recent kernel messages logged on the debug target.
- Call "firescope -h" to get more information on firescope's options.
- Notes
- -----
- Documentation and specifications: http://halobates.de/firewire/
- FireWire is a trademark of Apple Inc. - for more information please refer to:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FireWire
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