x86,aarch64,arm

Ciro Santilli fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
buildroot_config fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
hello_host_kernel_module fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
kernel_config fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
packages fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
patches 539b176e1d gem5: test out panic_on_panic 6 years ago
rootfs_overlay fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
submodules fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
.gitignore fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
.gitmodules fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
.lvimrc fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
.travis.yml fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
CONTRIBUTING.adoc fcffb4a6d6 Move contributing to readme 6 years ago
LICENSE.txt 36cd620dd2 license 7 years ago
README.adoc fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
bench-all fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
bench-boot fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
bench-cmd fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
bisect-linux-boot-gem5 fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
bisect-qemu-linux-boot fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
bst-vs-heap fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
build-all fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
build-buildroot fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
build-doc cc190fd355 readme: fix all broken asciidoctor links. 7 years ago
build-gem5 fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
build-qemu fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
buildroot_override fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
busybox_config_fragment e8f09a76e6 Add a shortcute for /eval.sh 7 years ago
common.py fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
config.example fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
configure fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
eeval fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
gem5-bench-cache fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
gem5-bench-dhrystone fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
gem5-shell fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
gem5-stat fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
getvar fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
qemu-trace2txt fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
qemumonitor bad30f513c qemumonitor: fix for qemu v2.12 6 years ago
qemurr 02e294c62c qemurr: create 6 years ago
release fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
rootfs_post_build_script fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
run fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
rundocker 294a8c2424 docker: crate docker host setup 7 years ago
rungdb fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
rungdb-user fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
rungdbserver fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
runtc fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
test 626f5f9e22 bench-boot: add -f option to only run fast boots 6 years ago
tmu 14965a40d2 tmu: fix window switch for build problem 7 years ago
trace-boot fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
trace2line fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
trace2line.sh fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago
user_table b2459d07f5 Add a non-root user user0 password "a" 7 years ago
vnc 294a8c2424 docker: crate docker host setup 7 years ago
x11.png 01f6ca24e5 x11 screenshot and link to insmod C 7 years ago
zip-img fd55d694c0 lkmc v2-rc 6 years ago

README.adoc

= Linux Kernel Module Cheat
:idprefix:
:idseparator: -
:sectanchors:
:sectlinks:
:sectnumlevels: 6
:sectnums:
:toc: macro
:toclevels: 6
:toc-title:

Run one command, get a QEMU or gem5 Buildroot BusyBox virtual machine built from source with several minimal Linux kernel 4.18 module development example tutorials with <> and <> step debugging and minimal educational hardware device models. "Tested" in Ubuntu 18.04 host, x86 and ARM guests.

TL;DR: <>

toc::[]

== About

This project was created to help me understand, modify and test low level system components by using system simulators.

System simulators are cool compared to real hardware because they are:

* free
* make experiments highly reproducible
* give full visibility to the system: you can inspect any byte in memory, or the state of any hardware register. The laws of physics sometimes get in the way when doing that for real hardware.

The current components we focus the most on are:

* Linux kernel and Linux kernel modules
* full systems emulators, currently <> and <>
* <>. We use and therefore document, a large part of its feature set.

The following components are not covered, but it shouldn't be hard to do:

* C standard libraries
* compilers. Project idea: add a new instruction to x86, then hack up GCC to actually use it, and make a C program that generates it.

The design goals are to provide setups that are:

* highly automated: "just works"
* thoroughly documented: you know what "just works" means
* can be fully built from source: to give visibility and allow modifications
* can also use prebuilt binaries as much as possible: in case you are lazy or unable to build from source

=== Fairy tale

____
Once upon a time, there was a boy called Linus.

Linus made a super fun toy, and since he was not very humble, decided to call it Linux.

Linux was an awesome toy, but it had one big problem: it was very difficult to learn how to play with it!

As a result, only some weird kids who were very bored ended up playing with Linux, and everyone thought those kids were very cool, in their own weird way.

One day, a mysterious new kid called Ciro tried to play with Linux, and like many before him, got very frustrated, and gave up.

A few years later, Ciro had grown up a bit, and by chance came across a very cool toy made by the boy Petazzoni and his gang: it was called Buildroot.

Ciro noticed that if you used Buildroot together with Linux, and Linux suddenly became very fun to play with!

So Ciro decided to explain to as many kids as possible how to use Buildroot to play with Linux.

And so everyone was happy. Except some of the old weird kernel hackers who wanted to keep their mystique, but so be it.

THE END
____

== Getting started

There are several different possible setups to use this repo.

Each child section of this section describes one of those setups, and the trade-offs of each.

If you don't know which one to go for, start with <>.

The trade-offs are basically a balance between:

* speed ans size; how long and how much disk space do the build and run take?
* visibility: can you GDB step debug everything and read source code?
* modifiability: can you modify the source code and rebuild a modified version?
* portability: does it work on a Windows host? Could it ever?
* accuracy: how accurate does the simulation represent real hardware?
* compatibility: how likely is is that all the components will work well together: emulator, compiler, kernel, standard library, ...
* guest software availability: how wide is your choice of easily installed guest software packages?

=== QEMU Buildroot setup

This is the best setup if you are on Ubuntu. We tend to test this repo the most on the latest Ubuntu, and on the latest Ubuntu LTS.

Everything will likely also work on other Linux distros if you install the analogous required packages for your distro from link:configure[], but this is not currently well tested. Compatibility patches are welcome. You can also try <> if you are on other Linux distros. Native Windows is unlikely feasible because Buildroot is a huge set of GNU Make scripts + host tools, just use an Ubuntu VM in that case.

Reserve 12Gb of disk and run:

....
git clone https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat
cd linux-kernel-module-cheat
./configure && \
./build-qemu &&
./build-buildroot && \
./run && \
:;
....

The first configure will take a while (30 minutes to 2 hours) to clone and build, see <> for more details.

It does not work if you just download the `.zip` from GitHub because we use link:.gitmodules[Git submodules], you must clone this repo. `./configure` then fetches only the required submodules for you.

It is super easy to build for different CPU architectures, just use the `--arch` option:

....
./build-qemu --arch arm && \
./build-buildroot --arch arm && \
./run --arch arm && \
:;
....

See also: <>.

If you don't want to wait, you could also try the following faster but much more limited methods:

* <>
* <>

but you will soon find that they are simply not enough if you anywhere near serious about systems programming.

After QEMU opens up, you can start playing with the kernel modules:

....
insmod /hello.ko
insmod /hello2.ko
rmmod hello
rmmod hello2
....

This should print to the screen:

....
hello init
hello2 init
hello cleanup
hello2 cleanup
....

which are `printk` messages from `init` and `cleanup` methods of those modules.

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/hello.c[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/hello2.c[]

Quit QEMU with:

....
Ctrl-A X
....

See also: <>.

All available modules can be found in the link:packages/kernel_modules/[`kernel_modules` directory].

I now urge you to read the following sections which contain widely applicable information:

* <>
* <>
* <>
* <>
* <>
* Linux kernel
** <>
** <>

Once you use <> and <>, your terminal will look a bit like this:

....
[ 1.451857] input: AT Translated Set 2 keyboard as /devices/platform/i8042/s1│loading @0xffffffffc0000000: ../kernel_modules-1.0//timer.ko
[ 1.454310] ledtrig-cpu: registered to indicate activity on CPUs │(gdb) b lkmc_timer_callback
[ 1.455621] usbcore: registered new interface driver usbhid │Breakpoint 1 at 0xffffffffc0000000: file /home/ciro/bak/git/linux-kernel-module
[ 1.455811] usbhid: USB HID core driver │-cheat/out/x86_64/buildroot/build/kernel_modules-1.0/./timer.c, line 28.
[ 1.462044] NET: Registered protocol family 10 │(gdb) c
[ 1.467911] Segment Routing with IPv6 │Continuing.
[ 1.468407] sit: IPv6, IPv4 and MPLS over IPv4 tunneling driver │
[ 1.470859] NET: Registered protocol family 17 │Breakpoint 1, lkmc_timer_callback (data=0xffffffffc0002000 )
[ 1.472017] 9pnet: Installing 9P2000 support │ at /linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/x86_64/buildroot/build/
[ 1.475461] sched_clock: Marking stable (1473574872, 0)->(1554017593, -80442)│kernel_modules-1.0/./timer.c:28
[ 1.479419] ALSA device list: │28 {
[ 1.479567] No soundcards found. │(gdb) c
[ 1.619187] ata2.00: ATAPI: QEMU DVD-ROM, 2.5+, max UDMA/100 │Continuing.
[ 1.622954] ata2.00: configured for MWDMA2 │
[ 1.644048] scsi 1:0:0:0: CD-ROM QEMU QEMU DVD-ROM 2.5+ P5│Breakpoint 1, lkmc_timer_callback (data=0xffffffffc0002000 )
[ 1.741966] tsc: Refined TSC clocksource calibration: 2904.010 MHz │ at /linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/x86_64/buildroot/build/
[ 1.742796] clocksource: tsc: mask: 0xffffffffffffffff max_cycles: 0x29dc0f4s│kernel_modules-1.0/./timer.c:28
[ 1.743648] clocksource: Switched to clocksource tsc │28 {
[ 2.072945] input: ImExPS/2 Generic Explorer Mouse as /devices/platform/i8043│(gdb) bt
[ 2.078641] EXT4-fs (vda): couldn't mount as ext3 due to feature incompatibis│#0 lkmc_timer_callback (data=0xffffffffc0002000 )
[ 2.080350] EXT4-fs (vda): mounting ext2 file system using the ext4 subsystem│ at /linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/x86_64/buildroot/build/
[ 2.088978] EXT4-fs (vda): mounted filesystem without journal. Opts: (null) │kernel_modules-1.0/./timer.c:28
[ 2.089872] VFS: Mounted root (ext2 filesystem) readonly on device 254:0. │#1 0xffffffff810ab494 in call_timer_fn (timer=0xffffffffc0002000 ,
[ 2.097168] devtmpfs: mounted │ fn=0xffffffffc0000000 ) at kernel/time/timer.c:1326
[ 2.126472] Freeing unused kernel memory: 1264K │#2 0xffffffff810ab71f in expire_timers (head=,
[ 2.126706] Write protecting the kernel read-only data: 16384k │ base=) at kernel/time/timer.c:1363
[ 2.129388] Freeing unused kernel memory: 2024K │#3 __run_timers (base=) at kernel/time/timer.c:1666
[ 2.139370] Freeing unused kernel memory: 1284K │#4 run_timer_softirq (h=) at kernel/time/timer.c:1692
[ 2.246231] EXT4-fs (vda): warning: mounting unchecked fs, running e2fsck isd│#5 0xffffffff81a000cc in __do_softirq () at kernel/softirq.c:285
[ 2.259574] EXT4-fs (vda): re-mounted. Opts: block_validity,barrier,user_xatr│#6 0xffffffff810577cc in invoke_softirq () at kernel/softirq.c:365
hello S98 │#7 irq_exit () at kernel/softirq.c:405
│#8 0xffffffff818021ba in exiting_irq () at ./arch/x86/include/asm/apic.h:541
Apr 15 23:59:23 login[49]: root login on 'console' │#9 smp_apic_timer_interrupt (regs=)
hello /root/.profile │ at arch/x86/kernel/apic/apic.c:1052
# insmod /timer.ko │#10 0xffffffff8180190f in apic_timer_interrupt ()
[ 6.791945] timer: loading out-of-tree module taints kernel. │ at arch/x86/entry/entry_64.S:857
# [ 7.821621] 4294894248 │#11 0xffffffff82003df8 in init_thread_union ()
[ 8.851385] 4294894504 │#12 0x0000000000000000 in ?? ()
│(gdb)
....

==== Your first kernel hack

Modify link:packages/kernel_modules/hello.c[] to contain:

....
pr_info("hello init hacked\n");
....

and then rebuild the kernel modules and re-run to see it take effect:

....
./build-buildroot --kernel-modules
./run --eval-busybox 'insmod /hello.ko'
....

Congratulations, you are now officially a kernel module hacker!

We use `./build-buildroot` here because kernel modules go into the root filesystem, and it is Buildroot that generates our root filesystem. The kernel modules are inside a Buildroot package.

`--kernel-modules` is required even if files were modified as explained at: <>.

The reboot after rebuild is annoying. We don't have a perfect solution for it yet, but there are some ideas cooking at: <>.

Not satisfied with kernel modules? OK then, let's hack up the <> Linux kernel itself.

Open the file:

....
vim submodules/linux/init/main.c
....

and find the `start_kernel` function, then add there a:

....
pr_info("I'VE HACKED THE LINUX KERNEL!!!");
....

Then rebuild the Linux kernel and reboot:

....
./build-buildroot && ./run
....

and, surely enough, your message has appeared at the beginning of the boot.

So you are now officially a kernel hacker, way to go!

Not satisfied with mere software? OK then, let's hack up the QEMU x86 CPU identification:

....
vim submodules/qemu/target/i386/cpu.c
....

and modify:

....
.model_id = "QEMU Virtual CPU version " QEMU_HW_VERSION,
....

to contain:

....
.model_id = "QEMU Virtual CPU version HACKED " QEMU_HW_VERSION,
....

then as usual rebuild and re-run:

.....
./build-qemu && ./run --eval-busybox 'grep "model name" /proc/cpuinfo'
.....

and once again, there is your message: QEMU communicated it to the Linux kernel, which printed it out.

You have now gone from newb to hardware hacker in a mere 15 minutes, your rate of progress is truly astounding!!!

BTW: if you want to be a real hardware hacker, it just can't be done with open source tools as of 2018. The root obstacle is that link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semiconductor_fabrication_plant[Silicon fabs] don't publish reveal their link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Design_rule_checking[design rules], which implies that there are no decent standard cell libraries, which implies that you can't get decent power performance and area estimates, see: https://www.quora.com/Are-there-good-open-source-standard-cell-libraries-to-learn-IC-synthesis-with-EDA-tools/answer/Ciro-Santilli The only thing you can do with open source is purely functional designs with Verilator, but you will never know if it can be actually produced and how efficient it can be.

==== About the QEMU Buildroot setup

link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buildroot[Buildroot] is a set of `make` scripts that downloads from source and compiles compatible versions of:

* GCC
* Linux kernel
* glibc
* link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BusyBox[BusyBox]

It therefore produces a pristine, blob-less, debuggable setup, where all moving parts are configured to work perfectly together.

The downsides of Buildroot are:

* the first build takes a while, but it is well worth it
* the selection of software packages is relatively limited if compared to Debian, e.g. no Java or Python package in guest out of the box.
+
In theory, any software can be packaged, and the Buildroot side is easy.
+
The hard part is dealing with crappy third party build systems and huge dependency chains.

link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QEMU[QEMU] is a system simulator: it simulates a CPU and devices such as interrupt handlers, timers, UART, screen, keyboard, etc.

QEMU is the leading cross arch system simulator as of 2018. It is even the default Android simulator that developers get with Android Studio 3 to develop apps without real hardware.

QEMU is also supported by Buildroot in-tree, see e.g.: https://github.com/buildroot/buildroot/blob/2018.05/configs/qemu_aarch64_virt_defconfig

All of this makes QEMU the natural choice of system simulator.

=== gem5 Buildroot setup

==== About the gem5 Buildroot setup

This setup is like the <>, but it uses link:http://gem5.org/[gem5] instead of QEMU as a system simulator.

QEMU tries to run as fast as possible and give correct results at the end, but it does not tell us how many CPU cycles it takes to do something, just the number of instructions it ran, and this cannot be used to estimate system performance. This is known as a functional simulation

gem5 on the other hand, can simulate the system in more detail than QEMU, including:

* simplified CPU pipeline
* caches
* DRAM timing

and can therefore be used to estimate system performance, see: <> for an example.

The downside of gem5 much slower than QEMU because of the greater simulation detail.

See <> for a more thorough comparison.

==== gem5 Buildroot setup getting started

For the most part, if you just add the `--gem5` option or `-gem5` suffix to all commands and everything should magically work:

....
./configure --gem5 && \
./build-gem5 --arch aarch64 && \
./build-buildroot --arch aarch64 --gem5 && \
./run --arch aarch64 --gem5 &&\
:;
....

If you have already built <> previously, don't be afraid, gem5 and QEMU use almost the same root filesystem and kernel, so `./build-buildroot --gem` will be fast. It is currently only needed for the <> tool.

To get a terminal, either open a new shell and run:

....
./gem5-shell
....

or if you are inside tmux, which I highly recommend, just run gem5 with:

....
./run --tmux
....

This will open up a split terminal by default so that you can see both the gem5 stdout and the terminal. See also: <>

If you forgot to open the shell and gem5 exit, you can inspect the terminal output post-mortem at:

....
less "$(./getvar --gem5 termout_file)"
....

TODO: `arm` boot broken on kernel 4.18 with:

....
Internal error: Oops - undefined instruction
....

Workaround by checking out kernel 4.17 as explained at <>. Bisected down to kernel 1d4238c56f9816ce0f9c8dbe42d7f2ad81cb6613, gem5 is not implementing the `CSDB` instruction.

More information at: <>

[[docker]]
=== QEMU Buildroot setup inside Docker

This is the same as the native <>, but run from inside a Docker on the host.

This is a good option if you are on a Linux host, but the native setup failed due to your weird host distribution, and you have better things to do with your life than to debug it.

Before anything, you must get rid of any host build files on `out/` if you have any. A simple way to do this it to:

....
mv out out.host
....

A cleaner option is to make a separate clone of this repository just for Docker, although this will require another submodule update.

Then install Docker, e.g. on Ubuntu:

....
sudo apt-get install docker
....

The very first time you launch Docker, create the container with:

....
./rundocker setup
....

You are now left inside a shell in the Docker guest.

From there, run the exact same commands that you would on a native install: <>

The host git top level directory is mounted inside the guest, which means for example that you can use your host's GUI text editor directly on the files.

Just don't forget that if you nuke that directory on the guest, then it gets nuked on the host as well!

Trying to run the output from Docker from host won't however, I think the main reason is that the absolute paths inside Docker are will be different than the host ones, but even if we fix that there will likely be other problems.

TODO make files created inside Docker be owned by the current user in host instead of `root`: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/23544282/what-is-the-best-way-to-manage-permissions-for-docker-shared-volumes

Quit and stop the container:

....
Ctrl-D
....

Restart the container:

....
./rundocker
....

Open a second shell in a running container:

....
./rundocker sh
....

You will need this for example to use <>.

Start a second shell, and run a command in it at the same time:

....
./rundocker sh ./rungdb start_kernel
....

Docker stops if and only if you quit the initial shell, you can quit this one without consequences.

If you mistakenly run `./rundocker` twice, it opens two mirrored terminals. To quit one of them do link:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19688314/how-do-you-attach-and-detach-from-dockers-process[]:

....
Ctrl-P Ctrl-Q
....

To use <> from Docker:

....
./run --graphic --vnc
....

and then on host:

....
sudo apt-get install vinagre
./vnc
....

Destroy the docker container:

....
./rundocker DELETE
....

Since we mount the guest's working directory on the host git top-level, you will likely not lose data from doing this, just the `apt-get` installs.

To get back to a host build, don't forget to clean up `out/` again:

....
mv out out.docker
mv out.host out
....

After this, to start using Docker again will you need another:

....
./rundocker setup
....

[[prebuilt]]
=== Prebuilt setup

==== About the prebuilt setup

This setup uses prebuilt binaries of the <> that we upload to GitHub from time to time.

We don't currently provide a full prebuilt because it would be too big to host freely, notably because of the cross toolchain.

Our prebuilts currently include:

* Linux kernel
* root filesystem

Advantages: saves time and disk space.

Limitations:

* can't GDB step debug the kernel, since the source and cross toolchain with GDB are not available. Buildroot cannot easily use a host toolchain: <>.
+
Maybe we could work around this by just downloading the kernel source somehow, and using a host prebuilt GDB, but we felt that it would be too messy and unreliable.
* can't create new modules or modify the existing ones, since no cross toolchain
* can't use things that rely on our QEMU fork, e.g. in-fork <> or <>
* you won't get the latest version of this repository. Our <> attempt to automate builds failed, and storing a release for every commit would likely make GitHub mad at us.
* <> is not currently supported, although it should not be too hard to do. One annoyance is that there is no Debian package for it, so you have to compile your own, so you might as well just build the image itself.

==== Prebuilt setup getting started

Download this repo:

....
git clone https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat
cd linux-kernel-module-cheat
....

Go to the latest release link:https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/releases[], download the `lkmc-*.zip` file and extract it into the repository:

....
unzip lkmc-*.zip
....

It is link:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/24987542/is-there-a-link-to-github-for-downloading-a-file-in-the-latest-release-of-a-repo/50540591#50540591[not possible to automate this step without the API], and I'm not venturing there at this time, pull requests welcome.

Checkout to the prebuilt repo version so that the scripts and documentation will be compatible with it, and run with the `--prebuilt` option:

....
git checkout
git submodule update --init "$(./getvar qemu_src_dir)"
./build-qemu
./run
....

and you are done.

Alternatively, you can also try to use the host QEMU:

....
sudo apt-get install qemu-system-x86
./run --prebuilt
....

but QEMU builds are pretty quick, and this further increases the probability of incompatibilities, are you really that lazy?

[[host]]
=== Host kernel module setup

This method runs the kernel modules directly on your host computer without a VM, and saves you the compilation time and disk usage of the virtual machine method.

It has however severe limitations, and you will soon see that the compilation time and disk usage are well worth it:

* can't control which kernel version and build options to use. So some of the modules will likely not compile because of kernel API changes, since https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37098482/how-to-build-a-linux-kernel-module-so-that-it-is-compatible-with-all-kernel-rele/45429681#45429681[the Linux kernel does not have a stable kernel module API].
* bugs can easily break you system. E.g.:
** segfaults can trivially lead to a kernel crash, and require a reboot
** your disk could get erased. Yes, this can also happen with `sudo` from userland. But you should not use `sudo` when developing newbie programs. And for the kernel you don't have the choice not to use `sudo`.
** even more subtle system corruption such as https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/78858/cannot-remove-or-reinsert-kernel-module-after-error-while-inserting-it-without-r[not being able to rmmod]
* can't control which hardware is used, notably the CPU architecture
* can't step debug it with <> easily. The alternatives are JTAG or <>, but those are less reliable, and JTAG requires extra hardware.

Still interested?

....
cd packages/kernel_modules
./make-host.sh
....

If the compilation of any of the C files fails because of kernel or toolchain differences that we don't control on the host, just rename it to remove the `.c` extension and try again:

....
mv broken.c broken.c~
./build_host
....

Once you manage to compile, and have come to terms with the fact that this may blow up your host, try it out with:

....
sudo insmod hello.ko

# Our module is there.
sudo lsmod | grep hello

# Last message should be: hello init
dmesg -T

sudo rmmod hello

# Last message should be: hello exit
dmesg -T

# Not present anymore
sudo lsmod | grep hello
....

Once you are done with this method, you must clean up the in-tree build objects before you decide to do the right thing and move on to the superior `./build` Buildroot method:

....
cd packages/kernel_modules
./make-host.sh clean
....

otherwise they will cause problems.

==== Hello host

Minimal host build system example:

....
cd hello_host_kernel_module
make
insmod hello.ko
dmesg
rmmod hello.ko
dmesg
....

[[gdb]]
== GDB step debug

=== GDB step debug kernel boot

`-d` makes QEMU wait for a GDB connection, otherwise we could accidentally go past the point we want to break at:

....
./run --debug-guest
....

Say you want to break at `start_kernel`. So on another shell:

....
./rungdb start_kernel
....

or at a given line:

....
./rungdb init/main.c:1088
....

Now QEMU will stop there, and you can use the normal GDB commands:

....
l
n
c
....

See also:

* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/11408041/how-to-debug-the-linux-kernel-with-gdb-and-qemu/33203642#33203642
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4943857/linux-kernel-live-debugging-how-its-done-and-what-tools-are-used/42316607#42316607

[[kernel-o0]]
==== Disable kernel compiler optimizations

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/29151235/how-to-de-optimize-the-linux-kernel-to-and-compile-it-with-o0

`O=0` is an impossible dream, `O=2` being the default.

So get ready for some weird jumps, and `` fun. Why, Linux, why.

=== GDB step debug kernel post-boot

Let's observe the kernel as it reacts to some userland actions.

Start QEMU with just:

....
./run
....

and after boot inside a shell run:

....
/count.sh
....

which counts to infinity to stdout. Source: link:rootfs_overlay/count.sh[].

Then in another shell, run:

....
./rungdb
....

and then hit:

....
Ctrl-C
break __x64_sys_write
continue
continue
continue
....

And you now control the counting on the first shell from GDB!

Before v4.17, the symbol name was just `sys_write`, the change happened at link:https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/d5a00528b58cdb2c71206e18bd021e34c4eab878[d5a00528b58cdb2c71206e18bd021e34c4eab878]. aarch64 still uses just `sys_write`.

When you hit `Ctrl-C`, if we happen to be inside kernel code at that point, which is very likely if there are no heavy background tasks waiting, and we are just waiting on a `sleep` type system call of the command prompt, we can already see the source for the random place inside the kernel where we stopped.

=== tmux

https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/152738/how-to-split-a-new-window-and-run-a-command-in-this-new-window-using-tmux/432111#432111

tmux just makes things even more fun by allowing us to see both terminals at once without dragging windows around!

First start `tmux` with:

....
tmux
....

Now that you are inside a shell inside tmux, run:

....
./run --debug-guest --tmux
....

Gives splits the terminal into two panes:

* left: usual QEMU
* right: gdb

and focuses on the GDB pane.

Now you can navigate with the usual tmux shortcuts:

* switch between the two panes with: `Ctrl-B O`
* close either pane by killing its terminal with `Ctrl-D` as usual

To start again, switch back to the QEMU pane, kill the emulator, and re-run:

....
./run --debug-guest --tmux
....

This automatically clears the GDB pane, and starts a new one.

Pass extra GDB arguments with:

....
./run --debug-guest --tmux --tmux-args start_kernel
....

See the tmux manual for further details:

....
man tmux
....

==== tmux gem5

If you are using gem5 instead of QEMU, `-u` has a different effect: it opens the gem5 terminal instead of the debugger:

....
./run --gem5 --tmux
....

If you also want to use the debugger with gem5, you will need to create new terminals as usual.

From inside tmux, you can do that with `Ctrl-B C` or `Ctrl-B %`.

To see the debugger by default instead of the terminal, run:

....
./tmu ./rungdb;./run --debug-guest --gem5
....

=== GDB step debug kernel module

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/28607538/how-to-debug-linux-kernel-modules-with-qemu/44095831#44095831

Loadable kernel modules are a bit trickier since the kernel can place them at different memory locations depending on load order.

So we cannot set the breakpoints before `insmod`.

However, the Linux kernel GDB scripts offer the `lx-symbols` command, which takes care of that beautifully for us.

Shell 1:

....
./run
....

Wait for the boot to end and run:

....
insmod /timer.ko
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/timer.c[].

This prints a message to dmesg every second.

Shell 2:

....
./rungdb
....

In GDB, hit `Ctrl-C`, and note how it says:

....
scanning for modules in /linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/x86_64/buildroot/build/linux-custom
loading @0xffffffffc0000000: ../kernel_modules-1.0//timer.ko
....

That's `lx-symbols` working! Now simply:

....
b lkmc_timer_callback
c
c
c
....

and we now control the callback from GDB!

Just don't forget to remove your breakpoints after `rmmod`, or they will point to stale memory locations.

TODO: why does `break work_func` for `insmod kthread.ko` not break the first time I `insmod`, but breaks the second time?

==== GDB step debug kernel module ARM

TODO on `arm` 51e31cdc2933a774c2a0dc62664ad8acec1d2dbe it does not always work, and `lx-symbols` fails with the message:

....
loading vmlinux
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/arm/buildroot/build/linux-custom/scripts/gdb/linux/symbols.py", line 163, in invoke
self.load_all_symbols()
File "/linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/arm/buildroot/build/linux-custom/scripts/gdb/linux/symbols.py", line 150, in load_all_symbols
[self.load_module_symbols(module) for module in module_list]
File "/linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/arm/buildroot/build/linux-custom/scripts/gdb/linux/symbols.py", line 110, in load_module_symbols
module_name = module['name'].string()
gdb.MemoryError: Cannot access memory at address 0xbf0000cc
Error occurred in Python command: Cannot access memory at address 0xbf0000cc
....

Can't reproduce on `x86_64` and `aarch64` are fine.

It is kind of random: if you just `insmod` manually and then immediately `./rungdb --arch arm`, then it usually works.

But this fails most of the time: shell 1:

....
./run --arch arm --eval-busybox 'insmod /hello.ko'
....

shell 2:

....
./rungdb --arch arm
....

then hit `Ctrl-C` on shell 2, and voila.

Then:

....
cat /proc/modules
....

says that the load address is:

....
0xbf000000
....

so it is close to the failing `0xbf0000cc`.

`readelf`:

....
./runtc readelf -- -s "$(./getvar build_dir)/kernel_modules-1.0/hello.ko"
....

does not give any interesting hits at `cc`, no symbol was placed that far.

==== GDB module_init

TODO find a more convenient method. We have working methods, but they are not ideal.

This is not very easy, since by the time the module finishes loading, and `lx-symbols` can work properly, `module_init` has already finished running!

Possibly asked at:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37059320/debug-a-kernel-module-being-loaded
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11888412/debug-the-init-module-call-of-a-linux-kernel-module

===== GDB module_init step into it

The kernel calls `module_init` synchronously, therefore it is not hard to step into that call.

As of 4.16, the call happens in `do_one_initcall`, so we can do in shell 1:

....
./run
....

shell 2 after boot finishes (because there are other calls to `do_init_module` at boot, presumably for the built-in modules):

....
./rungdb do_one_initcall
....

then step until the line:

....
833 ret = fn();
....

which does the actual call, and then step into it.

For the next time, you can also put a breakpoint there directly:

....
./rungdb init/main.c:833
....

How we found this out: first we got <> working, and then we did a `bt`. AKA cheating :-)

===== GDB module_init calculate entry address

This works, but is a bit annoying.

The key observation is that the load address of kernel modules is deterministic: there is a pre allocated memory region https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/x86/x86_64/mm.txt "module mapping space" filled from bottom up.

So once we find the address the first time, we can just reuse it afterwards, as long as we don't modify the module.

Do a fresh boot and get the module:

....
./run --eval-busybox '/pr_debug.sh;insmod /fops.ko;/poweroff.out'
....

The boot must be fresh, because the load address changes every time we insert, even after removing previous modules.

The base address shows on terminal:

....
0xffffffffc0000000 .text
....

Now let's find the offset of `myinit`:

....
./runtc readelf -- \
-s "$(./getvar build_dir)/kernel_modules-1.0/fops.ko" | \
grep myinit
....

which gives:

....
30: 0000000000000240 43 FUNC LOCAL DEFAULT 2 myinit
....

so the offset address is `0x240` and we deduce that the function will be placed at:

....
0xffffffffc0000000 + 0x240 = 0xffffffffc0000240
....

Now we can just do a fresh boot on shell 1:

....
./run --eval 'insmod /fops.ko;/poweroff.out' --debug-guest
....

and on shell 2:

....
./rungdb '*0xffffffffc0000240'
....

GDB then breaks, and `lx-symbols` works.

===== GDB module_init break at the end of sys_init_module

TODO not working. This could be potentially very convenient.

The idea here is to break at a point late enough inside `sys_init_module`, at which point `lx-symbols` can be called and do its magic.

Beware that there are both `sys_init_module` and `sys_finit_module` syscalls, and `insmod` uses `fmodule_init` by default.

Both call `do_module_init` however, which is what `lx-symbols` hooks to.

If we try:

....
b sys_finit_module
....

then hitting:

....
n
....

does not break, and insertion happens, likely because of optimizations? <>

Then we try:

....
b do_init_module
....

A naive:

....
fin
....

also fails to break!

Finally, in despair we notice that <> prints the kernel load address as explained at <>.

So, if we set a breakpoint just after that message is printed by searching where that happens on the Linux source code, we must be able to get the correct load address before `init_module` happens.

===== GDB module_init add trap instruction

This is another possibility: we could modify the module source by adding a trap instruction of some kind.

This appears to be described at: https://www.linuxjournal.com/article/4525

But it refers to a `gdbstart` script which is not in the tree anymore and beyond my `git log` capabilities.

And just adding:

....
asm( " int $3");
....

directly gives an <> as I'd expect.

==== Bypass lx-symbols

Useless, but a good way to show how hardcore you are. Disable `lx-symbols` with:

....
./rungdb --no-lxsymbols
....

From inside guest:

....
insmod /fops.ko
cat /proc/modules
....

as mentioned at:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6384605/how-to-get-address-of-a-kernel-module-loaded-using-insmod/6385818
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/194405/get-base-address-and-size-of-a-loaded-kernel-module

This will give a line of form:

....
fops 2327 0 - Live 0xfffffffa00000000
....

And then tell GDB where the module was loaded with:

....
Ctrl-C
add-symbol-file ../kernel_modules-1.0/fops.ko 0xfffffffa00000000
....

Alternatively, if the module panics before you can read `/proc/modules`, there is a <> which shows the load address:

....
echo 8 > /proc/sys/kernel/printk
echo 'file kernel/module.c +p' > /sys/kernel/debug/dynamic_debug/control
/myinsmod.out /hello.ko
....

And then search for a line of type:

....
[ 84.877482] 0xfffffffa00000000 .text
....

=== GDB step debug early boot

Break at the very first instruction executed by QEMU:

....
./rungdb --no-continue
....

TODO why can't we break at early startup stuff such as:

....
./rungdb extract_kernel
./rungdb main
....

Maybe it is because they are being copied around at specific locations instead of being run directly from inside the main image, which is where the debug information points to?

See also: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2589845/what-are-the-first-operations-that-the-linux-kernel-executes-on-boot

<> with `--debug-flags=Exec` does show the right symbols however! So in the worst case, we can just read their source. Amazing.

==== GDB step debug early boot by address

One possibility is to run:

....
./trace-boot --arch arm
....

and then find the second address (the first one does not work, already too late maybe):

....
less "$(./getvar --arch arm trace_txt_file)"
....

and break there:

....
./run --arch arm --debug-guest
./rungdb --arch arm '*0x1000'
....

but TODO: it does not show the source assembly under `arch/arm`: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11423784/qemu-arm-linux-kernel-boot-debug-no-source-code

I also tried to hack `rungdb` with:

....
@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ else
${gdb} \
-q \\
-ex 'add-auto-load-safe-path $(pwd)' \\
--ex 'file vmlinux' \\
+-ex 'file arch/arm/boot/compressed/vmlinux' \\
-ex 'target remote localhost:${port}' \\
${brk} \
-ex 'continue' \\
....

and no I do have the symbols from `arch/arm/boot/compressed/vmlinux'`, but the breaks still don't work.

=== GDB step debug userland processes

QEMU's `-gdb` GDB breakpoints are set on virtual addresses, so you can in theory debug userland processes as well.

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26271901/is-it-possible-to-use-gdb-and-qemu-to-debug-linux-user-space-programs-and-kernel
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16273614/debug-init-on-qemu-using-gdb

You will generally want to use <> for this as it is more reliable, but this method can overcome the following limitations of `gdbserver`:

* the emulator does not support host to guest networking. This seems to be the case for gem5: <>
* cannot see the start of the `init` process easily
* `gdbserver` alters the working of the kernel, and makes your run less representative

Known limitations of direct userland debugging:

* the kernel might switch context to another process or to the kernel itself e.g. on a system call, and then TODO confirm the PIC would go to weird places and source code would be missing.
* TODO step into shared libraries. If I attempt to load them explicitly:
+
....
(gdb) sharedlibrary ../../staging/lib/libc.so.0
No loaded shared libraries match the pattern `../../staging/lib/libc.so.0'.
....
+
since GDB does not know that libc is loaded.

==== GDB step debug userland custom init

* Shell 1:
+
....
./run --debug-guest --kernel-cli 'init=/sleep_forever.out'
....
* Shell 2:
+
....
./rungdb-user kernel_modules-1.0/user/sleep_forever.out main
....

TODO not working as of f8c0502bb2680f2dbe7c1f3d7958f60265347005, does not break. Bisect on recent QEMU and kernel. Debug by creating an executable that prints the address of `main`.

==== GDB step debug userland BusyBox init

BusyBox custom init process:

* Shell 1:
+
....
./run --debug-guest --kernel-cli 'init=/bin/ls'
....
* Shell 2:
+
....
./rungdb-user busybox-1.26.2/busybox ls_main
....

This follows BusyBox' convention of calling the main for each executable as `_main` since the `busybox` executable has many "mains".

BusyBox default init process:

* Shell 1:
+
....
./run --debug-guest
....
* Shell 2:
+
....
./rungdb-user busybox-1.26.2/busybox init_main
....

This cannot be debugged in another way without modifying the source, or `/sbin/init` exits early with:

....
"must be run as PID 1"
....

==== GDB step debug userland non-init

Non-init process:

* Shell 1:
+
....
./run --debug-guest
....
* Shell 2:
+
....
./rungdb-user kernel_modules-1.0/user/myinsmod.out main
....
* Shell 1 after the boot finishes:
+
....
/myinsmod.out /hello.ko
....

This is the least reliable setup as there might be other processes that use the given virtual address.

===== GDB step debug userland non-init without --debug-guest

TODO: on QEMU bfba11afddae2f7b2c1335b4e23133e9cd3c9126, it works on `x86_64` and `aarch64` but fails on arm as follows:

* Shell 1:
+
....
./run --arch arm
....
* Shell 2: wait for boot to finish, and run:
+
....
./rungdb-user --arch arm kernel_modules-1.0/user/hello.out main
....
* Shell 1:
+
....
/hello.out
....

The problem is that the `b main` that we do inside `./rungdb-user` says:

....
Cannot access memory at address 0x10604
....

We have also double checked the address with:

....
./runtc --arch arm readelf -- \
-s "$(./getvar --arch arm build_dir)/kernel_modules-1.0/fops.ko" | \
grep main
....

and from GDB:

....
info line main
....

and both give:

....
000105fc
....

which is just 8 bytes before `0x10604`.

`gdbserver` also says `0x10604`.

However, if do a `Ctrl-C` in GDB, and then a direct:

....
b *0x000105fc
....

it works. Why?!

On GEM5, x86 can also give the `Cannot access memory at address`, so maybe it is also unreliable on QEMU, and works just by coincidence.

=== GDB call

GDB can call functions as explained at: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1354731/how-to-evaluate-functions-in-gdb

However this is failing for us:

* some symbols are not visible to `call` even though `b` sees them
* for those that are, `call` fails with an E14 error

E.g.: if we break on `__x64_sys_write` on `/count.sh`:

....
>>> call printk(0, "asdf")
Could not fetch register "orig_rax"; remote failure reply 'E14'
>>> b printk
Breakpoint 2 at 0xffffffff81091bca: file kernel/printk/printk.c, line 1824.
>>> call fdget_pos(fd)
No symbol "fdget_pos" in current context.
>>> b fdget_pos
Breakpoint 3 at 0xffffffff811615e3: fdget_pos. (9 locations)
>>>
....

even though `fdget_pos` is the first thing `__x64_sys_write` does:

....
581 SYSCALL_DEFINE3(write, unsigned int, fd, const char __user *, buf,
582 size_t, count)
583 {
584 struct fd f = fdget_pos(fd);
....

I also noticed that I get the same error:

....
Could not fetch register "orig_rax"; remote failure reply 'E14'
....

when trying to use:

....
fin
....

on many (all?) functions.

See also: https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/issues/19

=== GDB view ARM system registers

Not possible as of QEMU 3.0.0 it seems: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46415059/how-to-observe-aarch64-system-registers-in-qemu

=== GDB step debug multicore

We can set and get which cores the Linux kernel allows a program to run on with `sched_getaffinity` and `sched_setaffinity`:

....
./run --cpus 2 --eval-busybox '/sched_getaffinity.out'
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/sched_getaffinity.c[]

Sample output:

....
sched_getaffinity = 1 1
sched_getcpu = 1
sched_getaffinity = 1 0
sched_getcpu = 0
....

Which shows us that:

* initially:
** all 2 cores were enabled as shown by `sched_getaffinity = 1 1`
** the process was randomly assigned to run on core 1 (the second one) as shown by `sched_getcpu = 1`. If we run this several times, it will also run on core 0 sometimes.
* then we restrict the affinity to just core 0, and we see that the program was actually moved to core 0

The number of cores is modified as explained at: <>

`taskset` from the util-linux package sets the initial core affinity of a program:

....
taskset -c 1,1 /sched_getaffinity.out
....

output:

....
sched_getaffinity = 0 1
sched_getcpu = 1
sched_getaffinity = 1 0
sched_getcpu = 0
....

so we see that the affinity was restricted to the second core from the start.

Let's do a QEMU observation to justify this example being in the repository with <>.

We will run our `/sched_getaffinity.out` infinitely many time, on core 0 and core 1 alternatively:

....
./run \
--cpus 2 \
--debug-guest \
--eval-busybox 'i=0; while true; do taskset -c $i,$i /sched_getaffinity.out; i=$((! $i)); done' \
;
....

on another shell:

....
./rungdb-user kernel_modules-1.0/user/sched_getaffinity.out main
....

Then, inside GDB:

....
(gdb) info threads
Id Target Id Frame
* 1 Thread 1 (CPU#0 [running]) main () at sched_getaffinity.c:30
2 Thread 2 (CPU#1 [halted ]) native_safe_halt () at ./arch/x86/include/asm/irqflags.h:55
(gdb) c
(gdb) info threads
Id Target Id Frame
1 Thread 1 (CPU#0 [halted ]) native_safe_halt () at ./arch/x86/include/asm/irqflags.h:55
* 2 Thread 2 (CPU#1 [running]) main () at sched_getaffinity.c:30
(gdb) c
....

and we observe that `info threads` shows the actual correct core on which the process was restricted to run by `taskset`!

We should also try it out with kernel modules: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28347876/set-cpu-affinity-on-a-loadable-linux-kernel-module

TODO we then tried:

....
./run --cpus 2 --eval-busybox '/sched_getaffinity_threads.out'
....

and:

....
./rungdb-user kernel_modules-1.0/user/sched_getaffinity_threads.out
....

to switch between two simultaneous live threads with different affinities, it just didn't break on our threads:

....
b main_thread_0
....

Bibliography:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10490756/how-to-use-sched-getaffinity-and-sched-setaffinity-in-linux-from-c/50117787#50117787
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/42800801/how-to-use-gdb-to-debug-qemu-with-smp-symmetric-multiple-processors

=== Linux kernel GDB scripts

We source the Linux kernel GDB scripts by default for `lx-symbols`, but they also contains some other goodies worth looking into.

Those scripts basically parse some in-kernel datastructures to offer greater visibility with GDB.

All defined commands are prefixed by `lx-`, so to get a full list just try to tab complete that.

There aren't as many as I'd like, and the ones that do exist are pretty self explanatory, but let's give a few examples.

Show dmesg:

....
lx-dmesg
....

Show the <>:

....
lx-cmdline
....

Dump the device tree to a `fdtdump.dtb` file in the current directory:

....
lx-fdtdump
pwd
....

List inserted kernel modules:

....
lx-lsmod
....

Sample output:

....
Address Module Size Used by
0xffffff80006d0000 hello 16384 0
....

Bibliography:

* https://events.static.linuxfound.org/sites/events/files/slides/Debugging%20the%20Linux%20Kernel%20with%20GDB.pdf
* https://wiki.linaro.org/LandingTeams/ST/GDB

==== lx-ps

List all processes:

....
lx-ps
....

Sample output:

....
0xffff88000ed08000 1 init
0xffff88000ed08ac0 2 kthreadd
....

The second and third fields are obviously PID and process name.

The first one is more interesting, and contains the address of the `task_struct` in memory.

This can be confirmed with:

....
p ((struct task_struct)*0xffff88000ed08000
....

which contains the correct PID for all threads I've tried:

....
pid = 1,
....

TODO get the PC of the kthreads: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26030910/find-program-counter-of-process-in-kernel Then we would be able to see where the threads are stopped in the code!

On ARM, I tried:

....
task_pt_regs((struct thread_info *)((struct task_struct)*0xffffffc00e8f8000))->uregs[ARM_pc]
....

but `task_pt_regs` is a `#define` and GDB cannot see defines without `-ggdb3`: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2934006/how-do-i-print-a-defined-constant-in-gdb which are apparently not set?

Bibliography:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9561546/thread-aware-gdb-for-kernel
* https://wiki.linaro.org/LandingTeams/ST/GDB
* https://events.static.linuxfound.org/sites/events/files/slides/Debugging%20the%20Linux%20Kernel%20with%20GDB.pdf presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqn5hIrz3A8

== KGDB

TODO: only working with <>. Without it, nothing shows on the terminal. So likely something linked to the option `console=ttyS0`.

KGDB is kernel dark magic that allows you to GDB the kernel on real hardware without any extra hardware support.

It is useless with QEMU since we already have full system visibility with `-gdb`, but this is a good way to learn it.

Cheaper than JTAG (free) and easier to setup (all you need is serial), but with less visibility as it depends on the kernel working, so e.g.: dies on panic, does not see boot sequence.

Usage:

....
./run --kgdb
./rungdb --kgdb
....

In GDB:

....
c
....

In QEMU:

....
/count.sh &
/kgdb.sh
....

In GDB:

....
b __x64_sys_write
c
c
c
c
....

And now you can count from GDB!

If you do: `b __x64_sys_write` immediately after `./rungdb --kgdb`, it fails with `KGDB: BP remove failed: `. I think this is because it would break too early on the boot sequence, and KGDB is not yet ready.

See also:

* https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.9/Documentation/DocBook/kgdb.tmpl
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22004616/qemu-kernel-debugging-with-kgdb/44197715#44197715

=== KGDB ARM

GDB not connecting to KGDB in ARM. Possibly linked to `-serial stdio`. See also: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14155577/how-to-use-kgdb-on-arm

Main shell just falls on:

....
Entering kdb (current=0xf8ce07d3, pid 1) due to Keyboard Entry
kdb>
....

and GDB shell gives:

....
Reading symbols from vmlinux...done.
Remote debugging using localhost:1234
Ignoring packet error, continuing...
warning: unrecognized item "timeout" in "qSupported" response
Ignoring packet error, continuing...
Remote replied unexpectedly to 'vMustReplyEmpty': timeout
....

=== KGDB kernel modules

In QEMU:

....
/kgdb-mod.sh
....

Source: link:rootfs_overlay/kgdb-mod.sh[].

In GDB:

....
lx-symbols ../kernel_modules-1.0/
b fop_write
c
c
c
....

and you now control the count.

TODO: if I `-ex lx-symbols` to the `gdb` command, just like done for QEMU `-gdb`, the kernel <>. How to automate this step?

=== KDB

If you modify `runqemu` to use:

....
-append kgdboc=kbd
....

instead of `kgdboc=ttyS0,115200`, you enter a different debugging mode called KDB.

Usage: in QEMU:

....
[0]kdb> go
....

Boot finishes, then:

....
/kgdb.sh
....

Source: link:rootfs_overlay/kgdb-mod.sh[].

And you are back in KDB. Now you can:

....
[0]kdb> help
[0]kdb> bp __x64_sys_write
[0]kdb> go
....

And you will break whenever `__x64_sys_write` is hit.

The other KDB commands allow you to instruction steps, view memory, registers and some higher level kernel runtime data.

But TODO I don't think you can see where you are in the kernel source code and line step as from GDB, since the kernel source is not available on guest (ah, if only debugging information supported full source).

== gdbserver

Step debug userland processes to understand how they are talking to the kernel.

Guest:

....
/gdbserver.sh /myinsmod.out /hello.ko
....

Source: link:rootfs_overlay/gdbserver.sh[].

Host:

....
./rungdbserver kernel_modules-1.0/user/myinsmod.out
....

You can find the executable with:

....
find "$(./getvar build_dir)" -name myinsmod.out
....

TODO: automate the path finding:

* using the executable from under `$(./getvar target_dir)` would be easier as the path is the same as in guest, but unfortunately those executables are stripped to make the guest smaller. `BR2_STRIP_none=y` should disable stripping, but make the image way larger.
* `$(./getvar staging_dir)` would be even better than the target dir as Buildroot docs say that this directory contains binaries before they were stripped. However, only a few binaries are pre-installed there by default, and it seems to be a manual per package thing.
+
E.g. `pciutils` has for `lspci`:
+
....
define PCIUTILS_INSTALL_STAGING_CMDS
$(TARGET_MAKE_ENV) $(MAKE1) -C $(@D) $(PCIUTILS_MAKE_OPTS) \
PREFIX=$(STAGING_DIR)/usr SBINDIR=$(STAGING_DIR)/usr/bin \
install install-lib install-pcilib
endef
....
+
and the docs describe the `*_INSTALL_STAGING` per package config, which is normally set for shared library packages.
+
Feature request: https://bugs.busybox.net/show_bug.cgi?id=10386

An implementation overview can be found at: https://reverseengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/8829/cross-debugging-for-mips-elf-with-qemu-toolchain/16214#16214

=== gdbserver different archs

As usual, different archs work with:

....
./rungdbserver --arch arm kernel_modules-1.0/user/myinsmod.out
....

=== gdbserver BusyBox

BusyBox executables are all symlinks, so if you do on guest:

....
/gdbserver.sh ls
....

on host you need:

....
./rungdbserver busybox-1.26.2/busybox
....

=== gdbserver shared libraries

Our setup gives you the rare opportunity to step debug libc and other system libraries e.g. with:

....
b open
c
....

Or simply by stepping into calls:

....
s
....

This is made possible by the GDB command:

....
set sysroot ${common_buildroot_build_dir}/staging
....

which automatically finds unstripped shared libraries on the host for us.

See also: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8611194/debugging-shared-libraries-with-gdbserver/45252113#45252113

=== gdbserver dynamic loader

TODO: try to step debug the dynamic loader. Would be even easier if `starti` is available: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10483544/stopping-at-the-first-machine-code-instruction-in-gdb

Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/20114565/gdb-step-into-dynamic-linkerld-so-code

== CPU architecture

The portability of the kernel and toolchains is amazing: change an option and most things magically work on completely different hardware.

To use `arm` instead of x86 for example:

....
./build-buildroot --arch arm
./run --arch arm
....

Debug:

....
./run --arch arm --debug-guest
# On another terminal.
./rungdb --arch arm
....

We also have one letter shorthand names for the architectures and `--arch` option:

....
# aarch64
./run -a A
# arm
./run -a a
# x86_64
./run -a x
....

Known quirks of the supported architectures are documented in this section.

=== x86_64

==== ring0

This example illustrates how reading from the x86 control registers with `mov crX, rax` can only be done from kernel land on ring0.

From kernel land:

....
insmod ring0.ko
....

works and output the registers, for example:

....
cr0 = 0xFFFF880080050033
cr2 = 0xFFFFFFFF006A0008
cr3 = 0xFFFFF0DCDC000
....

However if we try to do it from userland:

....
/ring0.out
....

stdout gives:

....
Segmentation fault
....

and dmesg outputs:

....
traps: ring0.out[55] general protection ip:40054c sp:7fffffffec20 error:0 in ring0.out[400000+1000]
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/ring0.c[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/ring0.h[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/ring0.c[]

In both cases, we attempt to run the exact same code which is shared on the `ring0.h` header file.

Bibliography:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7415515/how-to-access-the-control-registers-cr0-cr2-cr3-from-a-program-getting-segmenta/7419306#7419306
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/18717016/what-are-ring-0-and-ring-3-in-the-context-of-operating-systems/44483439#44483439

=== arm

==== Run arm executable in aarch64

TODO Can you run arm executables in the aarch64 guest? https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22460589/armv8-running-legacy-32-bit-applications-on-64-bit-os/51466709#51466709

I've tried:

....
./runtc --arch aarch64 gcc -- -static ~/test/hello_world.c -o data/9p/a.out
./run --arch aarch64 --eval-busybox '/mnt/9p/a.out'
....

but it fails with:

....
a.out: line 1: syntax error: unexpected word (expecting ")")
....

=== MIPS

We used to "support" it until f8c0502bb2680f2dbe7c1f3d7958f60265347005 (it booted) but dropped since one was testing it often.

If you want to revive and maintain it, send a pull request.

== init

When the Linux kernel finishes booting, it runs an executable as the first and only userland process. This executable is called the `init` program.

The init process is then responsible for setting up the entire userland (or destroying everything when you want to have fun).

This typically means reading some configuration files (e.g. `/etc/initrc`) and forking a bunch of userland executables based on those files, including the very interactive shell that we end up on.

systemd provides a "popular" init implementation for desktop distros as of 2017.

BusyBox provides its own minimalistic init implementation which Buildroot, and therefore this repo, uses by default.

The `init` program can be either an executable shell text file, or a compiled ELF file. It becomes easy to accept this once you see that the `exec` system call handles both cases equally: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/174062/can-the-init-process-be-a-shell-script-in-linux/395375#395375

The `init` executable is searched for in a list of paths in the root filesystem, including `/init`, `/sbin/init` and a few others. For more details see: <>

=== Replace init

To have more control over the system, you can replace BusyBox's init with your own.

The most direct way to replace `init` with our own is to just use the `init=` <> directly:

....
./run --kernel-cli 'init=/count.sh'
....

This just counts every second forever and does not give you a shell.

This method is not very flexible however, as it is hard to reliably pass multiple commands and command line arguments to the init with it, as explained at: <>.

For this reason, we have created a more robust helper method with the `--eval` option:

....
./run --eval 'echo "asdf qwer";insmod /hello.ko;/poweroff.out'
....

The `--eval` option replaces init with a shell script that just evals the given command.

It is basically a shortcut for:

....
./run --kernel-cli 'init=/eval_base64.sh - lkmc_eval="insmod /hello.ko;/poweroff.out"'
....

Source: link:rootfs_overlay/eval_base64.sh[].

This allows quoting and newlines by base64 encoding on host, and decoding on guest, see: <>.

It also automatically chooses between `init=` and `rcinit=` for you, see: <>

`--eval` replaces BusyBox' init completely, which makes things more minimal, but also has has the following consequences:

* `/etc/fstab` mounts are not done, notably `/proc` and `/sys`, test it out with:
+
....
./run --eval 'echo asdf;ls /proc;ls /sys;echo qwer'
....
* no shell is launched at the end of boot for you to interact with the system. You could explicitly add a `sh` at the end of your commands however:
+
....
./run --eval 'echo hello;sh'
....

The best way to overcome those limitations is to use: <>

If the script is large, you can add it to a gitignored file and pass that to `-E` as in:

....
echo '
insmod /hello.ko
/poweroff.out
' > gitignore.sh
./run --eval "$(cat gitignore.sh)"
....

or add it to a file to the root filesystem guest and rebuild:

....
echo '#!/bin/sh
insmod /hello.ko
/poweroff.out
' > rootfs_overlay/gitignore.sh
chmod +x rootfs_overlay/gitignore.sh
./build-buildroot
./run --kernel-cli 'init=/gitignore.sh'
....

Remember that if your init returns, the kernel will panic, there are just two non-panic possibilities:

* run forever in a loop or long sleep
* `poweroff` the machine

==== poweroff.out

Just using BusyBox' `poweroff` at the end of the `init` does not work and the kernel panics:

....
./run --eval poweroff
....

because BusyBox' `poweroff` tries to do some fancy stuff like killing init, likely to allow userland to shutdown nicely.

But this fails when we are `init` itself!

`poweroff` works more brutally and effectively if you add `-f`:

....
./run --eval 'poweroff -f'
....

but why not just use our minimal `/poweroff.out` and be done with it?

....
./run --eval '/poweroff.out'
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/poweroff.c[]

This also illustrates how to shutdown the computer from C: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28812514/how-to-shutdown-linux-using-c-or-qt-without-call-to-system

==== sleep_forever.out

I dare you to guess what this does:

....
./run --eval '/sleep_forever.out'
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/sleep_forever.c[]

This executable is a convenient simple init that does not panic and sleeps instead.

==== time_boot.out

Get a reasonable answer to "how long does boot take?":

....
./run --eval-busybox '/time_boot.out'
....

Dmesg contains a message of type:

....
[ 2.188242] time_boot.c
....

which tells us that boot took `2.188242` seconds.

Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12683169/measure-time-taken-for-linux-kernel-from-bootup-to-userpace/46517014#46517014

[[init-busybox]]
=== Run command at the end of BusyBox init

Use the `--eval-busybox` option is for you rely on something that BusyBox' init set up for you like `/etc/fstab`:

....
./run --eval-busybox 'echo asdf;ls /proc;ls /sys;echo qwer'
....

After the commands run, you are left on an interactive shell.

The above command is basically equivalent to:

....
./run --kernel-cli-after-dash 'lkmc_eval="insmod /hello.ko;poweroff.out;"'
....

where the `lkmc_eval` option gets evaled by our default link:rootfs_overlay/etc/init.d/S98[S98] startup script.

Except that `--eval-busybox` is smarter and uses `base64` encoding.

Alternatively, you can also add the comamdns to run to a new `init.d` entry to run at the end o the BusyBox init:

....
cp rootfs_overlay/etc/init.d/S98 rootfs_overlay/etc/init.d/S99.gitignore
vim rootfs_overlay/etc/init.d/S99.gitignore
./build-buildroot
./run
....

and they will be run automatically before the login prompt.

Scripts under `/etc/init.d` are run by `/etc/init.d/rcS`, which gets called by the line `::sysinit:/etc/init.d/rcS` in link:rootfs_overlay/etc/inittab[`/etc/inittab`].

=== Path to init

The init is selected at:

* initrd or initramfs system: `/init`, a custom one can be set with the `rdinit=` <>
* otherwise: default is `/sbin/init`, followed by some other paths, a custom one can be set with `init=`

More details: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/30414/what-can-make-passing-init-path-to-program-to-the-kernel-not-start-program-as-i/430614#430614

=== Init environment

Documented at link:https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.14/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.html[]:

____
The kernel parses parameters from the kernel command line up to "-"; if it doesn't recognize a parameter and it doesn't contain a '.', the parameter gets passed to init: parameters with '=' go into init's environment, others are passed as command line arguments to init. Everything after "-" is passed as an argument to init.
____

And you can try it out with:

....
./run --kernel-cli 'init=/init_env_poweroff.out - asdf=qwer zxcv'
....

Output:

....
args:
/init_env_poweroff.out
-
zxcv

env:
HOME=/
TERM=linux
asdf=qwer
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/init_env_poweroff.c[].

==== init environment args

The annoying dash `-` gets passed as a parameter to `init`, which makes it impossible to use this method for most non custom executables.

Arguments with dots that come after `-` are still treated specially (of the form `subsystem.somevalue`) and disappear, from args, e.g.:

....
./run --kernel-cli 'init=/init_env_poweroff.out - /poweroff.out'
....

outputs:

....
args
/init_env_poweroff.out
-
ab
....

so see how `a.b` is gone.

==== init environment env

Wait, where do `HOME` and `TERM` come from? (greps the kernel). Ah, OK, the kernel sets those by default: https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/94710cac0ef4ee177a63b5227664b38c95bbf703/init/main.c#L173

....
const char *envp_init[MAX_INIT_ENVS+2] = { "HOME=/", "TERM=linux", NULL, };
....

Furthermore, if you run something inside a shell:

....
./run --eval '/usr/bin/env'
....

BusyBox also defines `SHLVL` and `PWD=`:

....
SHLVL=1
HOME=/
TERM=linux
lkmc_eval=L3Vzci9iaW4vZW52
PWD=/
....

=== Networking

We disable networking by default because it starts an userland process, and we want to keep the number of userland processes to a minimum to make the system more understandable.

Enable:

....
/sbin/ifup -a
....

Disable:

....
/sbin/ifdown -a
....

Test:

....
wget google.com
....

BusyBox' `ping` does not work with hostnames even when networking is working fine:

....
ping google.com
....

TODO why: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/124283/busybox-ping-ip-works-but-hostname-nslookup-fails-with-bad-address

To enable networking by default, use the methods documented at <>.

== initrd

The kernel can boot from an CPIO file, which is a directory serialization format much like tar: https://superuser.com/questions/343915/tar-vs-cpio-what-is-the-difference

The bootloader, which for us is QEMU itself, is then configured to put that CPIO into memory, and tell the kernel that it is there.

With this setup, you don't even need to give a root filesystem to the kernel, it just does everything in memory in a ramfs.

To enable initrd instead of the default ext2 disk image, do:

....
./build-buildroot --initrd
./run --initrd
....

Notice how it boots fine, even though this leads to not giving QEMU the `-drive` option, as can be verified with:

....
cat "$(./getvar run_dir)/run.sh"
....

Also as expected, there is no filesystem persistency, since we are doing everything in memory:

....
date >f
poweroff
cat f
# can't open 'f': No such file or directory
....

which can be good for automated tests, as it ensures that you are using a pristine unmodified system image every time.

One downside of this method is that it has to put the entire filesystem into memory, and could lead to a panic:

....
end Kernel panic - not syncing: Out of memory and no killable processes...
....

This can be solved by increasing the memory with:

....
./run --initrd --memory 256M
....

The main ingredients to get initrd working are:

* `BR2_TARGET_ROOTFS_CPIO=y`: make Buildroot generate `images/rootfs.cpio` in addition to the other images.
+
It is also possible to compress that image with other options.
* `qemu -initrd`: make QEMU put the image into memory and tell the kernel about it.
* `CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INITRD=y`: Compile the kernel with initrd support, see also: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/67462/linux-kernel-is-not-finding-the-initrd-correctly/424496#424496
+
Buildroot forces that option when `BR2_TARGET_ROOTFS_CPIO=y` is given

https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/89923/how-does-linux-load-the-initrd-image asks how the mechanism works in more detail.

=== initrd in desktop distros

Most modern desktop distributions have an initrd in their root disk to do early setup.

The rationale for this is described at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Initial_ramdisk

One obvious use case is having an encrypted root filesystem: you keep the initrd in an unencrypted partition, and then setup decryption from there.

I think GRUB then knows read common disk formats, and then loads that initrd to memory with a `/boot/grub/grub.cfg` directive of type:

....
initrd /initrd.img-4.4.0-108-generic
....

Related: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6405083/initrd-and-booting-the-linux-kernel

=== initramfs

initramfs is just like <>, but you also glue the image directly to the kernel image itself.

So the only argument that QEMU needs is the `-kernel`, no `-drive` not even `-initrd`! Pretty cool.

Try it out with:

....
./build-buildroot --initramfs -l && ./run --initramfs
....

The `-l` (ell) should only be used the first time you move to / from a different root filesystem method (ext2 or cpio) to initramfs to overcome: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49260466/why-when-i-change-br2-linux-kernel-custom-config-file-and-run-make-linux-reconfi

....
./build-buildroot --initramfs && ./run --initramfs
....

It is interesting to see how this increases the size of the kernel image if you do a:

....
ls -lh "$(./getvar linux_image)"
....

before and after using initramfs, since the `.cpio` is now glued to the kernel image.

In the background, it uses `BR2_TARGET_ROOTFS_INITRAMFS`, and this makes the kernel config option `CONFIG_INITRAMFS_SOURCE` point to the CPIO that will be embedded in the kernel image.

http://nairobi-embedded.org/initramfs_tutorial.html shows a full manual setup.

=== gem5 initrd

TODO we were not able to get it working yet: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49261801/how-to-boot-the-linux-kernel-with-initrd-or-initramfs-with-gem5

== Device tree

The device tree is a Linux kernel defined data structure that serves to inform the kernel how the hardware is setup.

<> contains a minimal runnable example of device tree manipulation.

Device trees serve to reduce the need for hardware vendors to patch the kernel: they just provide a device tree file instead, which is much simpler.

x86 does not use it device trees, but many other archs to, notably ARM.

This is notably because ARM boards:

* typically don't have discoverable hardware extensions like PCI, but rather just put everything on an SoC with magic register addresses
* are made by a wide variety of vendors due to ARM's licensing business model, which increases variability

The Linux kernel itself has several device trees under `./arch//boot/dts`, see also: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/21670967/how-to-compile-dts-linux-device-tree-source-files-to-dtb/42839737#42839737

=== DTB files

Files that contain device trees have the `.dtb` extension when compiled, and `.dts` when in text form.

You can convert between those formats with:

....
sudo apt-get install device-tree-compiler
dtc -I dtb -O dts -o a.dts a.dtb
dtc -I dts -O dtb -o a.dtb a.dts
....

See also: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14000736/tool-to-visualize-the-device-tree-file-dtb-used-by-the-linux-kernel/39931834#39931834

Device tree files are provided to the emulator just like the root filesystem and the Linux kernel image.

In real hardware, those components are also often provided separately. For example, on the Raspberry Pi 2, the SD card must contain two partitions:

* the first contains all magic files, including the Linux kernel and the device tree
* the second contains the root filesystem

See also: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/29837892/how-to-run-a-c-program-with-no-os-on-the-raspberry-pi/40063032#40063032

=== Device tree syntax

Good format descriptions:

* https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/configuration/device-tree.md

Minimal example

....
/dts-v1/;

/ {
a;
};
....

Check correctness with:

....
dtc a.dts
....

Separate nodes are simply merged by node path, e.g.:

....
/dts-v1/;

/ {
a;
};

/ {
b;
};
....

then `dtc a.dts` gives:

....
/dts-v1/;

/ {
a;
b;
};
....

=== Get device tree from running kernel

https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/265890/is-it-possible-to-get-the-information-for-a-device-tree-using-sys-of-a-running/330926#330926

This is specially interesting because QEMU and gem5 are capable of generating DTBs that match the selected machine depending on dynamic command line parameters for some types of machines.

QEMU's `-M virt` for example, which we use by default for `aarch64`, boots just fine without the `-dtb` option:

....
./run --arch aarch64
....

Then, from inside the guest:

....
dtc -I fs -O dts /sys/firmware/devicetree/base
....

contains:

....
cpus {
#address-cells = <0x1>;
#size-cells = <0x0>;

cpu@0 {
compatible = "arm,cortex-a57";
device_type = "cpu";
reg = <0x0>;
};
};
....

=== Device tree emulator generation

Since emulators know everything about the hardware, they can automatically generate device trees for us, which is very convenient.

This is the case for both QEMU and gem5.

For example, if we increase the <> to 2:

....
./run --arch aarch64 --cpus 2
....

QEMU automatically adds a second CPU to the DTB!

....
cpu@0 {
cpu@1 {
....

The action seems to be happening at: `hw/arm/virt.c`.

<> 2a9573f5942b5416fb0570cf5cb6cdecba733392 can also generate its own DTB.

gem5 can generate DTBs on ARM with `--generate-dtb`, but we don't use that feature as of f8c0502bb2680f2dbe7c1f3d7958f60265347005 because it was buggy.

== KVM

You can make QEMU or gem5 <> by passing enabling KVM with:

....
./run --kvm
....

but it was broken in gem5 with pending patches: https://www.mail-archive.com/gem5-users@gem5.org/msg15046.html It fails immediately on:

....
panic: KVM: Failed to enter virtualized mode (hw reason: 0x80000021)
....

KVM uses the link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kernel-based_Virtual_Machine[KVM Linux kernel feature] of the host to run most instructions natively.

We don't enable KVM by default because:

* only works if the architecture of the guest equals that of the host.
+
We have only tested / supported it on x86, but it is rumoured that QEMU and gem5 also have ARM KVM support if you are link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ItXpmLsINs[running an ARM desktop for some weird reason] :-)
* limits visibility, since more things are running natively:
** can't use GDB
** can't do instruction tracing
* kernel boots are already fast enough without `-enable-kvm`

The main use case for `-enable-kvm` in this repository is to test if something that takes a long time to run is functionally correct.

For example, when porting a benchmark to Buildroot, you can first use QEMU's KVM to test that benchmarks is producing the correct results, before analysing them more deeply in gem5, which runs much slower.

== Kernel module utilities

=== insmod

link:https://git.busybox.net/busybox/tree/modutils/insmod.c?h=1_29_3[Provided by BusyBox]:

....
./run --eval-busybox 'insmod /hello.ko'
....

=== modprobe

If you are feeling fancy, you can also insert modules with:

....
modprobe hello
....

which insmods link:packages/kernel_modules/hello.c[].

`modprobe` searches for modules under:

....
ls /lib/modules/*/extra/
....

Kernel modules built from the Linux mainline tree with `CONFIG_SOME_MOD=m`, are automatically available with `modprobe`, e.g.:

....
modprobe dummy-irq irq=1
....

=== myinsmod

If you are feeling raw, you can insert and remove modules with our own minimal module inserter and remover!

....
# init_module
/myinsmod.out /hello.ko
# finit_module
/myinsmod.out /hello.ko "" 1
/myrmmod.out hello
....

which teaches you how it is done from C code.

Source:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/myinsmod.c[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/myrmmod.c[]

The Linux kernel offers two system calls for module insertion:

* `init_module`
* `finit_module`

and:

....
man init_module
....

documents that:

____
The finit_module() system call is like init_module(), but reads the module to be loaded from the file descriptor fd. It is useful when the authenticity of a kernel module can be determined from its location in the filesystem; in cases where that is possible, the overhead of using cryptographically signed modules to determine the authenticity of a module can be avoided. The param_values argument is as for init_module().
____

`finit` is newer and was added only in v3.8. More rationale: https://lwn.net/Articles/519010/

Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5947286/how-to-load-linux-kernel-modules-from-c-code

=== kmod

https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/utils/kernel/kmod/kmod.git

Multi-call executable that implements: `lsmod`, `insmod`, `rmmod`, and other tools on desktop distros such as Ubuntu 16.04, where e.g.:

....
ls -l /bin/lsmod
....

gives:

....
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4 Jul 25 15:35 /bin/lsmod -> kmod
....

and:

....
dpkg -l | grep -Ei
....

contains:

....
ii kmod 22-1ubuntu5 amd64 tools for managing Linux kernel modules
....

BusyBox also implements its own version of those executables. There are some differences.

Buildroot also has a kmod package, but we are not using it since BusyBox' version is good enough so far.

This page will only describe features that differ from kmod to the BusyBox implementation.

==== module-init-tools

Name of a predecessor set of tools.

==== kmod modprobe

kmod's `modprobe` can also load modules under different names to avoid conflicts, e.g.:

....
sudo modprobe vmhgfs -o vm_hgfs
....

== Graphics

Both QEMU and gem5 are capable of outputting graphics to the screen, and taking mouse and keyboard input.

https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/307390/what-is-the-difference-between-ttys0-ttyusb0-and-ttyama0-in-linux

=== QEMU text mode

Text mode is the default mode for QEMU.

The opposite of text mode is <>

In text mode, we just show the serial console directly on the current terminal, without opening a QEMU GUI window.

You cannot see any graphics from text mode, but text operations in this mode, including:

* scrolling up: <>
* copy paste to and from the terminal

making this a good default, unless you really need to use with graphics.

Text mode works by sending the terminal character by character to a serial device.

This is different from a display screen, where each character is a bunch of pixels, and it would be much harder to convert that into actual terminal text.

For more details, see:

* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/307390/what-is-the-difference-between-ttys0-ttyusb0-and-ttyama0-in-linux
* <>

Note that you can still see an image even in text mode with the VNC:

....
./run --vnc
....

and on another terminal:

....
./vnc
....

but there is not terminal on the VNC window, just the <> penguin.

==== Quit QEMU from text mode

https://superuser.com/questions/1087859/how-to-quit-the-qemu-monitor-when-not-using-a-gui

However, our QEMU setup captures Ctrl + C and other common signals and sends them to the guest, which makes it hard to quit QEMU for the first time since there is no GUI either.

The simplest way to quit QEMU, is to do:

....
Ctrl-A X
....

Alternative methods include:

* `quit` command on the <>
* `pkill qemu`

=== QEMU graphic mode

Enable graphic mode with:

....
./run --graphic
....

Outcome: you see a penguin due to <>.

For a more exciting GUI experience, see: <>

Text mode is the default due to the following considerable advantages:

* copy and paste commands and stdout output to / from host
* get full panic traces when you start making the kernel crash :-) See also: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/208260/how-to-scroll-up-after-a-kernel-panic
* have a large scroll buffer, and be able to search it, e.g. by using tmux on host
* one less window floating around to think about in addition to your shell :-)
* graphics mode has only been properly tested on `x86_64`.

Text mode has the following limitations over graphics mode:

* you can't see graphics such as those produced by <>
* very early kernel messages such as `early console in extract_kernel` only show on the GUI, since at such early stages, not even the serial has been setup.

`x86_64` has a VGA device enabled by default, as can be seen as:

....
./qemumonitor info qtree
....

and the Linux kernel picks it up through the link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_framebuffer[fbdev] graphics system as can be seen from:

....
cat /dev/urandom > /dev/fb0
....

flooding the screen with colors. See also: https://superuser.com/questions/223094/how-do-i-know-if-i-have-kms-enabled

==== Scroll up in graphic mode

Scroll up in <>:

....
Shift-PgUp
....

but I never managed to increase that buffer:

* https://askubuntu.com/questions/709697/how-to-increase-scrollback-lines-in-ubuntu14-04-2-server-edition
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/346018/how-to-increase-the-scrollback-buffer-size-for-tty

The superior alternative is to use text mode and GNU screen or <>.

==== QEMU Graphic mode arm

===== QEMU graphic mode arm terminal

TODO: on arm, we see the penguin and some boot messages, but don't get a shell at then end:

....
./run --arch aarch64 --graphic
....

I think it does not work because the graphic window is <> only, i.e.:

....
cat /dev/urandom > /dev/fb0
....

fails with:

....
cat: write error: No space left on device
....

and has no effect, and the Linux kernel does not appear to have a built-in DRM console as it does for fbdev with <>.

There is however one out-of-tree implementation: <>.

===== QEMU graphic mode arm terminal implementation

`arm` and `aarch64` rely on the QEMU CLI option:

....
-device virtio-gpu-pci
....

and the kernel config options:

....
CONFIG_DRM=y
CONFIG_DRM_VIRTIO_GPU=y
....

Unlike x86, `arm` and `aarch64` don't have a display device attached by default, thus the need for `virtio-gpu-pci`.

See also https://wiki.qemu.org/Documentation/Platforms/ARM (recently edited and corrected by yours truly... :-)).

===== QEMU graphic mode arm VGA

TODO: how to use VGA on ARM? https://stackoverflow.com/questions/20811203/how-can-i-output-to-vga-through-qemu-arm Tried:

....
-device VGA
....

But https://github.com/qemu/qemu/blob/v2.12.0/docs/config/mach-virt-graphical.cfg#L264 says:

....
# We use virtio-gpu because the legacy VGA framebuffer is
# very troublesome on aarch64, and virtio-gpu is the only
# video device that doesn't implement it.
....

so maybe it is not possible?

=== gem5 Graphic mode

gem5 does not have a "text mode", since it cannot redirect the Linux terminal to same host terminal where the executable is running: you are always forced to connect to the terminal with `gem-shell`.

TODO could not get it working on `x86_64`, only ARM.

Overview: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50364863/how-to-get-graphical-gui-output-and-user-touch-keyboard-mouse-input-in-a-ful/50364864#50364864

More concretely:

....
git -C "$(./getvar linux_src_dir)" checkout gem5/v4.15
./build-buildroot \
--arch arm \
--gem5 \
-l \
-K linux/arch/arm/configs/gem5_defconfig \
--linux-build-id gem5-v4.15 \
;
git -C "$(./getvar linux_src_dir)" checkout -
./run --arch arm --gem5 --linux-build-id gem5-v4.15
....

and then on another shell:

....
vinagre localhost:5900
....

The <> penguin only appears after several seconds, together with kernel messages of type:

....
[ 0.152755] [drm] found ARM HDLCD version r0p0
[ 0.152790] hdlcd 2b000000.hdlcd: bound virt-encoder (ops 0x80935f94)
[ 0.152795] [drm] Supports vblank timestamp caching Rev 2 (21.10.2013).
[ 0.152799] [drm] No driver support for vblank timestamp query.
[ 0.215179] Console: switching to colour frame buffer device 240x67
[ 0.230389] hdlcd 2b000000.hdlcd: fb0: frame buffer device
[ 0.230509] [drm] Initialized hdlcd 1.0.0 20151021 for 2b000000.hdlcd on minor 0
....

The port `5900` is incremented by one if you already have something running on that port, `gem5` stdout tells us the right port on stdout as:

....
system.vncserver: Listening for connections on port 5900
....

and when we connect it shows a message:

....
info: VNC client attached
....

Alternatively, you can also view the frames with `--frame-capture`:

....
./run \
--arch arm \
--gem5 \
--linux-build-id gem5-v4.15 \
-- --frame-capture \
;
....

This option dumps one compressed PNG whenever the screen image changes inside `m5out`, indexed by the cycle ID. This allows for more controlled experiments.

It is fun to see how we get one new frame whenever the white underscore cursor appears and reappears under the penguin.

TODO <> failed on `aarch64` with:

....
kmscube[706]: unhandled level 2 translation fault (11) at 0x00000000, esr 0x92000006, in libgbm.so.1.0.0[7fbf6a6000+e000]
....

Tested on: link:http://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/38fd6153d965ba20145f53dc1bb3ba34b336bde9[38fd6153d965ba20145f53dc1bb3ba34b336bde9]

==== Graphic mode gem5 aarch64

For `aarch64` we also need `-c kernel_config_fragment/display`:

....
git -C "$(./getvar linux_src_dir)" checkout gem5/v4.15
./build-buildroot \
--arch aarch64 \
-c kernel_config_fragment/display \
--gem5 \
-K linux/arch/arm64/configs/gem5_defconfig \
-l \
--linux-build-id gem5-v4.15 \
;
git -C "$(./getvar linux_src_dir)" checkout -
./run --arch aarch64 --gem5 --linux-build-id gem5-v4.15
....

This is because the gem5 `aarch64` defconfig does not enable HDLCD like the 32 bit one `arm` one for some reason.

==== Graphic mode gem5 internals

We cannot use mainline Linux because the <> are required at least to provide the `CONFIG_DRM_VIRT_ENCODER` option.

gem5 emulates the link:http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp?topic=/com.arm.doc.dui0541c/CHDBAIDI.html[HDLCD] ARM Holdings hardware for `arm` and `aarch64`.

The kernel uses HDLCD to implement the <> interface, the required kernel config options are present at: link:kernel_config_fragment/display[].

TODO: minimize out the `-K`. If we just remove it on `arm`: it does not work with a failing dmesg:

....
[ 0.066208] [drm] found ARM HDLCD version r0p0
[ 0.066241] hdlcd 2b000000.hdlcd: bound virt-encoder (ops drm_vencoder_ops)
[ 0.066247] [drm] Supports vblank timestamp caching Rev 2 (21.10.2013).
[ 0.066252] [drm] No driver support for vblank timestamp query.
[ 0.066276] hdlcd 2b000000.hdlcd: Cannot do DMA to address 0x0000000000000000
[ 0.066281] swiotlb: coherent allocation failed for device 2b000000.hdlcd size=8294400
[ 0.066288] CPU: 0 PID: 1 Comm: swapper/0 Not tainted 4.15.0 #1
[ 0.066293] Hardware name: V2P-AARCH64 (DT)
[ 0.066296] Call trace:
[ 0.066301] dump_backtrace+0x0/0x1b0
[ 0.066306] show_stack+0x24/0x30
[ 0.066311] dump_stack+0xb8/0xf0
[ 0.066316] swiotlb_alloc_coherent+0x17c/0x190
[ 0.066321] __dma_alloc+0x68/0x160
[ 0.066325] drm_gem_cma_create+0x98/0x120
[ 0.066330] drm_fbdev_cma_create+0x74/0x2e0
[ 0.066335] __drm_fb_helper_initial_config_and_unlock+0x1d8/0x3a0
[ 0.066341] drm_fb_helper_initial_config+0x4c/0x58
[ 0.066347] drm_fbdev_cma_init_with_funcs+0x98/0x148
[ 0.066352] drm_fbdev_cma_init+0x40/0x50
[ 0.066357] hdlcd_drm_bind+0x220/0x428
[ 0.066362] try_to_bring_up_master+0x21c/0x2b8
[ 0.066367] component_master_add_with_match+0xa8/0xf0
[ 0.066372] hdlcd_probe+0x60/0x78
[ 0.066377] platform_drv_probe+0x60/0xc8
[ 0.066382] driver_probe_device+0x30c/0x478
[ 0.066388] __driver_attach+0x10c/0x128
[ 0.066393] bus_for_each_dev+0x70/0xb0
[ 0.066398] driver_attach+0x30/0x40
[ 0.066402] bus_add_driver+0x1d0/0x298
[ 0.066408] driver_register+0x68/0x100
[ 0.066413] __platform_driver_register+0x54/0x60
[ 0.066418] hdlcd_platform_driver_init+0x20/0x28
[ 0.066424] do_one_initcall+0x44/0x130
[ 0.066428] kernel_init_freeable+0x13c/0x1d8
[ 0.066433] kernel_init+0x18/0x108
[ 0.066438] ret_from_fork+0x10/0x1c
[ 0.066444] hdlcd 2b000000.hdlcd: Failed to set initial hw configuration.
[ 0.066470] hdlcd 2b000000.hdlcd: master bind failed: -12
[ 0.066477] hdlcd: probe of 2b000000.hdlcd failed with error -12
[
....

So what other options are missing from `gem5_defconfig`? It would be cool to minimize it out to better understand the options.

[[x11]]
=== X11 Buildroot

Once you've seen the `CONFIG_LOGO` penguin as a sanity check, you can try to go for a cooler X11 Buildroot setup.

Build and run:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config-fragment br2/x11
./run --graphic
....

Inside QEMU:

....
startx
....

And then from the GUI you can start exciting graphical programs such as:

....
xcalc
xeyes
....

Outcome:

image:x11.png[image]

We don't build X11 by default because it takes a considerable amount of time (about 20%), and is not expected to be used by most users: you need to pass the `-x` flag to enable it.

More details: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/70931/how-to-install-x11-on-my-own-linux-buildroot-system/306116#306116

Not sure how well that graphics stack represents real systems, but if it does it would be a good way to understand how it works.

To x11 packages have an `xserver` prefix as in:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config-fragment br2/x11 -- xserver_xorg-server-reconfigure
....

the easiest way to find them out is to just list `"$(./getvar build_dir)/x*`.

TODO as of: c2696c978d6ca88e8b8599c92b1beeda80eb62b2 I noticed that `startx` leads to a <>:

....
[ 2.809104] WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 51 at drivers/gpu/drm/ttm/ttm_bo_vm.c:304 ttm_bo_vm_open+0x37/0x40
....

==== X11 Buildroot mouse not moving

TODO 9076c1d9bcc13b6efdb8ef502274f846d8d4e6a1 I'm 100% sure that it was working before, but I didn't run it forever, and it stopped working at some point. Needs bisection, on whatever commit last touched x11 stuff.

* https://askubuntu.com/questions/730891/how-can-i-get-a-mouse-cursor-in-qemu
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19665412/mouse-and-keyboard-not-working-in-qemu-emulator

`-show-cursor` did not help, I just get to see the host cursor, but the guest cursor still does not move.

Doing:

....
watch -n 1 grep i8042 /proc/interrupts
....

shows that interrupts do happen when mouse and keyboard presses are done, so I expect that it is some wrong either with:

* QEMU. Same behaviour if I try the host's QEMU 2.10.1 however.
* X11 configuration. We do have `BR2_PACKAGE_XDRIVER_XF86_INPUT_MOUSE=y`.

`/var/log/Xorg.0.log` contains the following interesting lines:

....
[ 27.549] (II) LoadModule: "mouse"
[ 27.549] (II) Loading /usr/lib/xorg/modules/input/mouse_drv.so
[ 27.590] (EE) : Cannot find which device to use.
[ 27.590] (EE) : cannot open input device
[ 27.590] (EE) PreInit returned 2 for ""
[ 27.590] (II) UnloadModule: "mouse"
....

The file `/dev/inputs/mice` does not exist.

Note that our current link:kernel_confi_fragment sets:

....
# CONFIG_INPUT_MOUSE is not set
# CONFIG_INPUT_MOUSEDEV_PSAUX is not set
....

for gem5, so you might want to remove those lines to debug this.

==== X11 Buildroot ARM

On ARM, `startx` hangs at a message:

....
vgaarb: this pci device is not a vga device
....

and nothing shows on the screen, and:

....
grep EE /var/log/Xorg.0.log
....

says:

....
(EE) Failed to load module "modesetting" (module does not exist, 0)
....

A friend told me this but I haven't tried it yet:

* `xf86-video-modesetting` is likely the missing ingredient, but it does not seem possible to activate it from Buildroot currently without patching things.
* `xf86-video-fbdev` should work as well, but we need to make sure fbdev is enabled, and maybe add some line to the `Xorg.conf`

== Linux kernel

=== Linux kernel configuration

==== Modify kernel config

By default, we use a `.config` that is a mixture of:

* Buildroot's minimal per machine `.config`, which has the minimal options needed to boot
* our <> which enables options we want to play with

Use just your own exact `.config` instead:

....
./build-buildroot -K data/myconfig -l
....

Beware that Buildroot can `sed` override some of the configurations we make no matter what, e.g. it forces `CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INITRD=y` when `BR2_TARGET_ROOTFS_CPIO` is on, so you might want to double check as explained at <>. TODO check if there is a way to prevent that patching and maybe patch Buildroot for it, it is too fuzzy. People should be able to just build with whatever `.config` they want.

Modify a single option:

....
./build-buildroot -C 'CONFIG_FORTIFY_SOURCE=y' -l
....

Use an extra kernel config fragment file:

....
printf '
CONFIG_IKCONFIG=y
CONFIG_IKCONFIG_PROC=y
' > myconfig
./build-buildroot -c 'myconfig' -l
....

`-K`, `-c`, `-C` can all be used at the same time. Options passed via `-C` take precedence over `-c`, which takes precedence over `-K`.

==== Find the kernel config

Ge the build config in guest:

....
zcat /proc/config.gz
....

or with our shortcut:

....
/conf.sh
....

or to conveniently grep for a specific option case insensitively:

....
/conf.sh ikconfig
....

Source: link:rootfs_overlay/conf.sh[].

This is enabled by:

....
CONFIG_IKCONFIG=y
CONFIG_IKCONFIG_PROC=y
....

From host:

....
cat "$(./getvar linux_build_dir)/.config"
....

Just for fun link:https://stackoverflow.com/a/14958263/895245[]:

....
./linux/scripts/extract-ikconfig "$(./getvar vmlinux)"
....

although this can be useful when someone gives you a random image.

[[kernel-configs-about]]
==== About our Linux kernel configs

We have managed to come up with minimalistic kernel configs that work for both QEMU and gem5 (oh, the hours of bisection).

Our configs are all based on Buildroot's configs, which were designed for QEMU, and then on top of those we also add:

* link:kernel_config_fragment/min[]: minimal tweaks required to boot gem5 or for using our slightly different QEMU command line options than Buildroot
* link:kernel_config_fragment/default[]: optional configs that we add by default to our kernel build because they increase visibility, and don't significantly increase build time nor add significant runtime overhead

Changes to those files automatically trigger kernel reconfigures even without using the linux-reconfigure target, since timestamps are used to decide if changes happened or not.

Having the same config working for both QEMU and gem5 means that you can deal with functional matters in QEMU, which runs much faster, and switch to gem5 only for performance issues.

To see Buildroot's base configs, have a look at `buildroot/configs/qemu_x86_64_defconfig`, which our `./build` script uses.

That file contains `BR2_LINUX_KERNEL_CUSTOM_CONFIG_FILE="board/qemu/x86_64/linux-4.11.config"`, which points to the base config file used.

`arm`, on the other hand, uses `buildroot/configs/qemu_arm_vexpress_defconfig`, which contains `BR2_LINUX_KERNEL_DEFCONFIG="vexpress"`, and therefore just does a `make vexpress_defconfig`.

Other configs which we had previously tested at 4e0d9af81fcce2ce4e777cb82a1990d7c2ca7c1e are:

* Jason's magic `x86_64` config: http://web.archive.org/web/20171229121642/http://www.lowepower.com/jason/files/config which is referenced at: link:http://web.archive.org/web/20171229121525/http://www.lowepower.com/jason/setting-up-gem5-full-system.html[]. QEMU boots with that by removing `# CONFIG_VIRTIO_PCI is not set`
* `arm` and `aarch64` configs present in the official ARM gem5 Linux kernel fork: https://gem5.googlesource.com/arm/linux, e.g. for arm v4.9: link:https://gem5.googlesource.com/arm/linux/+/917e007a4150d26a0aa95e4f5353ba72753669c7/arch/arm/configs/gem5_defconfig[]. The patches there are just simple optimizations and instrumentation, but they are not needed to boot.

On one hand, we would like to have our configs as a single git file tracked on this repo, to be able to easily refer people ot them. However, that would lose use the ability to:

* reuse Buildroot's configs
* split our configs into `min` and `default`

=== Kernel version

==== Find the kernel version

We try to use the latest possible kernel major release version.

In QEMU:

....
cat /proc/version
....

or in the source:

....
cd "$(./getvar linux_src_dir)"
git log | grep -E ' Linux [0-9]+\.' | head
....

==== Update the Linux kernel

During update all you kernel modules may break since the kernel API is not stable.

They are usually trivial breaks of things moving around headers or to sub-structs.

The userland, however, should simply not break, as Linus enforces strict backwards compatibility of userland interfaces.

This backwards compatibility is just awesome, it makes getting and running the latest master painless.

This also makes this repo the perfect setup to develop the Linux kernel.

In case something breaks while updating the Linux kernel, you can try to bisect it to understand the root cause: <>.

==== Downgrade the Linux kernel

The kernel is not forward compatible, however, so downgrading the Linux kernel requires downgrading the userland too to the latest Buildroot branch that supports it.

The default Linux kernel version is bumped in Buildroot with commit messages of type:

....
linux: bump default to version 4.9.6
....

So you can try:

....
git log --grep 'linux: bump default to version'
....

Those commits change `BR2_LINUX_KERNEL_LATEST_VERSION` in `/linux/Config.in`.

You should then look up if there is a branch that supports that kernel. Staying on branches is a good idea as they will get backports, in particular ones that fix the build as newer host versions come out.

=== Kernel command line parameters

Bootloaders can pass a string as input to the Linux kernel when it is booting to control its behaviour, much like the `execve` system call does to userland processes.

This allows us to control the behaviour of the kernel without rebuilding anything.

With QEMU, QEMU itself acts as the bootloader, and provides the `-append` option and we expose it through `./run --kernel-cli`, e.g.:

....
./run --kernel-cli 'foo bar'
....

Then inside the host, you can check which options were given with:

....
cat /proc/cmdline
....

They are also printed at the beginning of the boot message:

....
dmesg | grep "Command line"
....

See also:

* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/48601/how-to-display-the-linux-kernel-command-line-parameters-given-for-the-current-bo
* https://askubuntu.com/questions/32654/how-do-i-find-the-boot-parameters-used-by-the-running-kernel

The arguments are documented in the kernel documentation: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.14/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.html

When dealing with real boards, extra command line options are provided on some magic bootloader configuration file, e.g.:

* GRUB configuration files: https://askubuntu.com/questions/19486/how-do-i-add-a-kernel-boot-parameter
* Raspberry pi `/boot/cmdline.txt` on a magic partition: https://raspberrypi.stackexchange.com/questions/14839/how-to-change-the-kernel-commandline-for-archlinuxarm-on-raspberry-pi-effectly

==== Kernel command line parameters escaping

Double quotes can be used to escape spaces as in `opt="a b"`, but double quotes themselves cannot be escaped, e.g. `opt"a\"b"`

This even lead us to use base64 encoding with `--eval`!

==== Kernel command line parameters definition points

There are two methods:

* `__setup` as in:
+
....
__setup("console=", console_setup);
....
* `core_param` as in:
+
....
core_param(panic, panic_timeout, int, 0644);
....

`core_param` suggests how they are different:

....
/**
* core_param - define a historical core kernel parameter.

...

* core_param is just like module_param(), but cannot be modular and
* doesn't add a prefix (such as "printk."). This is for compatibility
* with __setup(), and it makes sense as truly core parameters aren't
* tied to the particular file they're in.
*/
....

==== norandmaps

Disable userland address space randomization. Test it out by running <> twice:

....
./run --eval-busybox '/rand_check.out;/poweroff.out'
./run --eval-busybox '/rand_check.out;/poweroff.out'
....

If we remove it from our link:run[] script by hacking it up, the addresses shown by `rand_check.out` vary across boots.

Equivalent to:

....
echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/randomize_va_space
....

=== printk

`printk` is the most simple and widely used way of getting information from the kernel, so you should familiarize yourself with its basic configuration.

We use `printk` a lot in our kernel modules, and it shows on the terminal by default, along with stdout and what you type.

Hide all `printk` messages:

....
dmesg -n 1
....

or equivalently:

....
echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/printk
....

See also: https://superuser.com/questions/351387/how-to-stop-kernel-messages-from-flooding-my-console

Do it with a <> to affect the boot itself:

....
./run --kernel-cli 'loglevel=5'
....

and now only boot warning messages or worse show, which is useful to identify problems.

Our default `printk` format is:

....
[TIMESTAMP] MESSAGE
....

e.g.:

....
<6>[ 2.979121] Freeing unused kernel memory: 2024K
....

where:

* `LEVEL`: higher means less serious
* `TIMESTAMP`: seconds since boot

This format is selected by the following boot options:

* `console_msg_format=syslog`: add the `` part. Added in v4.16.
* `printk.time=y`: add the `[TIMESTAMP]` part

The debug highest level is a bit more magic, see: <> for more info.

==== ignore_loglevel

....
./run --kernel-cli 'ignore_loglevel'
....

enables all log levels, and is basically the same as:

....
./run --kernel-cli 'loglevel=8'
....

except that you don't need to know what is the maximum level.

==== pr_debug

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28936199/why-is-pr-debug-of-the-linux-kernel-not-giving-any-output/49835405#49835405

Debug messages are not printable by default without recompiling.

But the awesome `CONFIG_DYNAMIC_DEBUG=y` option which we enable by default allows us to do:

....
echo 8 > /proc/sys/kernel/printk
echo 'file kernel/module.c +p' > /sys/kernel/debug/dynamic_debug/control
/myinsmod.out /hello.ko
....

and we have a shortcut at:

....
/pr_debug.sh
....

Source: link:rootfs_overlay/pr_debug.sh[].

Syntax: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.11/admin-guide/dynamic-debug-howto.html

Wildcards are also accepted, e.g. enable all messages from all files:

....
echo 'file * +p' > /sys/kernel/debug/dynamic_debug/control
....

TODO: why is this not working:

....
echo 'func sys_init_module +p' > /sys/kernel/debug/dynamic_debug/control
....

Enable messages in specific modules:

....
echo 8 > /proc/sys/kernel/printk
echo 'module myprintk +p' > /sys/kernel/debug/dynamic_debug/control
insmod /myprintk.ko
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/myprintk.c[]

This outputs the `pr_debug` message:

....
printk debug
....

but TODO: it also shows debug messages even without enabling them explicitly:

....
echo 8 > /proc/sys/kernel/printk
insmod /myprintk.ko
....

and it shows as enabled:

....
# grep myprintk /sys/kernel/debug/dynamic_debug/control
/linux-kernel-module-cheat/out/x86_64/buildroot/build/kernel_modules-1.0/./myprintk.c:12 [myprintk]myinit =p "pr_debug\012"
....

Enable `pr_debug` for boot messages as well, before we can reach userland and write to `/proc`:

....
./run --kernel-cli 'dyndbg="file * +p" loglevel=8'
....

Get ready for the noisiest boot ever, I think it overflows the `printk` buffer and funny things happen.

===== pr_debug != printk(KERN_DEBUG

When `CONFIG_DYNAMIC_DEBUG` is set, `printk(KERN_DEBUG` is not the exact same as `pr_debug(` since `printk(KERN_DEBUG` messages are visible with:

....
./run --kernel-cli 'initcall_debug logleve=8'
....

which outputs lines of type:

....
<7>[ 1.756680] calling clk_disable_unused+0x0/0x130 @ 1
<7>[ 1.757003] initcall clk_disable_unused+0x0/0x130 returned 0 after 111 usecs
....

which are `printk(KERN_DEBUG` inside `init/main.c` in v4.16.

Mentioned at: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37272109/how-to-get-details-of-all-modules-drivers-got-initialized-probed-during-kernel-b

This likely comes from the ifdef split at `init/main.c`:

....
/* If you are writing a driver, please use dev_dbg instead */
#if defined(CONFIG_DYNAMIC_DEBUG)
#include

/* dynamic_pr_debug() uses pr_fmt() internally so we don't need it here */
#define pr_debug(fmt, ...) \
dynamic_pr_debug(fmt, ##__VA_ARGS__)
#elif defined(DEBUG)
#define pr_debug(fmt, ...) \
printk(KERN_DEBUG pr_fmt(fmt), ##__VA_ARGS__)
#else
#define pr_debug(fmt, ...) \
no_printk(KERN_DEBUG pr_fmt(fmt), ##__VA_ARGS__)
#endif
....

=== Linux kernel entry point

`start_kernel` is a good definition of it: ttps://stackoverflow.com/questions/18266063/does-kernel-have-main-function/33422401#33422401

=== Kernel module APIs

==== Kernel module parameters

The Linux kernel allows passing module parameters at insertion time <>:

....
/params.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/params.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/params.sh[]

As shown in the example, module parameters can also be read and modified at runtime from <>.

We can obtain the help text of the parameters with:

....
modinfo /params.ko
....

The output contains:

....
parm: j:my second favorite int
parm: i:my favorite int
....

===== modprobe.conf

<> insertion can also set default parameters via the link:rootfs_overlay/etc/modprobe.conf[`/etc/modprobe.conf`] file:

....
modprobe params
cat /sys/kernel/debug/lkmc_params
....

Output:

....
12 34
....

This is specially important when loading modules with <> or else we would have no opportunity of passing those.

`modprobe.conf` doesn't actually insmod anything for us: https://superuser.com/questions/397842/automatically-load-kernel-module-at-boot-angstrom/1267464#1267464

==== Kernel module dependencies

One module can depend on symbols of another module that are exported with `EXPORT_SYMBOL`:

....
/dep.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/dep.c[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/dep2.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/dep.sh[]

The kernel deduces dependencies based on the `EXPORT_SYMBOL` that each module uses.

Symbols exported by `EXPORT_SYMBOL` can be seen with:

....
insmod /dep.ko
grep lkmc_dep /proc/kallsyms
....

sample output:

....
ffffffffc0001030 r __ksymtab_lkmc_dep [dep]
ffffffffc000104d r __kstrtab_lkmc_dep [dep]
ffffffffc0002300 B lkmc_dep [dep]
....

This requires `CONFIG_KALLSYMS_ALL=y`.

Dependency information is stored by the kernel module build system in the `.ko` files' <>, e.g.:

....
modinfo /dep2.ko
....

contains:

....
depends: dep
....

We can double check with:

....
strings 3 /dep2.ko | grep -E 'depends'
....

The output contains:

....
depends=dep
....

Module dependencies are also stored at:

....
cd /lib/module/*
grep dep modules.dep
....

Output:

....
extra/dep2.ko: extra/dep.ko
extra/dep.ko:
....

TODO: what for, and at which point point does Buildroot / BusyBox generate that file?

===== Kernel module dependencies with modprobe

Unlike `insmod`, `modprobe` deals with kernel module dependencies for us:

....
modprobe dep2
....

Removal also removes required modules that have zero usage count:

....
modprobe -r dep2
....

Bibliography:

* https://askubuntu.com/questions/20070/whats-the-difference-between-insmod-and-modprobe
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22891705/whats-the-difference-between-insmod-and-modprobe

`modprobe` seems to use information contained in the kernel module itself for the dependencies since `modprobe dep2` still works even if we modify `modules.dep` to remove the dependency.

==== modinfo

Module metadata is stored on module files at compile time. Some of the fields can be retrieved through the `THIS_MODULE` `struct module`:

....
insmod /module_info.ko
....

Dmesg output:

....
name = module_info
version = 1.0
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/module_info.c[]

Some of those are also present on sysfs:

....
cat /sys/module/module_info/version
....

Output:

....
1.0
....

And we can also observe them with the `modinfo` command line utility:

....
modinfo /module_info.ko
....

sample output:

....
filename: /module_info.ko
license: GPL
version: 1.0
srcversion: AF3DE8A8CFCDEB6B00E35B6
depends:
vermagic: 4.17.0 SMP mod_unload modversions
....

Module information is stored in a special `.modinfo` section of the ELF file:

....
./runtc readelf -- -SW "$(./getvar target_dir)/module_info.ko"
....

contains:

....
[ 5] .modinfo PROGBITS 0000000000000000 0000d8 000096 00 A 0 0 8
....

and:

....
./runtc readelf -- -x .modinfo "$(./getvar build_dir)/module_info.ko"
....

gives:

....
0x00000000 6c696365 6e73653d 47504c00 76657273 license=GPL.vers
0x00000010 696f6e3d 312e3000 61736466 3d717765 ion=1.0.asdf=qwe
0x00000020 72000000 00000000 73726376 65727369 r.......srcversi
0x00000030 6f6e3d41 46334445 38413843 46434445 on=AF3DE8A8CFCDE
0x00000040 42364230 30453335 42360000 00000000 B6B00E35B6......
0x00000050 64657065 6e64733d 006e616d 653d6d6f depends=.name=mo
0x00000060 64756c65 5f696e66 6f007665 726d6167 dule_info.vermag
0x00000070 69633d34 2e31372e 3020534d 50206d6f ic=4.17.0 SMP mo
0x00000080 645f756e 6c6f6164 206d6f64 76657273 d_unload modvers
0x00000090 696f6e73 2000 ions .
....

I think a dedicated section is used to allow the Linux kernel and command line tools to easily parse that information from the ELF file as we've done with `readelf`.

Bibliography:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19467150/significance-of-this-module-in-linux-driver/49812248#49812248
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4839024/how-to-find-the-version-of-a-compiled-kernel-module/42556565#42556565
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/238167/how-to-understand-the-modinfo-output

==== vermagic

Vermagic is a magic string present in the kernel and on <> of kernel modules. It is used to verify that the kernel module was compiled against a compatible kernel version and relevant configuration:

....
insmod /vermagic.ko
....

Possible dmesg output:

....
VERMAGIC_STRING = 4.17.0 SMP mod_unload modversions
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/vermagic.c[]

If we artificially create a mismatch with `MODULE_INFO(vermagic`, the insmod fails with:

....
insmod: can't insert '/vermagic_fail.ko': invalid module format
....

and `dmesg` says the expected and found vermagic found:

....
vermagic_fail: version magic 'asdfqwer' should be '4.17.0 SMP mod_unload modversions '
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/vermagic_fail.c[]

The kernel's vermagic is defined based on compile time configurations at link:https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.17/include/linux/vermagic.h#L35[include/linux/vermagic.h]:

....
#define VERMAGIC_STRING \
UTS_RELEASE " " \
MODULE_VERMAGIC_SMP MODULE_VERMAGIC_PREEMPT \
MODULE_VERMAGIC_MODULE_UNLOAD MODULE_VERMAGIC_MODVERSIONS \
MODULE_ARCH_VERMAGIC \
MODULE_RANDSTRUCT_PLUGIN
....

The `SMP` part of the string for example is defined on the same file based on the value of `CONFIG_SMP`:

....
#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
#define MODULE_VERMAGIC_SMP "SMP "
#else
#define MODULE_VERMAGIC_SMP ""
....

TODO how to get the vermagic from running kernel from userland? https://lists.kernelnewbies.org/pipermail/kernelnewbies/2012-October/006306.html

<> has a flag to skip the vermagic check:

....
--force-modversion
....

This option just strips `modversion` information from the module before loading, so it is not a kernel feature.

==== module_init

`init_module` and `cleantup_module` are an older alternative to the `module_init` and `module_exit` macros:

....
insmod /init_module.ko
rmmod init_module
....

Dmesg output:

....
init_module
cleanup_module
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/module_init.c[]

TODO why were `module_init` and `module_exit` created? https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3218320/what-is-the-difference-between-module-init-and-init-module-in-a-linux-kernel-mod

=== Kernel panic and oops

To test out kernel panics and oops in controlled circumstances, try out the modules:

....
insmod /panic.ko
insmod /oops.ko
....

Source:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/panic.c[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/oops.c[]

A panic can also be generated with:

....
echo c > /proc/sysrq-trigger
....

Panic vs oops: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/91854/whats-the-difference-between-a-kernel-oops-and-a-kernel-panic

How to generate them:

* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/66197/how-to-cause-kernel-panic-with-a-single-command
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/23484147/generate-kernel-oops-or-crash-in-the-code

When a panic happens, <> does not work as it normally does, and it is hard to get the logs if on are on <>:

* https://superuser.com/questions/848412/scrolling-up-the-failed-screen-with-kernel-panic
* https://superuser.com/questions/269228/write-qemu-booting-virtual-machine-output-to-a-file
* http://www.reactos.org/wiki/QEMU#Redirect_to_a_file

==== Kernel panic

On panic, the kernel dies, and so does our terminal.

The panic trace looks like:

....
panic: loading out-of-tree module taints kernel.
panic myinit
Kernel panic - not syncing: hello panic
CPU: 0 PID: 53 Comm: insmod Tainted: G O 4.16.0 #6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (i440FX + PIIX, 1996), BIOS rel-1.11.0-0-g63451fca13-prebuilt.qemu-project.org 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0x7d/0xba
? 0xffffffffc0000000
panic+0xda/0x213
? printk+0x43/0x4b
? 0xffffffffc0000000
myinit+0x1d/0x20 [panic]
do_one_initcall+0x3e/0x170
do_init_module+0x5b/0x210
load_module+0x2035/0x29d0
? kernel_read_file+0x7d/0x140
? SyS_finit_module+0xa8/0xb0
SyS_finit_module+0xa8/0xb0
do_syscall_64+0x6f/0x310
? trace_hardirqs_off_thunk+0x1a/0x32
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x42/0xb7
RIP: 0033:0x7ffff7b36206
RSP: 002b:00007fffffffeb78 EFLAGS: 00000206 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000139
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 000000000000005c RCX: 00007ffff7b36206
RDX: 0000000000000000 RSI: 000000000069e010 RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 000000000069e010 R08: 00007ffff7ddd320 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 00007ffff7ddd320 R11: 0000000000000206 R12: 0000000000000003
R13: 00007fffffffef4a R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
Kernel Offset: disabled
---[ end Kernel panic - not syncing: hello panic
....

Notice how our panic message `hello panic` is visible at:

....
Kernel panic - not syncing: hello panic
....

===== Kernel module stack trace to source line

The log shows which module each symbol belongs to if any, e.g.:

....
myinit+0x1d/0x20 [panic]
....

says that the function `myinit` is in the module `panic`.

To find the line that panicked, do:

....
./rungdb
....

and then:

....
info line *(myinit+0x1d)
....

which gives us the correct line:

....
Line 7 of "/linux-kernel-module-cheat/out/x86_64/buildroot/build/kernel_modules-1.0/./panic.c" starts at address 0xbf00001c and ends at 0xbf00002c .
....

as explained at: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8545931/using-gdb-to-convert-addresses-to-lines/27576029#27576029

The exact same thing can be done post mortem with:

....
./runtc gdb -- \
-batch \
-ex 'info line *(myinit+0x1d)' \
"$(./getvar build_dir)/kernel_modules-1.0/panic.ko" \
;
....

Related:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6151538/addr2line-on-kernel-module
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/13468286/how-to-read-understand-analyze-and-debug-a-linux-kernel-panic

===== BUG_ON

Basically just calls `panic("BUG!")` for most archs.

===== Exit emulator on panic

For testing purposes, it is very useful to quit the emulator automatically with exit status non zero in case of kernel panic, instead of just hanging forever.

====== Exit QEMU on panic

Enabled by default with:

* `panic=-1` command line option which reboots the kernel immediately on panic, see: <>
* QEMU `-no-reboot`, which makes QEMU exit when the guest tries to reboot

Also asked at https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/443017/can-i-make-qemu-exit-with-failure-on-kernel-panic which also mentions the x86_64 `-device pvpanic`, but I don't see much advantage to it.

TODO neither method exits with exit status different from 0, so for now we are just grepping the logs for panic messages, which sucks.

One possibility that gets close would be to use <> to break at the `panic` function, and then send a <> `quit` command if that happens, but I don't see a way to exit with non-zero status to indicate error.

====== Exit gem5 on panic

gem5 actually detects panics and outputs:

....
warn: Kernel panic in simulated kernel
....

before hanging forever.

We can make gem5 ff52563a214c71fcd1e21e9f00ad839612032e3b `fs.py` quit instead of hang with `system.panic_on_panic`:

....
patch -d "$(./getvar gem5_src_dir)" -p1 < patches/manual/gem5-panic.patch
./run --arch arm --eval-busybox 'echo c > /proc/sysrq-trigger' --gem5
....

Source: link:patches/manual/gem5-panic.patch[].

It does not seem to be exposed to `fs.py`.

TODO: fs.py x86 does not have it:

....
AttributeError: Class LinuxX86System has no parameter panic_on_panic
....

However TODO it still exits with status 0... so we are just parsing the logs for now, as for QEMU. This seems to happen because the abort that is used to quit at link:https://github.com/gem5/gem5/blob/ff52563a214c71fcd1e21e9f00ad839612032e3b/src/base/logging.hh#L124[src/base/logging.hh]:

....
void exit_helper() M5_ATTR_NORETURN { exit(); ::abort(); }
....

gets handled by an abort handler at link:https://github.com/gem5/gem5/blob/ff52563a214c71fcd1e21e9f00ad839612032e3b/src/sim/init_signals.cc#L147[src/sim/init_signals.cc] which prints the backtrace and still exits 0 despite `raiseFatalSignal`?

....
/// Abort signal handler.
void
abortHandler(int sigtype)
{
const EventQueue *const eq(curEventQueue());
if (eq) {
ccprintf(cerr, "Program aborted at tick %llu\n", eq->getCurTick());
} else {
STATIC_ERR("Program aborted\n\n");
}

print_backtrace();
raiseFatalSignal(sigtype);
}
....

Raised on the mailing list at: https://www.mail-archive.com/gem5-users@gem5.org/msg15863.html

Detection seems to be symbol based: it parses the kernel image, and triggers when the PC reaches the address of a symbol: https://github.com/gem5/gem5/blob/1da285dfcc31b904afc27e440544d006aae25b38/src/arch/arm/linux/system.cc#L73

....
kernelPanicEvent = addKernelFuncEventOrPanic(
"panic", "Kernel panic in simulated kernel", dmesg_output);
....

Here we see that the symbol `"panic"` for the `panic()` function is the one being tracked.

===== Reboot on panic

Make the kernel reboot after n seconds after panic:

....
echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/panic
....

Can also be controlled with the `panic=` kernel boot parameter.

`0` to disable, `-1` to reboot immediately.

Bibliography:

* https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.17/Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt#L2931
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/29567/how-to-configure-the-linux-kernel-to-reboot-on-panic/29569#29569

===== Panic trace show addresses instead of symbols

If `CONFIG_KALLSYMS=n`, then addresses are shown on traces instead of symbol plus offset.

In v4.16 it does not seem possible to configure that at runtime. GDB step debugging with:

....
./run --eval-busybox 'insmod /dump_stack.ko' --debug-guest --tmux --tmux-args dump_stack
....

shows that traces are printed at `arch/x86/kernel/dumpstack.c`:

....
static void printk_stack_address(unsigned long address, int reliable,
char *log_lvl)
{
touch_nmi_watchdog();
printk("%s %s%pB\n", log_lvl, reliable ? "" : "? ", (void *)address);
}
....

and `%pB` is documented at `Documentation/core-api/printk-formats.rst`:

....
If KALLSYMS are disabled then the symbol address is printed instead.
....

I wasn't able do disable `CONFIG_KALLSYMS` to test this this out however, it is being selected by some other option? But I then used `make menuconfig` to see which options select it, and they were all off...

[[oops]]
==== Kernel oops

On oops, the shell still lives after.

However we:

* leave the normal control flow, and `oops after` never gets printed: an interrupt is serviced
* cannot `rmmod oops` afterwards

It is possible to make `oops` lead to panics always with:

....
echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/panic_on_oops
insmod /oops.ko
....

An oops stack trace looks like:

....
BUG: unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at 0000000000000000
IP: myinit+0x18/0x30 [oops]
PGD dccf067 P4D dccf067 PUD dcc1067 PMD 0
Oops: 0002 [#1] SMP NOPTI
Modules linked in: oops(O+)
CPU: 0 PID: 53 Comm: insmod Tainted: G O 4.16.0 #6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (i440FX + PIIX, 1996), BIOS rel-1.11.0-0-g63451fca13-prebuilt.qemu-project.org 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:myinit+0x18/0x30 [oops]
RSP: 0018:ffffc900000d3cb0 EFLAGS: 00000282
RAX: 000000000000000b RBX: ffffffffc0000000 RCX: ffffffff81e3e3a8
RDX: 0000000000000001 RSI: 0000000000000086 RDI: ffffffffc0001033
RBP: ffffc900000d3e30 R08: 69796d2073706f6f R09: 000000000000013b
R10: ffffea0000373280 R11: ffffffff822d8b2d R12: 0000000000000000
R13: ffffffffc0002050 R14: ffffffffc0002000 R15: ffff88000dc934c8
FS: 00007ffff7ff66a0(0000) GS:ffff88000fc00000(0000) knlGS:0000000000000000
CS: 0010 DS: 0000 ES: 0000 CR0: 0000000080050033
CR2: 0000000000000000 CR3: 000000000dcd2000 CR4: 00000000000006f0
Call Trace:
do_one_initcall+0x3e/0x170
do_init_module+0x5b/0x210
load_module+0x2035/0x29d0
? SyS_finit_module+0xa8/0xb0
SyS_finit_module+0xa8/0xb0
do_syscall_64+0x6f/0x310
? trace_hardirqs_off_thunk+0x1a/0x32
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x42/0xb7
RIP: 0033:0x7ffff7b36206
RSP: 002b:00007fffffffeb78 EFLAGS: 00000206 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000139
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 000000000000005c RCX: 00007ffff7b36206
RDX: 0000000000000000 RSI: 000000000069e010 RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 000000000069e010 R08: 00007ffff7ddd320 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 00007ffff7ddd320 R11: 0000000000000206 R12: 0000000000000003
R13: 00007fffffffef4b R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
Code: 04 25 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 e8 b2 33 09 c1 31 c0 c3 0f 1f 44
RIP: myinit+0x18/0x30 [oops] RSP: ffffc900000d3cb0
CR2: 0000000000000000
---[ end trace 3cdb4e9d9842b503 ]---
....

To find the line that oopsed, look at the `RIP` register:

....
RIP: 0010:myinit+0x18/0x30 [oops]
....

and then on GDB:

....
./rungdb
....

run

....
info line *(myinit+0x18)
....

which gives us the correct line:

....
Line 7 of "/linux-kernel-module-cheat/out/arm/buildroot/build/kernel_modules-1.0/./panic.c" starts at address 0xbf00001c and ends at 0xbf00002c .
....

This-did not work on `arm` due to <> so we need to either:

* <>
* <> post-mortem method

==== dump_stack

The `dump_stack` function produces a stack trace much like panic and oops, but causes no problems and we return to the normal control flow, and can cleanly remove the module afterwards:

....
insmod /dump_stack.ko
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/dump_stack.c[]

==== WARN_ON

The `WARN_ON` macro basically just calls <>.

One extra side effect is that we can make it also panic with:

....
echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/panic_on_warn
insmod /warn_on.ko
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/warn_on.c[]

Can also be activated with the `panic_on_warn` boot parameter.

=== Pseudo filesystems

Pseudo filesystems are filesystems that don't represent actual files in a hard disk, but rather allow us to do special operations on filesystem-related system calls.

What each pseudo-file does for each related system call does is defined by its <>.

Bibliography:

* https://superuser.com/questions/1198292/what-is-a-pseudo-file-system-in-linux
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_file_system

==== debugfs

Debugfs is the simplest pseudo filesystem to play around with:

....
/debugfs.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/debugfs.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/debugfs.sh[]

Debugfs is made specifically to help test kernel stuff. Just mount, set <>, and we are done.

For this reason, it is the filesystem that we use whenever possible in our tests.

`debugfs.sh` explicitly mounts a debugfs at a custom location, but the most common mount point is `/sys/kernel/debug`.

This mount not done automatically by the kernel however: we, like most distros, do it from userland with our link:rootfs_overlay/etc/fstab[fstab].

Debugfs support requires the kernel to be compiled with `CONFIG_DEBUG_FS=y`.

Only the more basic file operations can be implemented in debugfs, e.g. `mmap` never gets called:

* https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/9252557/
* https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.9/fs/debugfs/file.c#L212

Bibliography: https://github.com/chadversary/debugfs-tutorial

==== procfs

Procfs is just another fops entry point:

....
/procfs.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Procfs is a little less convenient than <>, but is more used in serious applications.

Procfs can run all system calls, including ones that debugfs can't, e.g. <>.

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/procfs.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/procfs.sh[]

Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8516021/proc-create-example-for-kernel-module/18924359#18924359

==== sysfs

Sysfs is more restricted than <>, as it does not take an arbitrary `file_operations`:

....
/sysfs.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/sysfs.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/sysfs.sh[]

Vs procfs:

* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/4884/what-is-the-difference-between-procfs-and-sysfs
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37237835/how-to-attach-file-operations-to-sysfs-attribute-in-platform-driver

You basically can only do `open`, `close`, `read`, `write`, and `lseek` on sysfs files.

It is similar to a <> file operation, except that write is also implemented.

TODO: what are those `kobject` structs? Make a more complex example that shows what they can do.

Bibliography:

* https://github.com/t3rm1n4l/kern-dev-tutorial/blob/1f036ef40fc4378f5c8d2842e55bcea7c6f8894a/05-sysfs/sysfs.c
* https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/kobject.txt
* https://www.quora.com/What-are-kernel-objects-Kobj
* http://www.makelinux.net/ldd3/chp-14-sect-1
* https://www.win.tue.nl/~aeb/linux/lk/lk-13.html

==== Character devices

Character devices can have arbitrary <> associated to them:

....
/character_device.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:rootfs_overlay/character_device.sh[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/mknoddev.sh[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/character_device.c[]

Unlike <> entires, character device files are created with userland `mknod` or `mknodat` syscalls:

....
mknod c
....

Intuitively, for physical devices like keyboards, the major number maps to which driver, and the minor number maps to which device it is.

A single driver can drive multiple compatible devices.

The major and minor numbers can be observed with:

....
ls -l /dev/urandom
....

Output:

....
crw-rw-rw- 1 root root 1, 9 Jun 29 05:45 /dev/urandom
....

which means:

* `c` (first letter): this is a character device. Would be `b` for a block device.
* `1, 9`: the major number is `1`, and the minor `9`

To avoid device number conflicts when registering the driver we:

* ask the kernel to allocate a free major number for us with: `register_chrdev(0`
* find ouf which number was assigned by grepping `/proc/devices` for the kernel module name

Bibliography: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/37829/understanding-character-device-or-character-special-files/371758#371758

===== Automatically create character device file on insmod

And also destroy it on `rmmod`:

....
/character_device_create.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/character_device_create.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/character_device_create.sh[]

Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5970595/how-to-create-a-device-node-from-the-init-module-code-of-a-linux-kernel-module/45531867#45531867

=== Pseudo files

==== File operations

File operations are the main method of userland driver communication. `struct file_operations` determines what the kernel will do on filesystem system calls of <>.

This example illustrates the most basic system calls: `open`, `read`, `write`, `close` and `lseek`:

....
/fops.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/fops.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/fops.sh[]

Then give this a try:

....
sh -x /fops.sh
....

We have put printks on each fop, so this allows you to see which system calls are being made for each command.

No, there no official documentation: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15213932/what-are-the-struct-file-operations-arguments

==== seq_file

Writing trivial read <> is repetitive and error prone. The `seq_file` API makes the process much easier for those trivial cases:

....
/seq_file.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/seq_file.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/seq_file.sh[]

In this example we create a debugfs file that behaves just like a file that contains:

....
0
1
2
....

However, we only store a single integer in memory and calculate the file on the fly in an iterator fashion.

`seq_file` does not provide `write`: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30710517/how-to-implement-a-writable-proc-file-by-using-seq-file-in-a-driver-module

Bibliography:

* link:https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.17/Documentation/filesystems/seq_file.txt[Documentation/filesystems/seq_file.txt]
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/25399112/how-to-use-a-seq-file-in-linux-modules

===== seq_file single_open

If you have the entire read output upfront, `single_open` is an even more convenient version of <>:

....
/seq_file.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/seq_file_single_open.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/seq_file_single_open.sh[]

This example produces a debugfs file that behaves like a file that contains:

....
ab
cd
....

==== poll

The poll system call allows an user process to do a non-busy wait on a kernel event:

....
/poll.sh
....

Outcome: `jiffies` gets printed to stdout every second from userland.

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/poll.c[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/poll.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/poll.sh[]

Typically, we are waiting for some hardware to make some piece of data available available to the kernel.

The hardware notifies the kernel that the data is ready with an interrupt.

To simplify this example, we just fake the hardware interrupts with a <> that sleeps for a second in an infinite loop.

Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30035776/how-to-add-poll-function-to-the-kernel-module-code/44645336#44645336

==== ioctl

The `ioctl` system call is the best way to pass an arbitrary number of parameters to the kernel in a single go:

....
/ioctl.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/ioctl.c[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/ioctl.h[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/ioctl.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/ioctl.sh[]

`ioctl` is one of the most important methods of communication with real device drivers, which often take several fields as input.

`ioctl` takes as input:

* an integer `request` : it usually identifies what type of operation we want to do on this call
* an untyped pointer to memory: can be anything, but is typically a pointer to a `struct`
+
The type of the `struct` often depends on the `request` input
+
This `struct` is defined on a uapi-style C header that is used both to compile the kernel module and the userland executable.
+
The fields of this `struct` can be thought of as arbitrary input parameters.

And the output is:

* an integer return value. `man ioctl` documents:
+
____
Usually, on success zero is returned. A few `ioctl()` requests use the return value as an output parameter and return a nonnegative value on success. On error, -1 is returned, and errno is set appropriately.
____
* the input pointer data may be overwritten to contain arbitrary output

Bibliography:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2264384/how-do-i-use-ioctl-to-manipulate-my-kernel-module/44613896#44613896
* https://askubuntu.com/questions/54239/problem-with-ioctl-in-a-simple-kernel-module/926675#926675

==== mmap

The `mmap` system call allows us to share memory between user and kernel space without copying:

....
/mmap.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/mmap.c[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/mmap.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/mmap.sh[]

In this example, we make a tiny 4 byte kernel buffer available to user-space, and we then modify it on userspace, and check that the kernel can see the modification.

`mmap`, like most more complex <>, does not work with <> as of 4.9, so we use a <> file for it.

Example adapted from: https://coherentmusings.wordpress.com/2014/06/10/implementing-mmap-for-transferring-data-from-user-space-to-kernel-space/

Bibliography:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10760479/mmap-kernel-buffer-to-user-space/10770582#10770582
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1623008/allocating-memory-for-user-space-from-kernel-thread
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6967933/mmap-mapping-in-user-space-a-kernel-buffer-allocated-with-kmalloc
* https://github.com/jeremytrimble/ezdma
* https://github.com/simonjhall/dma
* https://github.com/ikwzm/udmabuf

==== Anonymous inode

Anonymous inodes allow getting multiple file descriptors from a single filesystem entry, which reduces namespace pollution compared to creating multiple device files:

....
/anonymous_inode.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/anonymous_inode.c[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/anonymous_inode.h[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/anonymous_inode.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/anonymous_inode.sh[]

This example gets an anonymous inode via <> from a debugfs entry by using `anon_inode_getfd`.

Reads to that inode return the sequence: `1`, `10`, `100`, ... `10000000`, `1`, `100`, ...

Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4508998/what-is-an-anonymous-inode-in-linux/44388030#44388030

==== netlink sockets

Netlink sockets offer a socket API for kernel / userland communication:

....
/netlink.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/netlink.c[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/netlink.h[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/netlink.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/netlink.sh[]

Launch multiple user requests in parallel to stress our socket:

....
insmod /netlink.ko sleep=1
for i in `seq 16`; do /netlink.out & done
....

TODO: what is the advantage over `read`, `write` and `poll`? https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16727212/how-netlink-socket-in-linux-kernel-is-different-from-normal-polling-done-by-appl

Bibliography:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3299386/how-to-use-netlink-socket-to-communicate-with-a-kernel-module
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netlink

=== kthread

Kernel threads are managed exactly like userland threads; they also have a backing `task_struct`, and are scheduled with the same mechanism:

....
insmod /kthread.ko
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/kthread.c[]

Outcome: dmesg counts from `0` to `9` once every second infinitely many times:

....
0
1
2
...
8
9
0
1
2
...
....

The count stops when we `rmmod`:

....
rmmod kthread
....

The sleep is done with `usleep_range`, see: <>.

Bibliography:

* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10177641/proper-way-of-handling-threads-in-kernel
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4084708/how-to-wait-for-a-linux-kernel-thread-kthreadto-exit

==== kthreads

Let's launch two threads and see if they actually run in parallel:

....
insmod /kthreads.ko
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/kthreads.c[]

Outcome: two threads count to dmesg from `0` to `9` in parallel.

Each line has output of form:

....

....

Possible very likely outcome:

....

1 0
2 0
1 1
2 1
1 2
2 2
1 3
2 3
....

The threads almost always interleaved nicely, thus confirming that they are actually running in parallel.

==== sleep

Count to dmesg every one second from `0` up to `n - 1`:

....
insmod /sleep.ko n=5
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/sleep.c[]

The sleep is done with a call to link:https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.17/kernel/time/timer.c#L1984[`usleep_range`] directly inside `module_init` for simplicity.

Bibliography:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15994603/how-to-sleep-in-the-linux-kernel/44153288#44153288
* https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.17/Documentation/timers/timers-howto.txt

==== Workqueues

A more convenient front-end for <>:

....
insmod /workqueue_cheat.ko
....

Outcome: count from `0` to `9` infinitely many times

Stop counting:

....
rmmod workqueue_cheat
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/workqueue_cheat.c[]

The workqueue thread is killed after the worker function returns.

We can't call the module just `workqueue.c` because there is already a built-in with that name: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/364956/how-can-insmod-fail-with-kernel-module-is-already-loaded-even-is-lsmod-does-not

Bibliography: https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.17/Documentation/core-api/workqueue.rst

===== Workqueue from workqueue

Count from `0` to `9` every second infinitely many times by scheduling a new work item from a work item:

....
insmod /work_from_work.ko
....

Stop:

....
rmmod work_from_work
....

The sleep is done indirectly through: link:https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.17/include/linux/workqueue.h#L522[`queue_delayed_work`], which waits the specified time before scheduling the work.

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/work_from_work.c[]

==== schedule

Let's block the entire kernel! Yay:

.....
./run --eval-busybox 'dmesg -n 1;insmod /schedule.ko schedule=0'
.....

Outcome: the system hangs, the only way out is to kill the VM.

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/schedule.c[]

kthreads only allow interrupting if you call `schedule()`, and the `schedule=0` <> turns it off.

Sleep functions like `usleep_range` also end up calling schedule.

If we allow `schedule()` to be called, then the system becomes responsive:

.....
./run --eval-busybox 'dmesg -n 1;insmod /schedule.ko schedule=1'
.....


and we can observe the counting with:

....
dmesg -w
....

The system also responds if we <>:

....
./run --cpus 2 --eval-busybox 'dmesg -n 1;insmod /schedule.ko schedule=0'
....

==== Wait queues

Wait queues are a way to make a thread sleep until an event happens on the queue:

....
insmod /wait_queue.c
....

Dmesg output:

....
0 0
1 0
2 0
# Wait one second.
0 1
1 1
2 1
# Wait one second.
0 2
1 2
2 2
...
....

Stop the count:

....
rmmod wait_queue
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/wait_queue.c[]

This example launches three threads:

* one thread generates events every with link:https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.17/include/linux/wait.h#L195[`wake_up`]
* the other two threads wait for that with link:https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.17/include/linux/wait.h#L286[`wait_event`], and print a dmesg when it happens.
+
The `wait_event` macro works a bit like:
+
....
while (!cond)
sleep_until_event
....

=== Timers

Count from `0` to `9` infinitely many times in 1 second intervals using timers:

....
insmod /timer.ko
....

Stop counting:

....
rmmod timer
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/timer.c[]

Timers are callbacks that run when an interrupt happens, from the interrupt context itself.

Therefore they produce more accurate timing than thread scheduling, which is more complex, but you can't do too much work inside of them.

Bibliography:

* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10812858/timers-in-linux-device-drivers
* https://gist.github.com/yagihiro/310149

=== IRQ

==== irq.ko

Brute force monitor every shared interrupt that will accept us:

....
./run --eval-busybox 'insmod /irq.ko' --graphic
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/irq.c[].

Now try the following:

* press a keyboard key and then release it after a few seconds
* press a mouse key, and release it after a few seconds
* move the mouse around

Outcome: dmesg shows which IRQ was fired for each action through messages of type:

....
handler irq = 1 dev = 250
....

`dev` is the character device for the module and never changes, as can be confirmed by:

....
grep lkmc_irq /proc/devices
....

The IRQs that we observe are:

* `1` for keyboard press and release.
+
If you hold the key down for a while, it starts firing at a constant rate. So this happens at the hardware level!
* `12` mouse actions

This only works if for IRQs for which the other handlers are registered as `IRQF_SHARED`.

We can see which ones are those, either via dmesg messages of type:

....
genirq: Flags mismatch irq 0. 00000080 (myirqhandler0) vs. 00015a00 (timer)
request_irq irq = 0 ret = -16
request_irq irq = 1 ret = 0
....

which indicate that `0` is not, but `1` is, or with:

....
cat /proc/interrupts
....

which shows:

....
0: 31 IO-APIC 2-edge timer
1: 9 IO-APIC 1-edge i8042, myirqhandler0
....

so only `1` has `myirqhandler0` attached but not `0`.

The <> also has some interrupt statistics for x86_64:

....
./qemumonitor info irq
....

TODO: properly understand how each IRQ maps to what number.

==== dummy-irq

The Linux kernel v4.16 mainline also has a `dummy-irq` module at `drivers/misc/dummy-irq.c` for monitoring a single IRQ.

We build it by default with:

....
CONFIG_DUMMY_IRQ=m
....

And then you can do

....
./run --graphic
....

and in guest:

....
modprobe dummy-irq irq=1
....

Outcome: when you click a key on the keyboard, dmesg shows:

....
dummy-irq: interrupt occurred on IRQ 1
....

However, this module is intended to fire only once as can be seen from its source:

....
static int count = 0;

if (count == 0) {
printk(KERN_INFO "dummy-irq: interrupt occurred on IRQ %d\n",
irq);
count++;
}
....

and furthermore interrupt `1` and `12` happen immediately TODO why, were they somehow pending?

So so see something interesting, you need to monitor an interrupt that is more rare than the keyboard, e.g. <>.

==== /proc/interrupts

In the guest with <>:

....
watch -n 1 cat /proc/interrupts
....

Then see how clicking the mouse and keyboard affect the interrupt counts.

This confirms that:

* 1: keyboard
* 12: mouse click and drags

The module also shows which handlers are registered for each IRQ, as we have observed at <>

When in text mode, we can also observe interrupt line 4 with handler `ttyS0` increase continuously as IO goes through the UART.

=== Kernel utility functions

https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.17/Documentation/core-api/kernel-api.rst

==== kstrto

Convert a string to an integer:

....
/kstrto.sh
echo $?
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/kstrto.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/kstrto.sh[]

Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6139493/how-convert-char-to-int-in-linux-kernel/49811658#49811658

==== virt_to_phys

Convert a virtual address to physical:

....
insmod /virt_to_phys.ko
cat /sys/kernel/debug/lkmc_virt_to_phys
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/virt_to_phys.c[]

Sample output:

....
*kmalloc_ptr = 0x12345678
kmalloc_ptr = ffff88000e169ae8
virt_to_phys(kmalloc_ptr) = 0xe169ae8
static_var = 0x12345678
&static_var = ffffffffc0002308
virt_to_phys(&static_var) = 0x40002308
....

We can confirm that the `kmalloc_ptr` translation worked with:

....
./qemumonitor 'xp 0xe169ae8'
....

which reads four bytes from a given physical address, and gives the expected:

....
000000000e169ae8: 0x12345678
....

TODO it only works for kmalloc however, for the static variable:

....
./qemumonitor 'xp 0x40002308'
....

it gave a wrong value of `00000000`.

Bibliography:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5748492/is-there-any-api-for-determining-the-physical-address-from-virtual-address-in-li/45128487#45128487
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39134990/mmap-of-dev-mem-fails-with-invalid-argument-for-virt-to-phys-address-but-addre/45127582#45127582
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/43325205/can-we-use-virt-to-phys-for-user-space-memory-in-kernel-module

===== Userland physical address experiments

Only tested in x86_64.

The Linux kernel exposes physical addresses to userland through:

* `/proc//maps`
* `/proc//pagemap`
* `/dev/mem`

In this section we will play with them.

First get a virtual address to play with:

....
/virt_to_phys_test.out &
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/virt_to_phys_test.c[]

Sample output:

....
vaddr 0x600800
pid 110
....

The program:

* allocates a `volatile` variable and sets is value to `0x12345678`
* prints the virtual address of the variable, and the program PID
* runs a while loop until until the value of the variable gets mysteriously changed somehow, e.g. by nasty tinkerers like us

Then, translate the virtual address to physical using `/proc//maps` and `/proc//pagemap`:

....
/virt_to_phys_user.out 110 0x600800
....

Sample output physical address:

....
0x7c7b800
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/virt_to_phys_user.c[]

Now we can verify that `virt_to_phys_user.out` gave the correct physical address in the following ways:

* <>
* <>

Bibliography:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/17021214/decode-proc-pid-pagemap-entry/45126141#45126141
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6284810/proc-pid-pagemaps-and-proc-pid-maps-linux/45500208#45500208

====== QEMU xp

The `xp` <> command reads memory at a given physical address.

First launch `virt_to_phys_user.out` as described at <>.

On a second terminal, use QEMU to read the physical address:

....
./qemumonitor 'xp 0x7c7b800'
....

Output:

....
0000000007c7b800: 0x12345678
....

Yes!!! We read the correct value from the physical address.

We could not find however to write to memory from the QEMU monitor, boring.

====== /dev/mem

`/dev/mem` exposes access to physical addresses, and we use it through the convenient `devmem` BusyBox utility.

First launch `virt_to_phys_user.out` as described at <>.

Next, read from the physical address:

....
devmem 0x7c7b800
....

Possible output:

....
Memory mapped at address 0x7ff7dbe01000.
Value at address 0X7C7B800 (0x7ff7dbe01800): 0x12345678
....

which shows that the physical memory contains the expected value `0x12345678`.

`0x7ff7dbe01000` is a new virtual address that `devmem` maps to the physical address to be able to read from it.

Modify the physical memory:

....
devmem 0x7c7b800 w 0x9abcdef0
....

After one second, we see on the screen:

....
i 9abcdef0
[1]+ Done /virt_to_phys_test.out
....

so the value changed, and the `while` loop exited!

This example requires:

* `CONFIG_STRICT_DEVMEM=n`, otherwise `devmem` fails with:
+
....
devmem: mmap: Operation not permitted
....
* `nopat` kernel parameter

which we set by default.

Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11891979/how-to-access-mmaped-dev-mem-without-crashing-the-linux-kernel

====== pagemap_dump.out

Dump the physical address of all pages mapped to a given process using `/proc//maps` and `/proc//pagemap`.

First launch `virt_to_phys_user.out` as described at <>. Suppose that the output was:

....
# /virt_to_phys_test.out &
vaddr 0x601048
pid 63
# /virt_to_phys_user.out 63 0x601048
0x1a61048
....

Now obtain the page map for the process:

....
/pagemap_dump.out 63
....

Sample output excerpt:

....
vaddr pfn soft-dirty file/shared swapped present library
400000 1ede 0 1 0 1 /virt_to_phys_test.out
600000 1a6f 0 0 0 1 /virt_to_phys_test.out
601000 1a61 0 0 0 1 /virt_to_phys_test.out
602000 2208 0 0 0 1 [heap]
603000 220b 0 0 0 1 [heap]
7ffff78ec000 1fd4 0 1 0 1 /lib/libuClibc-1.0.30.so
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/pagemap_dump.c[]

Adapted from: https://github.com/dwks/pagemap/blob/8a25747bc79d6080c8b94eac80807a4dceeda57a/pagemap2.c

Meaning of the flags:

* `vaddr`: first virtual address of a page the belongs to the process. Notably:
+
....
./runtc readelf -- -l "$(./getvar build_dir)/kernel_modules-1.0/user/virt_to_phys_test.out"
....
+
contains:
+
....
Type Offset VirtAddr PhysAddr
FileSiz MemSiz Flags Align
...
LOAD 0x0000000000000000 0x0000000000400000 0x0000000000400000
0x000000000000075c 0x000000000000075c R E 0x200000
LOAD 0x0000000000000e98 0x0000000000600e98 0x0000000000600e98
0x00000000000001b4 0x0000000000000218 RW 0x200000

Section to Segment mapping:
Segment Sections...
...
02 .interp .hash .dynsym .dynstr .rela.plt .init .plt .text .fini .rodata .eh_frame_hdr .eh_frame
03 .ctors .dtors .jcr .dynamic .got.plt .data .bss
....
+
from which we deduce that:
+
** `400000` is the text segment
** `600000` is the data segment
* `pfn`: add three zeroes to it, and you have the physical address.
+
Three zeroes is 12 bits which is 4kB, which is the size of a page.
+
For example, the virtual address `0x601000` has `pfn` of `0x1a61`, which means that its physical address is `0x1a61000`
+
This is consistent with what `virt_to_phys_user.out` told us: the virtual address `0x601048` has physical address `0x1a61048`.
+
`048` corresponds to the three last zeroes, and is the offset within the page.
+
Also, this value falls inside `0x601000`, which as previously analyzed is the data section, which is the normal location for global variables such as ours.
* `soft-dirty`: TODO
* `file/shared`: TODO. `1` seems to indicate that the page can be shared across processes, possibly for read-only pages? E.g. the text segment has `1`, but the data has `0`.
* `swapped`: TODO swapped to disk?
* `present`: TODO vs swapped?
* `library`: which executable owns that page

This program works in two steps:

* parse the human readable lines lines from `/proc//maps`. This files contains lines of form:
+
....
7ffff7b6d000-7ffff7bdd000 r-xp 00000000 fe:00 658 /lib/libuClibc-1.0.22.so
....
+
which tells us that:
+
** `7f8af99f8000-7f8af99ff000` is a virtual address range that belong to the process, possibly containing multiple pages.
** `/lib/libuClibc-1.0.22.so` is the name of the library that owns that memory
* loop over each page of each address range, and ask `/proc//pagemap` for more information about that page, including the physical address

=== Linux kernel tracing

Good overviews:

* http://www.brendangregg.com/blog/2015-07-08/choosing-a-linux-tracer.html by Brendan Greg, AKA the master of tracing. Also: https://github.com/brendangregg/perf-tools
* https://jvns.ca/blog/2017/07/05/linux-tracing-systems/

I hope to have examples of all methods some day, since I'm obsessed with visibility.

==== CONFIG_PROC_EVENTS

Logs proc events such as process creation to a link:packages/kernel_modules/netlink.c[netlink socket].

We then have a userland program that listens to the events and prints them out:

....
# /proc_events.out &
# set mcast listen ok
# sleep 2 & sleep 1
fork: parent tid=48 pid=48 -> child tid=79 pid=79
fork: parent tid=48 pid=48 -> child tid=80 pid=80
exec: tid=80 pid=80
exec: tid=79 pid=79
# exit: tid=80 pid=80 exit_code=0
exit: tid=79 pid=79 exit_code=0
echo a
a
#
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/proc_events.c[]

TODO: why `exit: tid=79` shows after `exit: tid=80`?

Note how `echo a` is a Bash built-in, and therefore does not spawn a new process.

TODO: why does this produce no output?

....
/proc_events.out >f &
....

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6075013/detect-launching-of-programs-on-linux-platform/8255487#8255487
* https://serverfault.com/questions/199654/does-anyone-know-a-simple-way-to-monitor-root-process-spawn
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/260162/how-to-track-newly-created-processes

TODO can you get process data such as UID and process arguments? It seems not since `exec_proc_event` contains so little data: https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.16/include/uapi/linux/cn_proc.h#L80 We could try to immediately read it from `/proc`, but there is a risk that the process finished and another one took its PID, so it wouldn't be reliable.

* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/163681/print-pids-and-names-of-processes-as-they-are-created/163689 requests process name
* https://serverfault.com/questions/199654/does-anyone-know-a-simple-way-to-monitor-root-process-spawn requests UID

===== CONFIG_PROC_EVENTS aarch64

0111ca406bdfa6fd65a2605d353583b4c4051781 was failing with:

....
>>> kernel_modules 1.0 Building
/usr/bin/make -j8 -C '/linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/aarch64/buildroot/build/kernel_modules-1.0/user' BR2_PACKAGE_OPENBLAS="" CC="/linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/aarch64/buildroot/host/bin/aarch64-buildroot-linux-uclibc-gcc" LD="/linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/aarch64/buildroot/host/bin/aarch64-buildroot-linux-uclibc-ld"
/linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/aarch64/buildroot/host/bin/aarch64-buildroot-linux-uclibc-gcc -ggdb3 -fopenmp -O0 -std=c99 -Wall -Werror -Wextra -o 'proc_events.out' 'proc_events.c'
In file included from /linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/aarch64/buildroot/host/aarch64-buildroot-linux-uclibc/sysroot/usr/include/signal.h:329:0,
from proc_events.c:12:
/linux-kernel-module-cheat//out/aarch64/buildroot/host/aarch64-buildroot-linux-uclibc/sysroot/usr/include/sys/ucontext.h:50:16: error: field ‘uc_mcontext’ has incomplete type
mcontext_t uc_mcontext;
^~~~~~~~~~~
....

so we commented it out.

Related threads:

* https://mailman.uclibc-ng.org/pipermail/devel/2018-January/001624.html
* https://github.com/DynamoRIO/dynamorio/issues/2356

If we try to naively update uclibc to 1.0.29 with `buildroot_override`, which contains the above mentioned patch, clean `aarch64` test build fails with:

....
../utils/ldd.c: In function 'elf_find_dynamic':
../utils/ldd.c:238:12: warning: cast to pointer from integer of different size [-Wint-to-pointer-cast]
return (void *)byteswap_to_host(dynp->d_un.d_val);
^
/tmp/user/20321/cciGScKB.o: In function `process_line_callback':
msgmerge.c:(.text+0x22): undefined reference to `escape'
/tmp/user/20321/cciGScKB.o: In function `process':
msgmerge.c:(.text+0xf6): undefined reference to `poparser_init'
msgmerge.c:(.text+0x11e): undefined reference to `poparser_feed_line'
msgmerge.c:(.text+0x128): undefined reference to `poparser_finish'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Makefile.in:120: recipe for target '../utils/msgmerge.host' failed
make[2]: *** [../utils/msgmerge.host] Error 1
make[2]: *** Waiting for unfinished jobs....
/tmp/user/20321/ccF8V8jF.o: In function `process':
msgfmt.c:(.text+0xbf3): undefined reference to `poparser_init'
msgfmt.c:(.text+0xc1f): undefined reference to `poparser_feed_line'
msgfmt.c:(.text+0xc2b): undefined reference to `poparser_finish'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Makefile.in:120: recipe for target '../utils/msgfmt.host' failed
make[2]: *** [../utils/msgfmt.host] Error 1
package/pkg-generic.mk:227: recipe for target '/data/git/linux-kernel-module-cheat/out/aarch64/buildroot/build/uclibc-custom/.stamp_built' failed
make[1]: *** [/data/git/linux-kernel-module-cheat/out/aarch64/buildroot/build/uclibc-custom/.stamp_built] Error 2
Makefile:79: recipe for target '_all' failed
make: *** [_all] Error 2
....

Buildroot master has already moved to uclibc 1.0.29 at f8546e836784c17aa26970f6345db9d515411700, but it is not yet in any tag... so I'm not tempted to update it yet just for this.

==== ftrace

Trace a single function:

....
cd /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/

# Stop tracing.
echo 0 > tracing_on

# Clear previous trace.
echo > trace

# List the available tracers, and pick one.
cat available_tracers
echo function > current_tracer

# List all functions that can be traced
# cat available_filter_functions
# Choose one.
echo __kmalloc > set_ftrace_filter
# Confirm that only __kmalloc is enabled.
cat enabled_functions

echo 1 > tracing_on

# Latest events.
head trace

# Observe trace continuously, and drain seen events out.
cat trace_pipe &
....

Sample output:

....
# tracer: function
#
# entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 97/97 #P:1
#
# _-----=> irqs-off
# / _----=> need-resched
# | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
# || / _--=> preempt-depth
# ||| / delay
# TASK-PID CPU# |||| TIMESTAMP FUNCTION
# | | | |||| | |
head-228 [000] .... 825.534637: __kmalloc <-load_elf_phdrs
head-228 [000] .... 825.534692: __kmalloc <-load_elf_binary
head-228 [000] .... 825.534815: __kmalloc <-load_elf_phdrs
head-228 [000] .... 825.550917: __kmalloc <-__seq_open_private
head-228 [000] .... 825.550953: __kmalloc <-tracing_open
head-229 [000] .... 826.756585: __kmalloc <-load_elf_phdrs
head-229 [000] .... 826.756627: __kmalloc <-load_elf_binary
head-229 [000] .... 826.756719: __kmalloc <-load_elf_phdrs
head-229 [000] .... 826.773796: __kmalloc <-__seq_open_private
head-229 [000] .... 826.773835: __kmalloc <-tracing_open
head-230 [000] .... 827.174988: __kmalloc <-load_elf_phdrs
head-230 [000] .... 827.175046: __kmalloc <-load_elf_binary
head-230 [000] .... 827.175171: __kmalloc <-load_elf_phdrs
....

Trace all possible functions, and draw a call graph:

....
echo 1 > max_graph_depth
echo 1 > events/enable
echo function_graph > current_tracer
....

Sample output:

....
# CPU DURATION FUNCTION CALLS
# | | | | | | |
0) 2.173 us | } /* ntp_tick_length */
0) | timekeeping_update() {
0) 4.176 us | ntp_get_next_leap();
0) 5.016 us | update_vsyscall();
0) | raw_notifier_call_chain() {
0) 2.241 us | notifier_call_chain();
0) + 19.879 us | }
0) 3.144 us | update_fast_timekeeper();
0) 2.738 us | update_fast_timekeeper();
0) ! 117.147 us | }
0) | _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore() {
0) 4.045 us | _raw_write_unlock_irqrestore();
0) + 22.066 us | }
0) ! 265.278 us | } /* update_wall_time */
....

TODO: what do `+` and `!` mean?

Each `enable` under the `events/` tree enables a certain set of functions, the higher the `enable` more functions are enabled.

TODO: can you get function arguments? https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27608752/does-ftrace-allow-capture-of-system-call-arguments-to-the-linux-kernel-or-only

==== Kprobes

kprobes is an instrumentation mechanism that injects arbitrary code at a given address in a trap instruction, much like GDB. Oh, the good old kernel. :-)

....
./build-buildroot -C 'CONFIG_KPROBES=y'
....

Then on guest:

....
insmod /kprobe_example.ko
sleep 4 & sleep 4 &'
....

Outcome: dmesg outputs on every fork:

....
<_do_fork> pre_handler: p->addr = 0x00000000e1360063, ip = ffffffff810531d1, flags = 0x246
<_do_fork> post_handler: p->addr = 0x00000000e1360063, flags = 0x246
<_do_fork> pre_handler: p->addr = 0x00000000e1360063, ip = ffffffff810531d1, flags = 0x246
<_do_fork> post_handler: p->addr = 0x00000000e1360063, flags = 0x246
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/kprobe_example.c[]

TODO: it does not work if I try to immediately launch `sleep`, why?

....
insmod /kprobe_example.ko && sleep 4 & sleep 4 &
....

I don't think your code can refer to the surrounding kernel code however: the only visible thing is the value of the registers.

You can then hack it up to read the stack and read argument values, but do you really want to?

There is also a kprobes + ftrace based mechanism with `CONFIG_KPROBE_EVENTS=y` which does read the memory for us based on format strings that indicate type... https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.16/Documentation/trace/kprobetrace.txt Horrendous. Used by: https://github.com/brendangregg/perf-tools/blob/98d42a2a1493d2d1c651a5c396e015d4f082eb20/execsnoop

Bibliography:

* https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.16/Documentation/kprobes.txt
* https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.17/samples/kprobes/kprobe_example.c

==== Count boot instructions

* https://www.quora.com/How-many-instructions-does-a-typical-Linux-kernel-boot-take
* https://github.com/cirosantilli/chat/issues/31
* https://rwmj.wordpress.com/2016/03/17/tracing-qemu-guest-execution/
* `qemu/docs/tracing.txt` and `qemu/docs/replay.txt`
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39149446/how-to-use-qemus-simple-trace-backend/46497873#46497873

Results (boot not excluded):

[options="header"]
|===
|Commit |Arch |Simulator |Instruction count

|7228f75ac74c896417fb8c5ba3d375a14ed4d36b
|arm
|QEMU
|680k

|7228f75ac74c896417fb8c5ba3d375a14ed4d36b
|arm
|gem5 AtomicSimpleCPU
|160M

|7228f75ac74c896417fb8c5ba3d375a14ed4d36b
|arm
|gem5 HPI
|155M

|7228f75ac74c896417fb8c5ba3d375a14ed4d36b
|x86_64
|QEMU
|3M

|7228f75ac74c896417fb8c5ba3d375a14ed4d36b
|x86_64
|gem5 AtomicSimpleCPU
|528M

|===

QEMU:

....
./trace-boot --arch x86_64
....

sample output:

....
instructions 1833863
entry_address 0x1000000
instructions_firmware 20708
....

gem5:

....
./run --arch aarch64 --gem5 --eval 'm5 exit'
# Or:
# ./run --arch aarch64 --gem5 --eval 'm5 exit' -- --cpu-type=HPI --caches
./gem5-stat --arch aarch64 sim_insts
....

Notes:

* `0x1000000` is the address where QEMU puts the Linux kernel at with `-kernel` in x86.
+
It can be found from:
+
....
./runtc readelf -- -e "$(./getvar vmlinux)" | grep Entry
....
+
TODO confirm further. If I try to break there with:
+
....
./rungdb *0x1000000
....
+
but I have no corresponding source line. Also note that this line is not actually the first line, since the kernel messages such as `early console in extract_kernel` have already shown on screen at that point. This does not break at all:
+
....
./rungdb extract_kernel
....
+
It only appears once on every log I've seen so far, checked with `grep 0x1000000 trace.txt`
+
Then when we count the instructions that run before the kernel entry point, there is only about 100k instructions, which is insignificant compared to the kernel boot itself.
+
TODO `--arch arm` and `--arch aarch64` does not count firmware instructions properly because the entry point address of the ELF file (`ffffff8008080000` for `aarch64`) does not show up on the trace at all. Tested on link:http://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/f8c0502bb2680f2dbe7c1f3d7958f60265347005[f8c0502bb2680f2dbe7c1f3d7958f60265347005].
* We can also discount the instructions after `init` runs by using `readelf` to get the initial address of `init`. One easy way to do that now is to just run:
+
....
./rungdb-user kernel_modules-1.0/user/poweroff.out main
....
+
And get that from the traces, e.g. if the address is `4003a0`, then we search:
+
....
grep -n 4003a0 trace.txt
....
+
I have observed a single match for that instruction, so it must be the init, and there were only 20k instructions after it, so the impact is negligible.
* to disable networking. Is replacing `init` enough?
+
--
** https://superuser.com/questions/181254/how-do-you-boot-linux-with-networking-disabled
** https://superuser.com/questions/684005/how-does-one-permanently-disable-gnu-linux-networking/1255015#1255015
--
+
`CONFIG_NET=n` did not significantly reduce instruction counts, so maybe replacing `init` is enough.
* gem5 simulates memory latencies. So I think that the CPU loops idle while waiting for memory, and counts will be higher.

=== Linux kernel hardening

Make it harder to get hacked and easier to notice that you were, at the cost of some (small?) runtime overhead.

==== CONFIG_FORTIFY_SOURCE

Detects buffer overflows for us:

....
./build-buildroot -C 'CONFIG_FORTIFY_SOURCE=y' --linux-build-id fortify --kernel-modules
./run --eval-busybox 'insmod /strlen_overflow.ko' --linux-build-id fortify
....

Possible dmesg output:

....
strlen_overflow: loading out-of-tree module taints kernel.
detected buffer overflow in strlen
------------[ cut here ]------------
....

followed by a trace.

You may not get this error because this depends on `strlen` overflowing at least until the next page: if a random `\0` appears soon enough, it won't blow up as desired.

TODO not always reproducible. Find a more reproducible failure. I could not observe it on:

....
insmod /memcpy_overflow.ko
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/strlen_overflow.c[]

Bibliography: https://www.reddit.com/r/hacking/comments/8h4qxk/what_a_buffer_overflow_in_the_linux_kernel_looks/

=== User mode Linux

I once got link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User-mode_Linux[UML] running on a minimal Buildroot setup at: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/73203/how-to-create-rootfs-for-user-mode-linux-on-fedora-18/372207#372207

But in part because it is dying, I didn't spend much effort to integrate it into this repo, although it would be a good fit in principle, since it is essentially a virtualization method.

Maybe some brave soul will send a pull request one day.

=== UIO

UIO is a kernel subsystem that allows to do certain types of driver operations from userland.

This would be awesome to improve debugability and safety of kernel modules.

VFIO looks like a newer and better UIO replacement, but there do not exist any examples of how to use it: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49309162/interfacing-with-qemu-edu-device-via-userspace-i-o-uio-linux-driver

TODO get something interesting working. I currently don't understand the behaviour very well.

TODO how to ACK interrupts? How to ensure that every interrupt gets handled separately?

TODO how to write to registers. Currently using `/dev/mem` and `lspci`.

This example should handle interrupts from userland and print a message to stdout:

....
/uio_read.sh
....

TODO: what is the expected behaviour? I should have documented this when I wrote this stuff, and I'm that lazy right now that I'm in the middle of a refactor :-)

UIO interface in a nutshell:

* blocking read / poll: waits until interrupts
* `write`: call `irqcontrol` callback. Default: 0 or 1 to enable / disable interrupts.
* `mmap`: access device memory

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/uio_read.c[]
* link:rootfs_overlay/uio_read.sh[]

Bibliography:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15286772/userspace-vs-kernel-space-driver
* https://01.org/linuxgraphics/gfx-docs/drm/driver-api/uio-howto.html
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7986260/linux-interrupt-handling-in-user-space
* https://yurovsky.github.io/2014/10/10/linux-uio-gpio-interrupt/
* https://github.com/bmartini/zynq-axis/blob/65a3a448fda1f0ea4977adfba899eb487201853d/dev/axis.c
* https://yurovsky.github.io/2014/10/10/linux-uio-gpio-interrupt/
* http://nairobi-embedded.org/uio_example.html that website has QEMU examples for everything as usual. The example has a kernel-side which creates the memory mappings and is used by the user.
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49309162/interfacing-with-qemu-edu-device-via-userspace-i-o-uio-linux-driver
* userland driver stability questions:
** https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8030758/getting-kernel-version-from-linux-kernel-module-at-runtime/45430233#45430233
** https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37098482/how-to-build-a-linux-kernel-module-so-that-it-is-compatible-with-all-kernel-rele/45429681#45429681
** https://liquidat.wordpress.com/2007/07/21/linux-kernel-2623-to-have-stable-userspace-driver-api/

=== Linux kernel interactive stuff

[[fbcon]]
==== Linux kernel console fun

Requires <>.

You can also try those on the `Ctrl-Alt-F3` of your Ubuntu host, but it is much more fun inside a VM!

Stop the cursor from blinking:

....
echo 0 > /sys/class/graphics/fbcon/cursor_blink
....

Rotate the console 90 degrees! https://askubuntu.com/questions/237963/how-do-i-rotate-my-display-when-not-using-an-x-server

....
echo 1 > /sys/class/graphics/fbcon/rotate
....

Relies on: `CONFIG_FRAMEBUFFER_CONSOLE_ROTATION=y`.

Documented under: `Documentation/fb/`.

TODO: font and keymap. Mentioned at: https://cmcenroe.me/2017/05/05/linux-console.html and I think can be done with BusyBox `loadkmap` and `loadfont`, we just have to understand their formats, related:

* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/177024/remap-keyboard-on-the-linux-console
* https://superuser.com/questions/194202/remapping-keys-system-wide-in-linux-not-just-in-x

==== Linux kernel magic keys

Requires <>.

Let's have some fun.

I think most are implemented under:

....
drivers/tty
....

TODO find all.

Scroll up / down the terminal:

....
Shift-PgDown
Shift-PgUp
....

Or inside `./qemumonitor`:

....
sendkey shift-pgup
sendkey shift-pgdown
....

===== Ctrl Alt Del

Run `/sbin/reboot` on guest:

....
Ctrl-Alt-Del
....

Enabled from our link:rootfs_overlay/etc/inittab[]:

....
::ctrlaltdel:/sbin/reboot
....

Linux tries to reboot, and QEMU shutdowns due to the `-no-reboot` option which we set by default for: <>.

Under the hood, behaviour is controlled by the `reboot` syscall:

....
man 2 reboot
....

`reboot` calls can set either of the these behaviours for `Ctrl-Alt-Del`:

* do a hard shutdown syscall. Set in ublibc C code with:
+
....
reboot(RB_ENABLE_CAD)
....
+
or from procfs with:
+
....
echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/ctrl-alt-del
....
* send a SIGINT to the init process. This is what BusyBox' init does, and it then execs the string set in `inittab`.
+
Set in uclibc C code with:
+
....
reboot(RB_DISABLE_CAD)
....
+
or from procfs with:
+
....
echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/ctrl-alt-del
....

Minimal example:

....
./run --kernel-cli 'init=/ctrl_alt_del.out' --graphic
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/ctrl_alt_del.c[]

When you hit `Ctrl-Alt-Del` in the guest, our tiny init handles a `SIGINT` sent by the kernel and outputs to stdout:

....
cad
....

To map between `man 2 reboot` and the uclibc `RB_*` magic constants see:

....
less "$(./getvar build_dir)"/uclibc-*/include/sys/reboot.h"
....

The procfs mechanism is documented at:

....
less linux/Documentation/sysctl/kernel.txt
....

which says:

....
When the value in this file is 0, ctrl-alt-del is trapped and
sent to the init(1) program to handle a graceful restart.
When, however, the value is > 0, Linux's reaction to a Vulcan
Nerve Pinch (tm) will be an immediate reboot, without even
syncing its dirty buffers.

Note: when a program (like dosemu) has the keyboard in 'raw'
mode, the ctrl-alt-del is intercepted by the program before it
ever reaches the kernel tty layer, and it's up to the program
to decide what to do with it.
....

Bibliography:

* https://superuser.com/questions/193652/does-linux-have-a-ctrlaltdel-equivalent/1324415#1324415
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/42573/meaning-and-commands-for-ctrlaltdel/444969#444969

===== SysRq

We cannot test these actual shortcuts on QEMU since the host captures them at a lower level, but from:

....
./qemumonitor
....

we can for example crash the system with:

....
sendkey alt-sysrq-c
....

Same but boring because no magic key:

....
echo c > /proc/sysrq-trigger
....

Implemented in:

....
drivers/tty/sysrq.c
....

On your host, on modern systems that don't have the `SysRq` key you can do:

....
Alt-PrtSc-space
....

which prints a message to `dmesg` of type:

....
sysrq: SysRq : HELP : loglevel(0-9) reboot(b) crash(c) terminate-all-tasks(e) memory-full-oom-kill(f) kill-all-tasks(i) thaw-filesystems(j) sak(k) show-backtrace-all-active-cpus(l) show-memory-usage(m) nice-all-RT-tasks(n) poweroff(o) show-registers(p) show-all-timers(q) unraw(r) sync(s) show-task-states(t) unmount(u) show-blocked-tasks(w) dump-ftrace-buffer(z)
....

Individual SysRq can be enabled or disabled with the bitmask:

....
/proc/sys/kernel/sysrq
....

The bitmask is documented at:

....
less linux/Documentation/admin-guide/sysrq.rst
....

Bibliography: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_SysRq_key

==== TTY

In order to play with TTYs, do this:

....
printf '
tty2::respawn:/sbin/getty -n -L -l /loginroot.sh tty2 0 vt100
tty3::respawn:-/bin/sh
tty4::respawn:/sbin/getty 0 tty4
tty63::respawn:-/bin/sh
::respawn:/sbin/getty -L ttyS0 0 vt100
::respawn:/sbin/getty -L ttyS1 0 vt100
::respawn:/sbin/getty -L ttyS2 0 vt100
# Leave one serial empty.
#::respawn:/sbin/getty -L ttyS3 0 vt100
' >> rootfs_overlay/etc/inittab
./build-buildroot
./run --graphic -- \
-serial telnet::1235,server,nowait \
-serial vc:800x600 \
-serial telnet::1236,server,nowait \
;
....

and on a second shell:

....
telnet localhost 1235
....

We don't add more TTYs by default because it would spawn more processes, even if we use `askfirst` instead of `respawn`.

On the GUI, switch TTYs with:

* `Alt-Left` or `Alt-Right:` go to previous / next populated `/dev/ttyN` TTY. Skips over empty TTYs.
* `Alt-Fn`: go to the nth TTY. If it is not populated, don't go there.
* `chvt `: go to the n-th virtual TTY, even if it is empty: https://superuser.com/questions/33065/console-commands-to-change-virtual-ttys-in-linux-and-openbsd

You can also test this on most hosts such as Ubuntu 18.04, except that when in the GUI, you must use `Ctrl-Alt-Fx` to switch to another terminal.

Next, we also have the following shells running on the serial ports, hit enter to activate them:

* `/dev/ttyS0`: first shell that was used to run QEMU, corresponds to QEMU's `-serial mon:stdio`.
+
It would also work if we used `-serial stdio`, but:
+
--
** `Ctrl-C` would kill QEMU instead of going to the guest
** `Ctrl-A C` wouldn't open the QEMU console there
--
+
see also: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49716931/how-to-run-qemu-with-nographic-and-monitor-but-still-be-able-to-send-ctrlc-to
* `/dev/ttyS1`: second shell running `telnet`
* `/dev/ttyS2`: go on the GUI and enter `Ctrl-Alt-2`, corresponds to QEMU's `-serial vc`. Go back to the main console with `Ctrl-Alt-1`.

although we cannot change between terminals from there.

Each populated TTY contains a "shell":

* `-/bin/sh`: goes directly into an `sh` without a login prompt. Don't forget the dash `-`: https://askubuntu.com/questions/902998/how-to-check-which-tty-am-i-using
+
TODO: does not work for the `ttyS*` terminals. Why?
* `/sbin/getty` asks for password, and then gives you an `sh`
+
We can overcome the password prompt with the `-l /loginroot.sh` technique explained at: https://askubuntu.com/questions/902998/how-to-check-which-tty-am-i-using but I don't see any advantage over `-/bin/sh` currently.

Identify the current TTY with the command:

....
tty
....

Bibliography:

* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/270272/how-to-get-the-tty-in-which-bash-is-running/270372
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/187319/how-to-get-the-real-name-of-the-controlling-terminal
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/77796/how-to-get-the-current-terminal-name
* https://askubuntu.com/questions/902998/how-to-check-which-tty-am-i-using

This outputs:

* `/dev/console` for the initial GUI terminal. But I think it is the same as `/dev/tty1`, because if I try to do
+
....
tty1::respawn:-/bin/sh
....
+
it makes the terminal go crazy, as if multiple processes are randomly eating up the characters.
* `/dev/ttyN` for the other graphic TTYs. Note that there are only 63 available ones, from `/dev/tty1` to `/dev/tty63` (`/dev/tty0` is the current one): link:https://superuser.com/questions/449781/why-is-there-so-many-linux-dev-tty[]. I think this is determined by:
+
....
#define MAX_NR_CONSOLES 63
....
+
in `linux/include/uapi/linux/vt.h`.
* `/dev/ttySN` for the text shells.
+
These are Serial ports, see this to understand what those represent physically: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/307390/what-is-the-difference-between-ttys0-ttyusb0-and-ttyama0-in-linux/367882#367882
+
There are only 4 serial ports, I think this is determined by QEMU. TODO check.
+
See also: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16706423/two-instances-of-busybox-on-separate-serial-lines-ttysn

Get the TTY in bulk for all processes:

....
/psa.sh
....

Source: link:rootfs_overlay/psa.sh[].

The TTY appears under the `TT` section, which is enabled by `-o tty`. This shows the TTY device number, e.g.:

....
4,1
....

and we can then confirm it with:

....
ls -l /dev/tty1
....

Next try:

....
insmod /kthread.ko
....

and switch between virtual terminals, to understand that the dmesg goes to whatever current virtual terminal you are on, but not the others, and not to the serial terminals.

Bibliography:

* https://serverfault.com/questions/119736/how-to-enable-multiple-virtual-consoles-on-linux
* https://github.com/mirror/busybox/blob/1_28_3/examples/inittab#L60
* http://web.archive.org/web/20180117124612/http://nairobi-embedded.org/qemu_serial_port_system_console.html

===== Start a getty from outside of init

TODO: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/196704/getty-start-from-command-line

TODO: how to place an `sh` directly on a TTY as well without `getty`?

If I try the exact same command that the `inittab` is doing from a regular shell after boot:

....
/sbin/getty 0 tty1
....

it fails with:

....
getty: setsid: Operation not permitted
....

The following however works:

....
./run --eval 'getty 0 tty1 & getty 0 tty2 & getty 0 tty3 & sleep 99999999' --graphic
....

presumably because it is being called from `init` directly?

Outcome: `Alt-Right` cycles between three TTYs, `tty1` being the default one that appears under the boot messages.

`man 2 setsid` says that there is only one failure possibility:

____

EPERM The process group ID of any process equals the PID of the calling process. Thus, in particular, setsid() fails if the calling process is already a process group leader.
____

We can get some visibility into it to try and solve the problem with:

....
/psa.sh
....

===== console kernel boot parameter

Take the command described at <> and try adding the following:

* `-e 'console=tty7'`: boot messages still show on `/dev/tty1` (TODO how to change that?), but we don't get a shell at the end of boot there.
+
Instead, the shell appears on `/dev/tty7`.
* `-e 'console=tty2'` like `/dev/tty7`, but `/dev/tty2` is broken, because we have two shells there:
** one due to the `::respawn:-/bin/sh` entry which uses whatever `console` points to
** another one due to the `tty2::respawn:/sbin/getty` entry we added
* `-e 'console=ttyS0'` much like `tty2`, but messages show only on serial, and the terminal is broken due to having multiple shells on it
* `-e 'console=tty1 console=ttyS0'`: boot messages show on both `tty1` and `ttyS0`, but only `S0` gets a shell because it came last

==== CONFIG_LOGO

If you run in <>, then you get a Penguin image for <> above the console! https://askubuntu.com/questions/80938/is-it-possible-to-get-the-tux-logo-on-the-text-based-boot

This is due to the link:https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v4.17/drivers/video/logo/Kconfig#L5[`CONFIG_LOGO=y`] option which we enable by default.

`reset` on the terminal then kills the poor penguins.

When `CONFIG_LOGO=y` is set, the logo can be disabled at boot with:

....
./run --kernel-cli 'logo.nologo'
....

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39872463/how-can-i-disable-the-startup-penguins-and-boot-text-on-linaro-ubuntu
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/332198/centos-remove-penguin-logo-at-startup

Looks like a recompile is needed to modify the image...

* https://superuser.com/questions/736423/changing-kernel-bootsplash-image
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/153975/how-to-change-boot-logo-in-linux-mint

=== DRM

DRM / DRI is the new interface that supersedes `fbdev`:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_LIBDRM=y' --kernel-modules
./run --eval-busybox '/libdrm_modeset.out' --graphic
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/libdrm_modeset.c[]

Outcome: for a few seconds, the screen that contains the terminal gets taken over by changing colors of the rainbow.

TODO not working for `aarch64`, it takes over the screen for a few seconds and the kernel messages disappear, but the screen stays black all the time.

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_LIBDRM=y' --kernel-modules
./run --eval-busybox '/libdrm_modeset.out' --graphic
....

<> however worked, which means that it must be a bug with this demo?

We set `CONFIG_DRM=y` on our default kernel configuration, and it creates one device file for each display:

....
# ls -l /dev/dri
total 0
crw------- 1 root root 226, 0 May 28 09:41 card0
# grep 226 /proc/devices
226 drm
# ls /sys/module/drm /sys/module/drm_kms_helper/
....

Try creating new displays:

....
./run --arch aarch64 --graphic -- -device virtio-gpu-pci
....

to see multiple `/dev/dri/cardN`, and then use a different display with:

....
./run --eval-busybox '/libdrm_modeset.out' --graphic
....

Bibliography:

* https://dri.freedesktop.org/wiki/DRM/
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_Rendering_Infrastructure
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_Rendering_Manager
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mode_setting KMS

Tested on: link:http://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/93e383902ebcc03d8a7ac0d65961c0e62af9612b[93e383902ebcc03d8a7ac0d65961c0e62af9612b]

==== kmscube

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config-fragment br2/kmscube
....

Outcome: a colored spinning cube coded in OpenGL + EGL takes over your display and spins forever: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CqgJMgfxjsk

It is a bit amusing to see OpenGL running outside of a window manager window like that: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3804065/using-opengl-without-a-window-manager-in-linux/50669152#50669152

TODO: it is very slow, about 1FPS. I tried Buildroot master ad684c20d146b220dd04a85dbf2533c69ec8ee52 with:

....
make qemu_x86_64_defconfig
printf "
BR2_CCACHE=y
BR2_PACKAGE_HOST_QEMU=y
BR2_PACKAGE_HOST_QEMU_LINUX_USER_MODE=n
BR2_PACKAGE_HOST_QEMU_SYSTEM_MODE=y
BR2_PACKAGE_HOST_QEMU_VDE2=y
BR2_PACKAGE_KMSCUBE=y
BR2_PACKAGE_MESA3D=y
BR2_PACKAGE_MESA3D_DRI_DRIVER_SWRAST=y
BR2_PACKAGE_MESA3D_OPENGL_EGL=y
BR2_PACKAGE_MESA3D_OPENGL_ES=y
BR2_TOOLCHAIN_BUILDROOT_CXX=y
" >> .config
....

and the FPS was much better, I estimate something like 15FPS.

On Ubuntu 18.04 with NVIDIA proprietary drivers:

....
sudo apt-get instll kmscube
kmscube
....

fails with:

....
drmModeGetResources failed: Invalid argument
failed to initialize legacy DRM
....

See also: https://github.com/robclark/kmscube/issues/12 and https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26920835/can-egl-application-run-in-console-mode/26921287#26921287

Tested on: link:http://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/2903771275372ccfecc2b025edbb0d04c4016930[2903771275372ccfecc2b025edbb0d04c4016930]

==== kmscon

TODO get working.

Implements a console for <>.

The Linux kernel has a built-in fbdev console: <> but not for <> it seems.

The upstream project seems dead with last commit in 2014: https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/kmscon/

Build failed in Ubuntu 18.04 with: https://github.com/dvdhrm/kmscon/issues/131 but this fork compiled but didn't run on host: https://github.com/Aetf/kmscon/issues/2#issuecomment-392484043

Haven't tested the fork on QEMU too much insanity.

==== libdri2

TODO get working.

Looks like a more raw alternative to libdrm:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKABE_LIBDRI2=y'
wget -O packages/kernel_modules/user/dri2test.c https://raw.githubusercontent.com/robclark/libdri2/master/test/dri2test.c
./build-buildroot --kernel-modules
....

but then I noticed that that example requires multiple files, and I don't feel like integrating it into our build.

When I build it on Ubuntu 18.04 host, it does not generate any executable, so I'm confused.

=== Linux kernel testing

Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3177338/how-is-the-linux-kernel-tested

==== LTP

Linux Test Project

https://github.com/linux-test-project/ltp

C userland test suite.

Buildroot already has a package, so it is trivial to build it:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_LTP_TESTSUITE=y'
....

Then try it out with:

....
cd /usr/lib/ltp-testsuite/testcases
./bin/write01
....

There is a main executable `execltp` to run everything, but it depends on Python, so let's just run them manually.

TODO a large chunk of tests, the Open POSIX test suite, is disabled with a comment on Buildroot master saying build failed: https://github.com/buildroot/buildroot/blob/3f37dd7c3b5eb25a41edc6f72ba73e5a21b07e9b/package/ltp-testsuite/ltp-testsuite.mk#L13 However, both tickets mentioned there were closed, so we should try it out and patch Buildroot if it works now.

==== stress

POSIX userland stress. Two versions:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_STRESS=y'
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_STRESS_NG=y'
....

Websites:

* https://people.seas.harvard.edu/~apw/stress/
* https://github.com/ColinIanKing/stress-ng

Likely the NG one is best, but it requires `BR2_TOOLCHAIN_USES_GLIBC=y` which we don't have currently because we use uclibc... arghhhh.

`stress` usage:

....
stress --help
stress -c 16 &
ps
....

and notice how 16 threads were created in addition to a parent worker thread.

It just runs forever, so kill it when you get tired:

....
kill %1
....

`stress -c 1 -t 1` makes gem5 irresponsive for a very long time.

== QEMU

Some QEMU specific features to play with and limitations to cry over.

=== Disk persistency

We disable disk persistency for both QEMU and gem5 by default, to prevent the emulator from putting the image in an unknown state.

For QEMU, this is done by passing the `snapshot` option to `-drive`, and for gem5 it is the default behaviour.

If you hack up our link:run[] script to remove that option, then:

....
./run --eval-busybox 'date >f;poweroff'

....

followed by:

....
./run --eval-busybox 'cat f'
....

gives the date, because `poweroff` without `-n` syncs before shutdown.

The `sync` command also saves the disk:

....
sync
....

When you do:

....
./build-buildroot
....

the disk image gets overwritten by a fresh filesystem and you lose all changes.

Remember that if you forcibly turn QEMU off without `sync` or `poweroff` from inside the VM, e.g. by closing the QEMU window, disk changes may not be saved.

Persistency is also turned off when booting from <> with a CPIO instead of with a disk.

Disk persistency is useful to re-run shell commands from the history of a previous session with `Ctrl-R`, but we felt that the loss of determinism was not worth it.

==== gem5 disk persistency

TODO how to make gem5 disk writes persistent?

As of cadb92f2df916dbb47f428fd1ec4932a2e1f0f48 there are some `read_only` entries in the `config.ini` under cow sections, but hacking them to true did not work:

....
diff --git a/configs/common/FSConfig.py b/configs/common/FSConfig.py
index 17498c42b..76b8b351d 100644
--- a/configs/common/FSConfig.py
+++ b/configs/common/FSConfig.py
@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ os_types = { 'alpha' : [ 'linux' ],
}

class CowIdeDisk(IdeDisk):
- image = CowDiskImage(child=RawDiskImage(read_only=True),
+ image = CowDiskImage(child=RawDiskImage(read_only=False),
read_only=False)

def childImage(self, ci):
....

The directory of interest is `src/dev/storage`.

qcow2 does not appear supported, there are not hits in the source tree, and there is a mention on Nate's 2009 wishlist: http://gem5.org/Nate%27s_Wish_List

=== Snapshot

QEMU allows us to take snapshots at any time through the monitor.

You can then restore CPU, memory and disk state back at any time.

qcow2 filesystems must be used for that to work.

To test it out, login into the VM with and run:

....
./run --eval-busybox 'umount /mnt/9p /mnt/out;/count.sh'
....

On another shell, take a snapshot:

....
./qemumonitor savevm my_snap_id
....

The counting continues.

Restore the snapshot:

....
./qemumonitor loadvm my_snap_id
....

and the counting goes back to where we saved. This shows that CPU and memory states were reverted.

The `umount` is needed because snapshotting conflicts with <<9p>>, which we felt is a more valuable default. If you forget to unmount, the following error appears on the QEMU monitor:

.....
Migration is disabled when VirtFS export path '/linux-kernel-module-cheat/out/x86_64/buildroot/build' is mounted in the guest using mount_tag 'host_out'
.....

We can also verify that the disk state is also reversed. Guest:

....
echo 0 >f
....

Monitor:

....
./qemumonitor savevm my_snap_id
....

Guest:

....
echo 1 >f
....

Monitor:

....
./qemumonitor loadvm my_snap_id
....

Guest:

....
cat f
....

And the output is `0`.

Our setup does not allow for snapshotting while using <>.

Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/40227651/does-qemu-emulator-have-checkpoint-function/48724371#48724371

==== Snapshot internals

Snapshots are stored inside the `.qcow2` images themselves.

They can be observed with:

....
"$(./getvar host_dir)/bin/qemu-img" info "$(./getvar qcow2_file)"
....

which after `savevm my_snap_id` and `savevm asdf` contains an output of type:

....
image: out/x86_64/buildroot/images/rootfs.ext2.qcow2
file format: qcow2
virtual size: 512M (536870912 bytes)
disk size: 180M
cluster_size: 65536
Snapshot list:
ID TAG VM SIZE DATE VM CLOCK
1 my_snap_id 47M 2018-04-27 21:17:50 00:00:15.251
2 asdf 47M 2018-04-27 21:20:39 00:00:18.583
Format specific information:
compat: 1.1
lazy refcounts: false
refcount bits: 16
corrupt: false
....

As a consequence:

* it is possible to restore snapshots across boots, since they stay on the same image the entire time
* it is not possible to use snapshots with <> in our setup, since we don't pass `-drive` at all when initrd is enabled

=== Device models

This section documents:

* how to interact with peripheral hardware device models through device drivers
* how to write your own hardware device models for our emulators, see also: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28315265/how-to-add-a-new-device-in-qemu-source-code

For the more complex interfaces, we focus on simplified educational devices, either:

* present in the QEMU upstream:
** <>
* added in link:https://github.com/cirosantilli/qemu[our fork of QEMU]:
** <>
** <>

==== PCI

Only tested in x86.

===== pci_min

PCI driver for our minimal `pci_min.c` QEMU fork device:

....
./run -- -device lkmc_pci_min
....

then:

....
insmod /pci_min.ko
....

Sources:

* Kernel module: link:packages/kernel_modules/pci_min.c[].
* QEMU device: https://github.com/cirosantilli/qemu/blob/lkmc/hw/misc/lkmc_pci_min.c

Outcome:

....
<4>[ 10.608241] pci_min: loading out-of-tree module taints kernel.
<6>[ 10.609935] probe
<6>[ 10.651881] dev->irq = 11
lkmc_pci_min mmio_write addr = 0 val = 12345678 size = 4
<6>[ 10.668515] irq_handler irq = 11 dev = 251
lkmc_pci_min mmio_write addr = 4 val = 0 size = 4
....

What happened:

* right at probe time, we write to a register
* our hardware model is coded such that it generates an interrupt when written to
* the Linux kernel interrupt handler write to another register, which tells the hardware to stop sending interrupts

Kernel messages and printks from inside QEMU are shown all together, to see that more clearly, run in <> instead.

We don't enable the device by default because it does not work for vanilla QEMU, which we often want to test with this repository.

Probe already does a MMIO write, which generates an IRQ and tests everything.

[[qemu-edu]]
===== QEMU edu PCI device

Small upstream educational PCI device:

....
/qemu_edu.sh
....

This tests a lot of features of the edu device, to understand the results, compare the inputs with the documentation of the hardware: https://github.com/qemu/qemu/blob/v2.12.0/docs/specs/edu.txt

Sources:

* kernel module: link:packages/kernel_modules/qemu_edu.c[]
* QEMU device: https://github.com/qemu/qemu/blob/v2.12.0/hw/misc/edu.c
* test script: link:rootfs_overlay/qemu_edu.sh[]

Works because we add to our default QEMU CLI:

....
-device edu
....

This example uses:

* the QEMU `edu` educational device, which is a minimal educational in-tree PCI example
* out `/pci.ko` kernel module, which exercises the `edu` hardware.
+
I've contacted the awesome original author author of `edu` link:https://github.com/jirislaby[Jiri Slaby], and he told there is no official kernel module example because this was created for a kernel module university course that he gives, and he didn't want to give away answers. link:https://github.com/cirosantilli/how-to-teach-efficiently[I don't agree with that philosophy], so students, cheat away with this repo and go make startups instead.

TODO exercise DMA on the kernel module. The `edu` hardware model has that feature:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/32592734/are-there-any-dma-driver-example-pcie-and-fpga/44716747#44716747
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/17913679/how-to-instantiate-and-use-a-dma-driver-linux-module

===== Manipulate PCI registers directly

In this section we will try to interact with PCI devices directly from userland without kernel modules.

First identify the PCI device with:

....
lspci
....

In our case for example, we see:

....
00:06.0 Unclassified device [00ff]: Device 1234:11e8 (rev 10)
00:07.0 Unclassified device [00ff]: Device 1234:11e9
....

which we identify as being `edu` and `pci_min` respectively by the magic numbers: `1234:11e?`

Alternatively, we can also do use the QEMU monitor:

....
./qemumonitor info qtree
....

which gives:

....
dev: lkmc_pci_min, id ""
addr = 07.0
romfile = ""
rombar = 1 (0x1)
multifunction = false
command_serr_enable = true
x-pcie-lnksta-dllla = true
x-pcie-extcap-init = true
class Class 00ff, addr 00:07.0, pci id 1234:11e9 (sub 1af4:1100)
bar 0: mem at 0xfeb54000 [0xfeb54007]
dev: edu, id ""
addr = 06.0
romfile = ""
rombar = 1 (0x1)
multifunction = false
command_serr_enable = true
x-pcie-lnksta-dllla = true
x-pcie-extcap-init = true
class Class 00ff, addr 00:06.0, pci id 1234:11e8 (sub 1af4:1100)
bar 0: mem at 0xfea00000 [0xfeafffff]
....

See also: https://serverfault.com/questions/587189/list-all-devices-emulated-for-a-vm/913622#913622

Read the configuration registers as binary:

....
hexdump /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:00:06.0/config
....

Get nice human readable names and offsets of the registers and some enums:

....
setpci --dumpregs
....

Get the values of a given config register from its human readable name, either with either bus or device id:

....
setpci -s 0000:00:06.0 BASE_ADDRESS_0
setpci -d 1234:11e9 BASE_ADDRESS_0
....

Note however that `BASE_ADDRESS_0` also appears when you do:

....
lspci -v
....

as:

....
Memory at feb54000
....

Then you can try messing with that address with <>:

....
devmem 0xfeb54000 w 0x12345678
....

which writes to the first register of our <> device.

The device then fires an interrupt at irq 11, which is unhandled, which leads the kernel to say you are a bad boy:

....
lkmc_pci_min mmio_write addr = 0 val = 12345678 size = 4
<5>[ 1064.042435] random: crng init done
<3>[ 1065.567742] irq 11: nobody cared (try booting with the "irqpoll" option)
....

followed by a trace.

Next, also try using our <> IRQ monitoring module before triggering the interrupt:

....
insmod /irq.ko
devmem 0xfeb54000 w 0x12345678
....

Our kernel module handles the interrupt, but does not acknowledge it like our proper <> kernel module, and so it keeps firing, which leads to infinitely many messages being printed:

....
handler irq = 11 dev = 251
....

===== pciutils

There are two versions of `setpci` and `lspci`:

* a simple one from BusyBox
* a more complete one from link:https://github.com/pciutils/pciutils[pciutils] which Buildroot has a package for, and is the default on Ubuntu 18.04 host. This is the one we enable by default.

===== Introduction to PCI

The PCI standard is non-free, obviously like everything in low level: https://pcisig.com/specifications but Google gives several illegal PDF hits :-)

And of course, the best documentation available is: http://wiki.osdev.org/PCI

Like every other hardware, we could interact with PCI on x86 using only IO instructions and memory operations.

But PCI is a complex communication protocol that the Linux kernel implements beautifully for us, so let's use the kernel API.

Bibliography:

* edu device source and spec in QEMU tree:
** https://github.com/qemu/qemu/blob/v2.7.0/hw/misc/edu.c
** https://github.com/qemu/qemu/blob/v2.7.0/docs/specs/edu.txt
* http://www.zarb.org/~trem/kernel/pci/pci-driver.c inb outb runnable example (no device)
* LDD3 PCI chapter
* another QEMU device + module, but using a custom QEMU device:
** https://github.com/levex/kernel-qemu-pci/blob/31fc9355161b87cea8946b49857447ddd34c7aa6/module/levpci.c
** https://github.com/levex/kernel-qemu-pci/blob/31fc9355161b87cea8946b49857447ddd34c7aa6/qemu/hw/char/lev-pci.c
* https://is.muni.cz/el/1433/podzim2016/PB173/um/65218991/ course given by the creator of the edu device. In Czech, and only describes API
* http://nairobi-embedded.org/linux_pci_device_driver.html

===== PCI BFD

`lspci -k` shows something like:

....
00:04.0 Class 00ff: 1234:11e8 lkmc_pci
....

Meaning of the first numbers:

....
<8:bus>:<5:device>.<3:function>
....

Often abbreviated to BDF.

* bus: groups PCI slots
* device: maps to one slot
* function: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19223394/what-is-the-function-number-in-pci/44735372#44735372

Sometimes a fourth number is also added, e.g.:

....
0000:00:04.0
....

TODO is that the domain?

Class: pure magic: https://www-s.acm.illinois.edu/sigops/2007/roll_your_own/7.c.1.html TODO: does it have any side effects? Set in the edu device at:

....
k->class_id = PCI_CLASS_OTHERS
....

===== PCI BAR

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30190050/what-is-base-address-register-bar-in-pcie/44716618#44716618

Each PCI device has 6 BAR IOs (base address register) as per the PCI spec.

Each BAR corresponds to an address range that can be used to communicate with the PCI.

Each BAR is of one of the two types:

* `IORESOURCE_IO`: must be accessed with `inX` and `outX`
* `IORESOURCE_MEM`: must be accessed with `ioreadX` and `iowriteX`. This is the saner method apparently, and what the edu device uses.

The length of each region is defined by the hardware, and communicated to software via the configuration registers.

The Linux kernel automatically parses the 64 bytes of standardized configuration registers for us.

QEMU devices register those regions with:

....
memory_region_init_io(&edu->mmio, OBJECT(edu), &edu_mmio_ops, edu,
"edu-mmio", 1 << 20);
pci_register_bar(pdev, 0, PCI_BASE_ADDRESS_SPACE_MEMORY, &edu->mmio);
....

==== GPIO

TODO: broken. Was working before we moved `arm` from `-M versatilepb` to `-M virt` around af210a76711b7fa4554dcc2abd0ddacfc810dfd4. Either make it work on `-M virt` if that is possible, or document precisely how to make it work with `versatilepb`, or hopefully `vexpress` which is newer.

QEMU does not have a very nice mechanism to observe GPIO activity: https://raspberrypi.stackexchange.com/questions/56373/is-it-possible-to-get-the-state-of-the-leds-and-gpios-in-a-qemu-emulation-like-t/69267#69267

The best you can do is to hack our link:build[] script to add:

....
HOST_QEMU_OPTS='--extra-cflags=-DDEBUG_PL061=1'
....

where link:http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp?topic=/com.arm.doc.ddi0190b/index.html[PL061] is the dominating ARM Holdings hardware that handles GPIO.

Then compile with:

....
./build-buildroot --arch arm --buildroot-config-fragment br2/gpio -c kernel_config_fragment/gpio -l
....

then test it out with:

....
/gpio.sh
....

Source: link:rootfs_overlay/gpio.sh[]

Buildroot's Linux tools package provides some GPIO CLI tools: `lsgpio`, `gpio-event-mon`, `gpio-hammer`, TODO document them here.

==== LEDs

TODO: broken when `arm` moved to `-M virt`, same as <>.

Hack QEMU's `hw/misc/arm_sysctl.c` with a printf:

....
static void arm_sysctl_write(void *opaque, hwaddr offset,
uint64_t val, unsigned size)
{
arm_sysctl_state *s = (arm_sysctl_state *)opaque;

switch (offset) {
case 0x08: /* LED */
printf("LED val = %llx\n", (unsigned long long)val);
....

and then rebuild with:

....
./build-buildroot --arch arm -c kernel_config_fragment/leds -lq
....

But beware that one of the LEDs has a heartbeat trigger by default (specified on dts), so it will produce a lot of output.

And then activate it with:

....
cd /sys/class/leds/versatile:0
cat max_brightness
echo 255 >brightness
....

Relevant QEMU files:

* `hw/arm/versatilepb.c`
* `hw/misc/arm_sysctl.c`

Relevant kernel files:

* `arch/arm/boot/dts/versatile-pb.dts`
* `drivers/leds/led-class.c`
* `drivers/leds/leds-sysctl.c`

==== platform_device

Minimal platform device example coded into the `-M versatilepb` SoC of our QEMU fork.

Using this device now requires checking out to the branch:

....
git checkout platform-device
git submodule sync
....

before building, it does not work on master.

Rationale: we found out that the kernels that build for `qemu -M versatilepb` don't work on gem5 because `versatilepb` is an old pre-v7 platform, and gem5 requires armv7. So we migrated over to `-M virt` to have a single kernel for both gem5 and QEMU, and broke this since the single kernel was more important. TODO port to `-M virt`.

The module itself can be found at: https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/blob/platform-device/kernel_modules/platform_device.c

Uses:

* `hw/misc/lkmc_platform_device.c` minimal device added in our QEMU fork to `-M versatilepb`
* the device tree entry we added to our Linux kernel fork: https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux/blob/361bb623671a52a36a077a6dd45843389a687a33/arch/arm/boot/dts/versatile-pb.dts#L42

Expected outcome after insmod:

* QEMU reports MMIO with printfs
* IRQs are generated and handled by this module, which logs to dmesg

Without insmoding this module, try writing to the register with <>:

....
devmem 0x101e9000 w 0x12345678
....

We can also observe the interrupt with <>:

....
modprobe dummy-irq irq=34
insmod /platform_device.ko
....

The IRQ number `34` was found by on the dmesg after:

....
insmod /platform_device.ko
....

Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28315265/how-to-add-a-new-device-in-qemu-source-code/44612957#44612957

==== gem5 educational hardware models

TODO get some working!

http://gedare-csphd.blogspot.co.uk/2013/02/adding-simple-io-device-to-gem5.html

=== 9P

This protocol allows sharing a mountable filesystem between guest and host.

With networking, it's boring, we can just use any of the old tools like sshfs and NFS.

One advantage of this method over NFS is that can run without `sudo` on host, or having to pass host credentials on guest for sshfs.

TODO performance compared to NFS.

As usual, we have already set everything up for you. On host:

....
cd data/9p
uname -a > host
....

Guest:

....
cd /mnt/9p
cat host
uname -a > guest
....

Host:

....
cat guest
....

The main ingredients for this are:

* `9P` settings in our <>
* `9p` entry on our link:rootfs_overlay/etc/fstab[]
+
Alternatively, you could also mount your own with:
+
....
mkdir /mnt/my9p
mount -t 9p -o trans=virtio,version=9p2000.L host0 /mnt/my9p
....
* Launch QEMU with `-virtfs` as in your link:run[] script
+
When we tried:
+
....
security_model=mapped
....
+
writes from guest failed due to user mismatch problems: https://serverfault.com/questions/342801/read-write-access-for-passthrough-9p-filesystems-with-libvirt-qemu

Bibliography:

* https://superuser.com/questions/628169/how-to-share-a-directory-with-the-host-without-networking-in-qemu
* https://wiki.qemu.org/Documentation/9psetup

==== 9P gem5

Seems possible! Lets do it:

* http://gem5.org/wiki/images/b/b8/Summit2017_wa_devlib.pdf
* http://gem5.org/WA-gem5

==== OverlayFS

It would be uber awesome if we could overlay a 9p filesystem on top of the root.

That would allow us to have a second Buildroot `target/` directory, and without any extra configs, keep the root filesystem image small, which implies:

* less host disk usage, no need to copy the entire `target/` to the image again
* faster rebuild turnaround:
** no need to regenerate the root filesystem at all and reboot
** overcomes the `check_bin_arch` problem: <>
* no need to worry about <>

But TODO we didn't get it working yet:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/41119656/how-can-i-overlayfs-the-root-filesystem-on-linux
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/316018/how-to-use-overlayfs-to-protect-the-root-filesystem

Test with the script:

....
/overlayfs.sh
....

Source: link:rootfs_overlay/overlayfs.sh[]

It shows that files from the `upper/` does not show on the root.

Furthermore, if you try to mount the root elsewhere to prepare for a chroot:

....
/overlayfs.sh / /overlay
# chroot /overlay
....

it does not work well either because sub filesystems like `/proc` do not show on the mount:

....
ls /overlay/proc
....

A less good alternative is to set `LD_LIBRARY_PATH` on the 9p mount and run executables directly from the mount.

Even mor awesome than `chroot` be to `pivot_root`, but I couldn't get that working either:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28015688/pivot-root-device-or-resource-busy
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/179788/pivot-root-device-or-resource-busy

=== Guest host networking

First ensure that networking is enabled before trying out anything in this section: <>

==== Host to guest networking

Guest, BusyBox `nc` enabled with `CONFIG_NC=y`:

....
nc -l -p 45455
....

Host, `nc` from the `netcat-openbsd` package:

....
echo asdf | nc localhost 45455
....

Then `asdf` appears on the guest.

Only this specific port works by default since we have forwarded it on the QEMU command line.

We us this exact procedure to connect to <>.

===== ssh into guest

Not enabled by default due to the build / runtime overhead. To enable, build with:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_OPENSSH=y'
....

Then inside the guest turn on sshd:

....
/sshd.sh
....

Source: link:rootfs_overlay/sshd.sh[]

And finally on host:

....
ssh root@localhost -p 45456
....

Bibliography: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/124681/how-to-ssh-from-host-to-guest-using-qemu/307557#307557

===== gem5 host to guest networking

Could not do port forwarding from host to guest, and therefore could not use `gdbserver`: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48941494/how-to-do-port-forwarding-from-guest-to-host-in-gem5

==== Guest to host networking

TODO. There is `guestfwd`, which sounds analogous to `hostwfd` used in the other sense, but I was not able to get it working, e.g.:

....
-netdev user,hostfwd=tcp::45455-:45455,guestfwd=tcp::45456-,id=net0 \
....

gives:

....
Could not open guest forwarding device 'guestfwd.tcp.45456'
....

Bibliography: https://serverfault.com/questions/769874/how-to-forward-a-port-from-guest-to-host-in-qemu-kvm

==== Secondary disk

A simpler and possibly less overhead alternative to <<9P>> would be to generate a secondary disk image with the benchmark you want to rebuild.

Then you can `umount` and re-mount on guest without reboot.

We don't support this yet, but it should not be too hard to hack it up, maybe by hooking into link:rootfs_post_build_script[].

This was not possible from gem5 `fs.py` as of 60600f09c25255b3c8f72da7fb49100e2682093a: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50862906/how-to-attach-multiple-disk-images-in-a-simulation-with-gem5-fs-py/51037661#51037661

=== QEMU user mode

This has nothing to do with the Linux kernel, but it is cool:

....
sudo apt-get install qemu-user
./build-buildroot --arch arm
cd "$(./getvar target_dir)"
qemu-arm -L . bin/ls
....

This uses QEMU's user-mode emulation mode that allows us to run cross-compiled userland programs directly on the host.

The reason this is cool, is that `ls` is not statically compiled, but since we have the Buildroot image, we are still able to find the shared linker and the shared library at the given path.

In other words, much cooler than:

....
./runtc --arch arm gcc -- -static ./packages/kernel_modules/user/hello.c
qemu-arm a.out
....

It is also possible to compile QEMU user mode from source with `BR2_PACKAGE_HOST_QEMU_LINUX_USER_MODE=y`, but then your compilation will likely fail with:

....
package/qemu/qemu.mk:110: *** "Refusing to build qemu-user: target Linux version newer than host's.". Stop.
....

since we are using a bleeding edge kernel, which is a sanity check in the Buildroot QEMU package.

Anyways, this warns us that the userland emulation will likely not be reliable, which is good to know. TODO: where is it documented the host kernel must be as new as the target one?

GDB step debugging is also possible with:

....
cd "$(./getvar --arch arm target_dir)"
qemu-arm -g 1234 -L . ../build/kernel_modules-1.0/user/myinsmod.out
../host/usr/bin/arm-buildroot-linux-uclibcgnueabihf-gdb \
--nh \
-ex 'set architecture arm' \
-ex 'set sysroot .' \
-ex 'file ../build/kernel_modules-1.0/user/myinsmod.out' \
-ex 'target remote localhost:1234' \
-ex 'break main' \
-ex 'continue' \
-ex 'layout split' \
;
....

link:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48959349/how-to-solve-fatal-kernel-too-old-when-running-gem5-in-syscall-emulation-se-m[crosstool-ng] tests show that QEMU also has a runtime check for the kernel version which can fail as:

....
FATAL: kernel too old
....

but it must be using the kernel version given by glibc, since we didn't hit that error on uclibc.

==== gem5 syscall emulation mode

Analogous to <>, but less usable.

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48986597/when-should-you-use-full-system-fs-vs-syscall-emulation-se-with-userland-program
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48959349/how-to-solve-fatal-kernel-too-old-when-running-gem5-in-syscall-emulation-se-m

First we try some `-static` sanity checks.

Works and prints `hello`:

....
./runtc --arch x86_64 gcc -- -static -o x86_64.out ./packages/kernel_modules/user/hello.c
./runtc --arch arm gcc -- -static -o arm.out ./packages/kernel_modules/user/hello.c
./runtc --arch aarch64 gcc -- -static -o aarch64.out ./packages/kernel_modules/user/hello.c
"$(./getvar --arch x86_64 --gem5 exec)" "$(./getvar gem5_se_file)" -c ./x86_64.out
"$(./getvar --arch arm --gem5 exec)" "$(./getvar gem5_se_file)" -c ./arm.out
"$(./getvar --arch aarch64 --gem5 exec)" "$(./getvar gem5_se_file)" -c ./aarch64.out
....

But I think this is unreliable, and only works because we are using uclibc which does not check the kernel version as glibc does: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48959349/how-to-solve-fatal-kernel-too-old-when-running-gem5-in-syscall-emulation-se-m/50542301#50542301

Ignoring that insanity, we then try it with dynamically linked executables:

....
"$(./getvar --arch x86_64 --gem5 exec)" "$(./getvar gem5_se_file)" -c "$(./getvar --arch x86_64 --gem5 target_dir)/hello.out"
"$(./getvar --arch arm --gem5 exec)" "$(./getvar gem5_se_file)" -c "$(./getvar --arch arm --gem5 target_dir)/hello.out"
"$(./getvar --arch aarch64 --gem5 exec)" "$(./getvar gem5_se_file)" -c "$(./getvar --arch aarch64 --gem5 target_dir)/hello.out"
....

But at 185c2730cc78d5adda683d76c0e3b35e7cb534f0 they fail with:

....
fatal: Unable to open dynamic executable's interpreter.
....

and `cd "$(./getvar --arch aarch64 target_dir)` did not help: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50542222/how-to-run-a-dynamically-linked-executable-syscall-emulation-mode-se-py-in-gem5

The current FAQ says it is not possible to use dynamic executables: http://gem5.org/Frequently_Asked_Questions but I don't trust it, and then these presentations mention it:

* http://www.gem5.org/wiki/images/0/0c/2015_ws_08_dynamic-linker.pdf
* http://research.cs.wisc.edu/multifacet/papers/learning_gem5_tutorial.pdf

but I could not find how to actually use it.

==== User mode vs full system benchmark

Let's see if user mode runs considerably faster than full system or not.

gem5 user mode:

....
make \
-C "$(./getvar --arch arm build_dir)/dhrystone-2" \
CC="$(./runtc --arch arm --dry gcc)" \
CFLAGS=-static \
;
time \
"$(./getvar --arch arm --gem5 exec)" \
"$(./getvar --arch arm gem5_se_file)" \
-c "$(./getvar --arch arm build_dir)/dhrystone-2/dhrystone" \
-o 100000 \
;
....

gem5 full system:

....
time \
./run \
--arch arm \
--eval-busybox '/gem5.sh' \
--gem5
--gem5-readfile 'dhrystone 100000' \
;
....

QEMU user mode:

....
time qemu-arm "$(./getvar --arch arm build_dir)/dhrystone-2/dhrystone" 100000000
....

QEMU full system:

....
time \
./run \
--arch arm \
--eval-busybox 'time dhrystone 100000000;/poweroff.out' \
;
....

Result on <> at bad30f513c46c1b0995d3a10c0d9bc2a33dc4fa0:

* gem5 user: 33 seconds
* gem5 full system: 51 seconds
* QEMU user: 45 seconds
* QEMU full system: 223 seconds

=== QEMU monitor

The QEMU monitor is a terminal that allows you to send text commands to the QEMU VM: https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/QEMU/Monitor

On another terminal, run:

....
./qemumonitor
....

or send one command such as `info qtree` and quit the monitor:

....
./qemumonitor info qtree
....

Source: link:qemumonitor[]

`qemumonitor` uses the `-monitor` QEMU command line option, which makes the monitor listen from a socket.

`qemumonitor` does not support input from an stdin pipe currently, see comments on the source for rationale.

Alternatively, from text mode:

....
Ctrl-A C
....

and go back to the terminal with:

....
Ctrl-A C
....

* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14165158/how-to-switch-to-qemu-monitor-console-when-running-with-curses
* https://superuser.com/questions/488263/how-to-switch-to-the-qemu-control-panel-with-nographics

And in graphic mode from the GUI:

....
Ctrl-Alt ?
....

where `?` is a digit `1`, or `2`, or, `3`, etc. depending on what else is available on the GUI: serial, parallel and frame buffer.

In general, `./qemumonitor` is the best option, as it:

* works on both modes
* allows to use the host Bash history to re-run one off commands
* allows you to search the output of commands on your host shell even when in graphic mode

Getting everything to work required careful choice of QEMU command line options:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49716931/how-to-run-qemu-with-nographic-and-monitor-but-still-be-able-to-send-ctrlc-to/49751144#49751144
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/167165/how-to-pass-ctrl-c-to-the-guest-when-running-qemu-with-nographic/436321#436321

==== QEMU monitor from guest

Peter Maydell said potentially not possible nicely as of August 2018: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51747744/how-to-run-a-qemu-monitor-command-from-inside-the-guest/51764110#51764110

It is also worth looking into the QEMU Guest Agent tool `qemu-gq` that can be enabled with:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_QEMU=y'
....

See also: https://superuser.com/questions/930588/how-to-pass-commands-noninteractively-to-running-qemu-from-the-guest-qmp-via-te

==== QEMU monitor from GDB

When doing <> it is possible to send QEMU monitor commands through the GDB `monitor` command, which saves you the trouble of opening yet another shell.

Try for example:

....
monitor help
monitor info qtree
....

=== Debug the emulator

When you start hacking QEMU or gem5, it is useful to see what is going on inside the emulator themselves.

This is of course trivial since they are just regular userland programs on the host, but we make it a bit easier with:

....
./run --debug-vm
....

Then you could:

....
b edu_mmio_read
c
....

And in QEMU:

....
/qemu_edu.sh
....

When in <>, using `--debug-vm` makes Ctrl-C not get passed to the QEMU guest anymore: it is instead captured by GDB itself, so allow breaking. So e.g. you won't be able to easily quit from a guest program like:

....
sleep 10
....

In graphic mode, make sure that you never click inside the QEMU graphic while debugging, otherwise you mouse gets captured forever, and the only solution I can find is to go to a TTY with `Ctrl-Alt-F1` and `kill` QEMU.

You can still send key presses to QEMU however even without the mouse capture, just either click on the title bar, or alt tab to give it focus.

==== Debug gem5 Python scripts

Start pdb at the first instruction:

....
./run --gem5 --gem5-exe-args='--pdb' --terminal
....

Requires `--terminal` as we must be on foreground.

Alternatively, you can add to the point of the code where you want to break the usual:

....
import ipdb; ipdb.set_trace()
....

and then run with:

....
./run --gem5 --terminal
....

TODO test PyCharm: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51982735/writing-gem5-configuration-scripts-with-pycharm

=== Tracing

QEMU can log several different events.

The most interesting are events which show instructions that QEMU ran, for which we have a helper:

....
./trace-boot --arch x86_64
....

Under the hood, this uses QEMU's `-trace` option.

You can then inspect the instructions with:

....
less "$(./getvar --arch x86_64 run_dir)/trace.txt"
....

Get the list of available trace events:

....
./run --trace help
....

Enable other specific trace events:

....
./run --trace trace1,trace2
./qemu-trace2txt -a "$arch"
less "$(./getvar -a "$arch" run_dir)/trace.txt"
....

This functionality relies on the following setup:

* `./configure --enable-trace-backends=simple`. This logs in a binary format to the trace file.
+
It makes 3x execution faster than the default trace backend which logs human readable data to stdout.
+
Logging with the default backend `log` greatly slows down the CPU, and in particular leads to this boot message:
+
....
All QSes seen, last rcu_sched kthread activity 5252 (4294901421-4294896169), jiffies_till_next_fqs=1, root ->qsmask 0x0
swapper/0 R running task 0 1 0 0x00000008
ffff880007c03ef8 ffffffff8107aa5d ffff880007c16b40 ffffffff81a3b100
ffff880007c03f60 ffffffff810a41d1 0000000000000000 0000000007c03f20
fffffffffffffedc 0000000000000004 fffffffffffffedc ffffffff00000000
Call Trace:
[] sched_show_task+0xcd/0x130
[] rcu_check_callbacks+0x871/0x880
[] update_process_times+0x2f/0x60
....
+
in which the boot appears to hang for a considerable time.
* patch QEMU source to remove the `disable` from `exec_tb` in the `trace-events` file. See also: https://rwmj.wordpress.com/2016/03/17/tracing-qemu-guest-execution/

==== QEMU -d tracing

QEMU also has a second trace mechanism in addition to `-trace`, find out the events with:

....
./run -- -d help
....

Let's pick the one that dumps executed instructions, `in_asm`:

....
./run --eval '/poweroff.out' -- -D out/trace.txt -d in_asm
less out/trace.txt
....

Sample output excerpt:

....
----------------
IN:
0xfffffff0: ea 5b e0 00 f0 ljmpw $0xf000:$0xe05b

----------------
IN:
0x000fe05b: 2e 66 83 3e 88 61 00 cmpl $0, %cs:0x6188
0x000fe062: 0f 85 7b f0 jne 0xd0e1
....

TODO: after `IN:`, symbol names are meant to show, which is awesome, but I don't get any. I do see them however when running a bare metal example from: https://github.com/cirosantilli/newlib-examples/tree/900a9725947b1f375323c7da54f69e8049158881

TODO: what is the point of having two mechanisms, `-trace` and `-d`? `-d` tracing is cool because it does not require a messy recompile, and it can also show symbols.

==== Trace source lines

We can further use Binutils' `addr2line` to get the line that corresponds to each address:

....
./trace-boot --arch x86_64 && ./trace2line --arch x86_64
less "$(./getvar --arch x86_64 run_dir)/trace-lines.txt"
....

The format is as follows:

....
39368 _static_cpu_has arch/x86/include/asm/cpufeature.h:148
....

Where:

* `39368`: number of consecutive times that a line ran. Makes the output much shorter and more meaningful
* `_static_cpu_has`: name of the function that contains the line
* `arch/x86/include/asm/cpufeature.h:148`: file and line

This could of course all be done with GDB, but it would likely be too slow to be practical.

TODO do even more awesome offline post-mortem analysis things, such as:

* detect if we are in userspace or kernelspace. Should be a simple matter of reading the
* read kernel data structures, and determine the current thread. Maybe we can reuse / extend the kernel's GDB Python scripts??

==== QEMU record and replay

QEMU runs are not deterministic by default, however it does support a record and replay mechanism that allows you to replay a previous run deterministically:

This awesome feature allows you to examine a single run as many times as you would like until you understand everything:

....
# Record a run.
./run --eval-busybox '/rand_check.out;/poweroff.out;' --record
# Replay the run.
./run --eval-busybox '/rand_check.out;/poweroff.out;' --replay
....

A convenient shortcut to do both at once to test the feature is:

....
./qemurr --eval-busybox '/rand_check.out;/poweroff.out;'
....

By comparing the terminal output of both runs, we can see that they are the exact same, including things which normally differ across runs:

* timestamps of dmesg output
* <> output

The record and replay feature was revived around QEMU v3.0.0. It existed earlier but it rot completely. As of v3.0.0 it is still flaky: sometimes we get deadlocks, and only a limited number of command line arguments are supported.

Documented at: https://github.com/qemu/qemu/blob/v2.12.0/docs/replay.txt

TODO: using `-r` as above leads to a kernel warning:

....
rcu_sched detected stalls on CPUs/tasks
....

TODO: replay deadlocks intermittently at disk operations, last kernel message:

....
EXT4-fs (sda): re-mounted. Opts: block_validity,barrier,user_xattr
....

TODO replay with network gets stuck:

....
./qemurr --eval-busybox '/sbin/ifup -a;wget -S google.com;/poweroff.out;'
....

after the message:

....
adding dns 10.0.2.3
....

There is explicit network support on the QEMU patches, but either it is buggy or we are not using the correct magic options.

Solved on unmerged c42634d8e3428cfa60672c3ba89cabefc720cde9 from https://github.com/ispras/qemu/tree/rr-180725

TODO `arm` and `aarch64` only seem to work with initrd since I cannot plug a working IDE disk device? See also: https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2018-02/msg05245.html

Then, when I tried with <> and no disk:

....
./build-buildroot --arch aarch64 -i
./qemurr --arch aarch64 --eval-busybox '/rand_check.out;/poweroff.out;' -i
....

QEMU crashes with:

....
ERROR:replay/replay-time.c:49:replay_read_clock: assertion failed: (replay_file && replay_mutex_locked())
....

I had the same error previously on x86-64, but it was fixed: https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1762179 so maybe the forgot to fix it for `aarch64`?

Solved on unmerged c42634d8e3428cfa60672c3ba89cabefc720cde9 from https://github.com/ispras/qemu/tree/rr-180725

===== QEMU reverse debugging

TODO get working.

QEMU replays support checkpointing, and this allows for a simplistic "reverse debugging" implementation proposed at https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2018-06/msg00478.html on the unmerged link:https://github.com/ispras/qemu/tree/rr-180725[]:

....
./run --eval-busybox '/rand_check.out;/poweroff.out;' --record
./run --eval-busybox '/rand_check.out;/poweroff.out;' --replay --debug-guest
....

On another shell:

....
./rungdb start_kernel
....

In GDB:

....
n
n
n
n
reverse-continue
....

and we are back at `start_kernel`

==== QEMU trace multicore

TODO: is there any way to distinguish which instruction runs on each core? Doing:

....
./run --arch x86_64 --cpus 2 --eval '/poweroff.out' --trace exec_tb
./qemu-trace2txt
....

just appears to output both cores intertwined without any clear differentiation.

==== QEMU trace decode instructions

TODO: is is possible to show which instructions ran at each point in time, in addition to the address of the instruction with `exec_tb` shows? Hopefully dissembled, not just the instruction memory.

PANDA can list memory addresses, so I bet it can also decode the instructions: https://github.com/panda-re/panda/blob/883c85fa35f35e84a323ed3d464ff40030f06bd6/panda/docs/LINE_Censorship.md I wonder why they don't just upstream those things to QEMU's tracing: https://github.com/panda-re/panda/issues/290

Memory access on vanilla seem impossible due to optimizations that QEMU does:

* https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2015-06/msg07479.html
* https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2014-04/msg02856.html
* https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2012-08/msg03057.html

==== gem5 tracing

gem5 unlike QEMU is deterministic by default without needing to replay traces

But it also provides a tracing mechanism documented at: link:http://www.gem5.org/Trace_Based_Debugging[] to allow easily inspecting certain aspects of the system:

....
./run --arch aarch64 --eval 'm5 exit' --gem5 --trace Exec
less "$(./getvar --arch aarch64 run_dir)/trace.txt"
....

List all available debug flags:

....
./run --arch aarch64 --gem5-exe-args='--debug-help' --gem5
....

but to understand most of them you have to look at the source code:

....
less "$(./getvar gem5_src_dir)/src/cpu/SConscript"
less "$(./getvar gem5_src_dir)/src/cpu/exetrace.cc"
....

As can be seen on the `Sconstruct`, `Exec` is just an alias that enables a set of flags.

Be warned, the trace is humongous, at 16Gb.

We can make the trace smaller by naming the trace file as `trace.txt.gz`, which enables GZIP compression, but that is not currently exposed on our scripts, since you usually just need something human readable to work on.

Enabling tracing made the runtime about 4x slower on the <>, with or without `.gz` compression.

The output format is of type:

....
25007000: system.cpu T0 : @start_kernel : stp
25007000: system.cpu T0 : @start_kernel.0 : addxi_uop ureg0, sp, #-112 : IntAlu : D=0xffffff8008913f90
25007500: system.cpu T0 : @start_kernel.1 : strxi_uop x29, [ureg0] : MemWrite : D=0x0000000000000000 A=0xffffff8008913f90
25008000: system.cpu T0 : @start_kernel.2 : strxi_uop x30, [ureg0, #8] : MemWrite : D=0x0000000000000000 A=0xffffff8008913f98
25008500: system.cpu T0 : @start_kernel.3 : addxi_uop sp, ureg0, #0 : IntAlu : D=0xffffff8008913f90
....

There are two types of lines:

* full instructions, as the first line. Only shown if the `ExecMacro` flag is given.
* micro ops that constitute the instruction, the lines that follow. Yes, `aarch64` also has microops: link:https://superuser.com/questions/934752/do-arm-processors-like-cortex-a9-use-microcode/934755#934755[]. Only shown if the `ExecMicro` flag is given.

Breakdown:

* `25007500`: time count in some unit. Note how the microops execute at further timestamps.
* `system.cpu`: distinguishes between CPUs when there are more than one
* `T0`: thread number. TODO: link:https://superuser.com/questions/133082/hyper-threading-and-dual-core-whats-the-difference/995858#995858[hyperthread]? How to play with it?
* `@start_kernel`: we are in the `start_kernel` function. Awesome feature! Implemented with libelf https://sourceforge.net/projects/elftoolchain/ copy pasted in-tree `ext/libelf`. To get raw addresses, remove the `ExecSymbol`, which is enabled by `Exec`. This can be done with `Exec,-ExecSymbol`.
* `.1` as in `@start_kernel.1`: index of the microop
* `stp`: instruction disassembly. Seems to use `.isa` files dispersed per arch, which is an in house format: http://gem5.org/ISA_description_system
* `strxi_uop x29, [ureg0]`: microop disassembly.
* `MemWrite : D=0x0000000000000000 A=0xffffff8008913f90`: a memory write microop:
** `D` stands for data, and represents the value that was written to memory or to a register
** `A` stands for address, and represents the address to which the value was written. It only shows when data is being written to memory, but not to registers.

The best way to verify all of this is to write some bare metal code: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/43682311/uart-communication-in-gem5-with-arm-bare-metal

Trace the source lines just like <> with:

....
./trace-boot --arch aarch64 --gem5 && ./trace2line --arch aarch64 --gem5
less "$(./getvar --arch aarch64 run_dir)/trace-lines.txt"
....

TODO: 7452d399290c9c1fc6366cdad129ef442f323564 `./trace2line` this is too slow and takes hours. QEMU's processing of 170k events takes 7 seconds. gem5's processing is analogous, but there are 140M events, so it should take 7000 seconds ~ 2 hours which seems consistent with what I observe, so maybe there is no way to speed this up... The workaround is to just use gem5's `ExecSymbol` to get function granularity, and then GDB individually if line detail is needed?

=== QEMU GUI is unresponsive

Sometimes in Ubuntu 14.04, after the QEMU SDL GUI starts, it does not get updated after keyboard strokes, and there are artifacts like disappearing text.

We have not managed to track this problem down yet, but the following workaround always works:

....
Ctrl-Shift-U
Ctrl-C
root
....

This started happening when we switched to building QEMU through Buildroot, and has not been observed on later Ubuntu.

Using text mode is another workaround if you don't need GUI features.

== gem5

=== gem5 vs QEMU

* advantages of gem5:
** simulates a generic more realistic pipelined and optionally out of order CPU cycle by cycle, including a realistic DRAM memory access model with latencies, caches and page table manipulations. This allows us to:
+
--
*** do much more realistic performance benchmarking with it, which makes absolutely no sense in QEMU, which is purely functional
*** make certain functional observations that are not possible in QEMU, e.g.:
**** use Linux kernel APIs that flush cache memory like DMA, which are crucial for driver development. In QEMU, the driver would still work even if we forget to flush caches.
**** spectre / meltdown:
***** https://www.mail-archive.com/gem5-users@gem5.org/msg15319.html
***** https://github.com/jlpresearch/gem5/tree/spectre-test
--
+
It is not of course truly cycle accurate, as that:
+
--
** would require exposing proprietary information of the CPU designs: link:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/17454955/can-you-check-performance-of-a-program-running-with-qemu-simulator/33580850#33580850[]
** would make the simulation even slower TODO confirm, by how much
--
+
but the approximation is reasonable.
+
It is used mostly for microarchitecture research purposes: when you are making a new chip technology, you don't really need to specialize enormously to an existing microarchitecture, but rather develop something that will work with a wide range of future architectures.
** runs are deterministic by default, unlike QEMU which has a special <> mode, that requires first playing the content once and then replaying
** gem5 ARM at least appears to implement more low level CPU functionality than QEMU, e.g. QEMU only added EL2 in 2018, and EL3 is yet unimplemented: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/42824706/qemu-system-aarch64-entering-el1-when-emulating-a53-power-up
* disadvantage of gem5: slower than QEMU, see: <>
+
This implies that the user base is much smaller, since no Android devs.
+
Instead, we have only chip makers, who keep everything that really works closed, and researchers, who can't version track or document code properly >:-) And this implies that:
+
--
** the documentation is more scarce
** it takes longer to support new hardware features
--
+
Well, not that AOSP is that much better anyways.
* not sure: gem5 has BSD license while QEMU has GPL
+
This suits chip makers that want to distribute forks with secret IP to their customers.
+
On the other hand, the chip makers tend to upstream less, and the project becomes more crappy in average :-)

=== gem5 run benchmark

OK, this is why we used gem5 in the first place, performance measurements!

Let's see how many cycles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dhrystone[Dhrystone], which Buildroot provides, takes for a few different input parameters.

A flexible setup is demonstrated at:

....
./gem5-bench-dhrystone
cat out/gem5-bench-dhrystone.txt
....

Source: link:gem5-bench-dhrystone[]

Sample output:

....
n cycles
1000 12898577
10000 23441629
100000 128428617
....

so as expected, the Dhrystone run with a larger input parameter `100000` took more cycles than the ones with smaller input parameters.

The `gem5-stats` commands output the approximate number of CPU cycles it took Dhrystone to run.

Another interesting example can be found at: link:gem5-bench-cache[].

A more naive and simpler to understand approach would be a direct:

....
./run --arch aarch64 --gem5 --eval 'm5 checkpoint;m5 resetstats;dhrystone 10000;m5 exit'
....

but the problem is that this method does not allow to easily run a different script without running the boot again, see: <>.

Now you can play a fun little game with your friends:

* pick a computational problem
* make a program that solves the computation problem, and outputs output to stdout
* write the code that runs the correct computation in the smallest number of cycles possible

To find out why your program is slow, a good first step is to have a look at the statistics for the run:

....
cat "$(./getvar --arch aarch64 m5out_dir)/stats.txt"
....

Whenever we run `m5 dumpstats` or `m5 exit`, a section with the following format is added to that file:

....
---------- Begin Simulation Statistics ----------
[the stats]
---------- End Simulation Statistics ----------
....

==== Skip extra benchmark instructions

A few imperfections of our <> are:

* when we do `m5 resetstats` and `m5 exit`, there is some time passed before the `exec` system call returns and the actual benchmark starts and ends
* the benchmark outputs to stdout, which means so extra cycles in addition to the actual computation. But TODO: how to get the output to check that it is correct without such IO cycles?

Solutions to these problems include:

* modify benchmark code with instrumentation directly, see <> for an example.
* monitor known addresses TODO possible? Create an example.

Discussion at: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48944587/how-to-count-the-number-of-cpu-clock-cycles-between-the-start-and-end-of-a-bench/48944588#48944588

Those problems should be insignificant if the benchmark runs for long enough however.

==== gem5 system parameters

Besides optimizing a program for a given CPU setup, chip developers can also do the inverse, and optimize the chip for a given benchmark!

The rabbit hole is likely deep, but let's scratch a bit of the surface.

===== Number of cores

....
./run --arch arm --cpus 2 --gem5
....

Check with:

....
cat /proc/cpuinfo
getconf _NPROCESSORS_CONF
....

====== gem5 arm more than 8 cores

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50248067/how-to-run-a-gem5-arm-aarch64-full-system-simulation-with-fs-py-with-more-than-8

===== gem5 cache size

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49624061/how-to-run-gem5-simulator-in-fs-mode-without-cache/49634544#49634544

A quick `+./run --gem5 -- -h+` leads us to the options:

....
--caches
--l1d_size=1024
--l1i_size=1024
--l2cache
--l2_size=1024
--l3_size=1024
....

But keep in mind that it only affects benchmark performance of the most detailed CPU types:

[options="header"]
|===
|arch |CPU type |caches used

|X86
|`AtomicSimpleCPU`
|no

|X86
|`DerivO3CPU`
|?*

|ARM
|`AtomicSimpleCPU`
|no

|ARM
|`HPI`
|yes

|===

{empty}*: couldn't test because of:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49011096/how-to-switch-cpu-models-in-gem5-after-restoring-a-checkpoint-and-then-observe-t

Cache sizes can in theory be checked with the methods described at: link:https://superuser.com/questions/55776/finding-l2-cache-size-in-linux[]:

....
getconf -a | grep CACHE
lscpu
cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cache/index2/size
....

but for some reason the Linux kernel is not seeing the cache sizes:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49008792/why-doesnt-the-linux-kernel-see-the-cache-sizes-in-the-gem5-emulator-in-full-sy
* http://gem5-users.gem5.narkive.com/4xVBlf3c/verify-cache-configuration

Behaviour breakdown:

* arm QEMU and gem5 (both `AtomicSimpleCPU` or `HPI`), x86 gem5: `/sys` files don't exist, and `getconf` and `lscpu` value empty
* x86 QEMU: `/sys` files exist, but `getconf` and `lscpu` values still empty

So we take a performance measurement approach instead:

....
./gem5-bench-cache --arch aarch64
cat "$(./getvar --arch aarch64 run_dir)/bench-cache.txt"
....

which gives:

....
cmd ./run --gem5 --arch aarch64 --gem5-readfile "dhrystone 1000" --gem5-restore 1 -- --caches --l2cache --l1d_size=1024 --l1i_size=1024 --l2_size=1024 --l3_size=1024 --cpu-type=HPI --restore-with-cpu=HPI
time 23.82
exit_status 0
cycles 93284622
instructions 4393457

cmd ./run --gem5 --arch aarch64 --gem5-readfile "dhrystone 1000" --gem5-restore 1 -- --caches --l2cache --l1d_size=1024kB --l1i_size=1024kB --l2_size=1024kB --l3_size=1024kB --cpu-type=HPI --restore-with-cpu=HPI
time 14.91
exit_status 0
cycles 10128985
instructions 4211458

cmd ./run --gem5 --arch aarch64 --gem5-readfile "dhrystone 10000" --gem5-restore 1 -- --caches --l2cache --l1d_size=1024 --l1i_size=1024 --l2_size=1024 --l3_size=1024 --cpu-type=HPI --restore-with-cpu=HPI
time 51.87
exit_status 0
cycles 188803630
instructions 12401336

cmd ./run --gem5 --arch aarch64 --gem5-readfile "dhrystone 10000" --gem5-restore 1 -- --caches --l2cache --l1d_size=1024kB --l1i_size=1024kB --l2_size=1024kB --l3_size=1024kB --cpu-type=HPI --restore-with-cpu=HPI
time 35.35
exit_status 0
cycles 20715757
instructions 12192527

cmd ./run --gem5 --arch aarch64 --gem5-readfile "dhrystone 100000" --gem5-restore 1 -- --caches --l2cache --l1d_size=1024 --l1i_size=1024 --l2_size=1024 --l3_size=1024 --cpu-type=HPI --restore-with-cpu=HPI
time 339.07
exit_status 0
cycles 1176559936
instructions 94222791

cmd ./run --gem5 --arch aarch64 --gem5-readfile "dhrystone 100000" --gem5-restore 1 -- --caches --l2cache --l1d_size=1024kB --l1i_size=1024kB --l2_size=1024kB --l3_size=1024kB --cpu-type=HPI --restore-with-cpu=HPI
time 240.37
exit_status 0
cycles 125666679
instructions 91738770
....

We make the following conclusions:

* the number of instructions almost does not change: the CPU is waiting for memory all the extra time. TODO: why does it change at all?
* the wall clock execution time is not directionally proportional to the number of cycles: here we had a 10x cycle increase, but only 2x time increase. This suggests that the simulation of cycles in which the CPU is waiting for memory to come back is faster.

===== gem5 memory latency

TODO These look promising:

....
--list-mem-types
--mem-type=MEM_TYPE
--mem-channels=MEM_CHANNELS
--mem-ranks=MEM_RANKS
--mem-size=MEM_SIZE
....

TODO: now to verify this with the Linux kernel? Besides raw performance benchmarks.

===== Memory size

....
./run --arch arm --memory 512M
....

and verify inside the guest with:

....
free -m
....

===== gem5 disk and network latency

TODO These look promising:

....
--ethernet-linkspeed
--ethernet-linkdelay
....

and also: `gem5-dist`: https://publish.illinois.edu/icsl-pdgem5/

===== gem5 clock frequency

Clock frequency: TODO how does it affect performance in benchmarks?

....
./run --arch aarch64 --gem5 -- --cpu-clock 10000000
....

Check with:

....
m5 resetstats && sleep 10 && m5 dumpstats
....

and then:

....
./gem5-stat --arch aarch64
....

TODO: why doesn't this exist:

....
ls /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq
....

==== Interesting benchmarks

Buildroot built-in libraries, mostly under Libraries > Other:

* Armadillo `C++`: linear algebra
* fftw: Fourier transform
* Flann
* GSL: various
* liblinear
* libspacialindex
* libtommath
* qhull

There are not yet enabled, but it should be easy to so, see: <>

===== BST vs heap

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6147242/heap-vs-binary-search-tree-bst/29548834#29548834

Usage:

....
./run \
--arch aarch64 \
--eval-busybox '/gem5.sh' \
--gem5 \
--gem5-readfile '/bst_vs_heap.out' \
;
./bst-vs-heap --arch aarch64 --gem5 > bst_vs_heap.dat
....

and then feed `bst_vs_heap.dat` into: https://github.com/cirosantilli/cpp-cheat/blob/9d0f77792fc8e55b20b6ee32018761ef3c5a3f2f/cpp/interactive/bst_vs_heap.gnuplot

Sources:

* link:bst-vs-heap[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/bst_vs_heap.cpp[]

===== OpenMP

Implemented by GCC itself, so just a toolchain configuration, no external libs, and we enable it by default:

....
/openmp.out
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/openmp.c[]

===== BLAS

Buildroot supports it, which makes everything just trivial:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_OPENBLAS=y' --kernel-modules
./run --eval-busybox '/openblas.out; echo $?'
....

Outcome: the test passes:

....
0
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/openblas.c[]

The test performs a general matrix multiplication:

....
| 1.0 -3.0 | | 1.0 2.0 1.0 | | 0.5 0.5 0.5 | | 11.0 - 9.0 5.0 |
1 * | 2.0 4.0 | * | -3.0 4.0 -1.0 | + 2 * | 0.5 0.5 0.5 | = | - 9.0 21.0 -1.0 |
| 1.0 -1.0 | | 0.5 0.5 0.5 | | 5.0 - 1.0 3.0 |
....

This can be deduced from the Fortran interfaces at

....
less "$(./getvar build_dir)"/openblas-*/reference/dgemmf.f
....

which we can map to our call as:

....
C := alpha*op( A )*op( B ) + beta*C,
SUBROUTINE DGEMMF( TRANA, TRANB, M,N,K, ALPHA,A,LDA,B,LDB,BETA,C,LDC)
cblas_dgemm( CblasColMajor, CblasNoTrans, CblasTrans,3,3,2 ,1, A,3, B,3, 2 ,C,3 );
....

===== Eigen

Header only linear algebra library with a mainline Buildroot package:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_EIGEN=y' --kernel-modules
....

Just create an array and print it:

....
./run --eval-busybox '/eigen.out'
....

Output:

....
3 -1
2.5 1.5
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/eigen.cpp[]

This example just creates a matrix and prints it out.

Tested on: link:http://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/a4bdcf102c068762bb1ef26c591fcf71e5907525[a4bdcf102c068762bb1ef26c591fcf71e5907525]

===== PARSEC benchmark

We have ported parts of the link:http://parsec.cs.princeton.edu[PARSEC benchmark] for cross compilation at: https://github.com/cirosantilli/parsec-benchmark See the documentation on that repo to find out which benchmarks have been ported. Some of the benchmarks were are segfaulting, they are documented in that repo.

There are two ways to run PARSEC with this repo:

* <>, most likely what you want
* <>

====== PARSEC benchmark without parsecmgmt

....
./configure -gpq && \
./build-buildroot --arch arm --buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_PARSEC_BENCHMARK=y' --gem5 && \
./run --arch arm --gem5 && \
:;
....

Once inside the guest, launch one of the `test` input sized benchmarks manually as in:

....
cd /parsec/ext/splash2x/apps/fmm/run
../inst/arm-linux.gcc/bin/fmm 1 < input_1
....

To find run out how to run many of the benchmarks, have a look at the `test.sh` script of the `parse-benchmark` repo.

From the guest, you can also run it as:

....
cd /parsec
./test.sh
....

but this might be a bit time consuming in gem5.

====== PARSEC change the input size

Running a benchmark of a size different than `test`, e.g. `simsmall`, requires a rebuild with:

....
./build-buildroot \
--arch arm \
--buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_PARSEC_BENCHMARK=y' \
--buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_PARSEC_BENCHMARK_INPUT_SIZE="simsmall"' \
--gem5 \
-- parsec-benchmark-reconfigure \
;
....

Large input may also require tweaking:

* <> if the unpacked inputs are large
* <>, unless you want to meet the OOM killer, which is admittedly kind of fun

`test.sh` only contains the run commands for the `test` size, and cannot be used for `simsmall`.

The easiest thing to do, is to link:https://superuser.com/questions/231002/how-can-i-search-within-the-output-buffer-of-a-tmux-shell/1253137#1253137[scroll up on the host shell] after the build, and look for a line of type:

....
Running /full/path/to/linux-kernel-module-cheat/out/aarch64/buildroot/build/parsec-benchmark-custom/ext/splash2x/apps/ocean_ncp/inst/aarch64-linux.gcc/bin/ocean_ncp -n2050 -p1 -e1e-07 -r20000 -t28800
....

and then tweak the command found in `test.sh` accordingly.

Yes, we do run the benchmarks on host just to unpack / generate inputs. They are expected fail to run since they were build for the guest instead of host, including for x86_64 guest which has a different interpreter than the host's (see `file myexecutable`).

The rebuild is required because we unpack input files on the host.

Separating input sizes also allows to create smaller images when only running the smaller benchmarks.

This limitation exists because `parsecmgmt` generates the input files just before running via the Bash scripts, but we can't run `parsecmgmt` on gem5 as it is too slow!

One option would be to do that inside the guest with QEMU.

Also, we can't generate all input sizes at once, because many of them have the same name and would overwrite one another...

PARSEC simply wasn't designed with non native machines in mind...

====== PARSEC benchmark with parsecmgmt

Most users won't want to use this method because:

* running the `parsecmgmt` Bash scripts takes forever before it ever starts running the actual benchmarks on gem5
+
Running on QEMU is feasible, but not the main use case, since QEMU cannot be used for performance measurements
* it requires putting the full `.tar` inputs on the guest, which makes the image twice as large (1x for the `.tar`, 1x for the unpacked input files)

It would be awesome if it were possible to use this method, since this is what Parsec supports officially, and so:

* you don't have to dig into what raw command to run
* there is an easy way to run all the benchmarks in one go to test them out
* you can just run any of the benchmarks that you want

but it simply is not feasible in gem5 because it takes too long.

If you still want to run this, try it out with:

....
./build-buildroot \
--arch aarch64 \
--buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_PARSEC_BENCHMARK=y' \
--buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_PARSEC_BENCHMARK_PARSECMGMT=y' \
--buildroot-config 'BR2_TARGET_ROOTFS_EXT2_SIZE="3G"' \
--gem5 \
-- parsec-benchmark-reconfigure \
;
....

And then you can run it just as you would on the host:

....
cd /parsec/
bash
. env.sh
parsecmgmt -a run -p splash2x.fmm -i test
....

====== PARSEC uninstall

If you want to remove PARSEC later, Buildroot doesn't provide an automated package removal mechanism as documented at: link:https://github.com/buildroot/buildroot/blob/2017.08/docs/manual/rebuilding-packages.txt#L90[], but the following procedure should be satisfactory:

....
rm -rf \
"$(./getvar dl_dir)"/parsec-* \
"$(./getvar buildroot_build_dir)"/build/parsec-* \
"$(./getvar buildroot_build_dir)"/build/packages-file-list.txt \
"$(./getvar buildroot_build_dir)"/images/rootfs.* \
"$(./getvar buildroot_build_dir)"/target/parsec-* \
;
./build-buildroot --arch arm --gem5
....

====== PARSEC benchmark hacking

If you end up going inside link:submodules/parsec-benchmark[] to hack up the benchmark (you will!), these tips will be helpful.

Buildroot was not designed to deal with large images, and currently cross rebuilds are a bit slow, due to some image generation and validation steps.

A few workarounds are:

* develop in host first as much as you can. Our PARSEC fork supports it.
+
If you do this, don't forget to do a:
+
....
cd "$(./getvar parsec_src_dir)"
git clean -xdf .
....
before going for the cross compile build.
+
* patch Buildroot to work well, and keep cross compiling all the way. This should be totally viable, and we should do it.
+
Don't forget to explicitly rebuild PARSEC with:
+
....
./build-buildroot \
--arch arm \
--buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_PARSEC_BENCHMARK=y' \
--gem5 \
-- parsec-benchmark-reconfigure \
;
....
+
You may also want to test if your patches are still functionally correct inside of QEMU first, which is a faster emulator.
* sell your soul, and compile natively inside the guest. We won't do this, not only because it is evil, but also because Buildroot explicitly does not support it: https://buildroot.org/downloads/manual/manual.html#faq-no-compiler-on-target ARM employees have been known to do this: https://github.com/arm-university/arm-gem5-rsk/blob/aa3b51b175a0f3b6e75c9c856092ae0c8f2a7cdc/parsec_patches/qemu-patch.diff

=== gem5 kernel command line parameters

Analogous <>:

....
./run --arch arm --kernel-cli 'init=/poweroff.out' --gem5
....

Internals: when we give `--command-line=` to gem5, it overrides default command lines, including some mandatory ones which are required to boot properly.

Our run script hardcodes the require options in the default `--command-line` and appends extra options given by `-e`.

To find the default options in the first place, we removed `--command-line` and ran:

....
./run --arch arm --gem5
....

and then looked at the line of the Linux kernel that starts with:

....
Kernel command line:
....

[[gem5-gdb]]
=== gem5 GDB step debug

==== gem5 GDB step debug kernel
Analogous <>, on the first shell:

....
./run --arch arm --debug-guest --gem5
....

On the second shell:

....
./rungdb --arch arm --gem5
....

On a third shell:

....
./gem5-shell
....

When you want to break, just do a `Ctrl-C` on GDB shell, and then `continue`.

And we now see the boot messages, and then get a shell. Now try the `/count.sh` procedure described for QEMU: <>.

TODO: how to stop at `start_kernel`? gem5 listens for GDB by default, and therefore does not wait for a GDB connection to start like QEMU does. So when GDB connects we might have already passed `start_kernel`. Maybe `--debug-break=0` can be used? https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49296092/how-to-make-gem5-wait-for-gdb-to-connect-to-reliably-break-at-start-kernel-of-th

===== gem5 GDB step debug kernel aarch64

TODO: GDB fails with:

....
Reading symbols from vmlinux...done.
Remote debugging using localhost:7000
Remote 'g' packet reply is too long: 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
....

and gem5 says:

....
4107766500: system.remote_gdb: remote gdb attached
warn: Couldn't read data from debugger.
4107767500: system.remote_gdb: remote gdb detached
....

I've also tried the fix at: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27411621/remote-g-packet-reply-is-too-long-aarch64-arm64 by adding to the link:rungdb[] script:

....
-ex 'set tdesc filename out/aarch64/buildroot/build/gdb-7.11.1/./gdb/features/aarch64.xml'
....

but it did not help.

https://www.mail-archive.com/gem5-users@gem5.org/msg15383.html

==== gem5 GDB step debug userland process

We are unable to use `gdbserver` because of networking: <>

The alternative is to do as in <>.

First make sure that for your arch the kernel debugging on the given target works for the architecture: <>, on which we rely. When we last tested, this was not the case for aarch64: <>

Next, follow the exact same steps explained at <>, but passing `-g` to every command as usual.

But then TODO (I'll still go crazy one of those days): for `arm`, while debugging `/myinsmod.out /hello.ko`, after then line:

....
23 if (argc < 3) {
24 params = "";
....

I press `n`, it just runs the program until the end, instead of stopping on the next line of execution. The module does get inserted normally.

TODO:

....
./rungdb-user --arch arm --gem5 gem5-1.0/gem5/util/m5/m5 main
....

breaks when `m5` is run on guest, but does not show the source code.

=== gem5 checkpoint

Analogous to QEMU's <>, but better since it can be started from inside the guest, so we can easily checkpoint after a specific guest event, e.g. just before `init` is done.

Documentation: http://gem5.org/Checkpoints

....
./run --arch arm --gem5
....

In the guest, wait for the boot to end and run:

....
m5 checkpoint
....

where <> is a guest utility present inside the gem5 tree which we cross-compiled and installed into the guest.

To restore the checkpoint, kill the VM and run:

....
./run --arch arm --gem5 --gem5-restore 1
....

The `--gem5-restore` option restores the checkpoint that was created most recently.

Let's create a second checkpoint to see how it works, in guest:

....
date >f
m5 checkpoint
....

Kill the VM, and try it out:

....
./run --arch arm --gem5 --gem5-restore 1
....

Here we use `--gem5-restore 1` again, since the second snapshot we took is now the most recent one

Now in the guest:

....
cat f
....

contains the `date`. The file `f` wouldn't exist had we used the first checkpoint with `--gem5-restore 2`, which is the second most recent snapshot taken.

If you automate things with <> as in:

....
./run --arch arm --eval 'm5 checkpoint;m5 resetstats;dhrystone 1000;m5 exit' --gem5
....

Then there is no need to pass the kernel command line again to gem5 for replay:

....
./run --arch arm --gem5 --gem5-restore 1
....

since boot has already happened, and the parameters are already in the RAM of the snapshot.

==== gem5 checkpoint internals

Checkpoints are stored inside the `m5out` directory at:

....
"$(./getvar --gem5 run_dir)/m5out/cpt."
....

where `` is the cycle number at which the checkpoint was taken.

`fs.py` exposes the `-r N` flag to restore checkpoints, which N-th checkpoint with the largest ``: https://github.com/gem5/gem5/blob/e02ec0c24d56bce4a0d8636a340e15cd223d1930/configs/common/Simulation.py#L118

However, that interface is bad because if you had taken previous checkpoints, you have no idea what `N` to use, unless you memorize which checkpoint was taken at which cycle.

Therefore, just use our superior `--gem5-restore` flag, which uses directory timestamps to determine which checkpoint you created most recently.

The `-r N` integer value is just pure `fs.py` sugar, the backend at `m5.instantiate` just takes the actual tracepoint directory path as input.

[[gem5-restore-new-script]]
==== gem5 checkpoint restore and run a different script

You want to automate running several tests from a single pristine post-boot state.

The problem is that boot takes forever, and after the checkpoint, the memory and disk states are fixed, so you can't for example:

* hack up an existing rc script, since the disk is fixed
* inject new kernel boot command line options, since those have already been put into memory by the bootloader

There is however a few loopholes, <> being the simplest, as it reads whatever is present on the host.

So we can do it like:

....
# Boot, checkpoint and exit.
printf 'echo "setup run";m5 exit' > "$(./getvar gem5_readfile)"
./run --gem5 --eval 'm5 checkpoint;m5 readfile > a.sh;sh a.sh'

# Restore and run the first benchmark.
printf 'echo "first benchmark";m5 exit' > "$(./getvar gem5_readfile)"
./run --gem5 --gem5-restore 1

# Restore and run the second benchmark.
printf 'echo "second benchmark";m5 exit' > "$(./getvar gem5_readfile)"
./run --gem5 --gem5-restore 1

# If something weird happened, create an interactive shell to examine the system.
printf 'sh' > "$(./getvar gem5_readfile)"
./run --gem5 --gem5-restore 1
....

Since this is such a common setup, we provide some helpers for it as described at <>:

* link:rootfs_overlay/gem5.sh[rootfs_overlay/gem5.sh]. This script is analogous to gem5's in-tree link:https://github.com/gem5/gem5/blob/2b4b94d0556c2d03172ebff63f7fc502c3c26ff8/configs/boot/hack_back_ckpt.rcS[hack_back_ckpt.rcS], but with less noise.
* `./run --gem5-readfile` is a convenient way to set the `m5 readfile`

Other loophole possibilities include:

* <<9p>>
* <>
* `expect` as mentioned at: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7013137/automating-telnet-session-using-bash-scripts
+
....
#!/usr/bin/expect
spawn telnet localhost 3456
expect "# $"
send "pwd\r"
send "ls /\r"
send "m5 exit\r"
expect eof
....
+
This is ugly however as it is not deterministic.

https://www.mail-archive.com/gem5-users@gem5.org/msg15233.html

==== gem5 restore checkpoint with a different CPU

gem5 can switch to a different CPU model when restoring a checkpoint.

A common combo is to boot Linux with a fast CPU, make a checkpoint and then replay the benchmark of interest with a slower CPU.

An illustrative interactive run:

....
./run --arch arm --gem5
....

In guest:

....
m5 checkpoint
....

And then restore the checkpoint with a different CPU:

....
./run --arch arm --gem5 --gem5-restore 1 -- --caches --restore-with-cpu=HPI
....

=== Pass extra options to gem5

Pass options to the `fs.py` script:

* get help:
+
....
./run --gem5 -- -h
....
* boot with the more detailed and slow `HPI` CPU model:
+
....
./run --arch arm --gem5 -- --caches --cpu-type=HPI
....

Pass options to the `gem5` executable itself:

* get help:
+
....
./run --gem5-exe-args='-h' --gem5
....

=== gem5 exit after a number of instructions

Quit the simulation after `1024` instructions:

....
./run --gem5 -- -I 1024
....

Can be nicely checked with <>.

Cycles instead of instructions:

....
./run --gem5 -- --memory 1024
....

Otherwise the simulation runs forever by default.

=== m5ops

m5ops are magic instructions which lead gem5 to do magic things, like quitting or dumping stats.

Documentation: http://gem5.org/M5ops

There are two main ways to use m5ops:

* <>
* <>

`m5` is convenient if you only want to take snapshots before or after the benchmark, without altering its source code. It uses the <> as its backend.

`m5` cannot should / should not be used however:

* in bare metal setups
* when you want to call the instructions from inside interest points of your benchmark. Otherwise you add the syscall overhead to the benchmark, which is more intrusive and might affect results.
+
Why not just hardcode some <> as in our example instead, since you are going to modify the source of the benchmark anyways?

==== m5

`m5` is a guest command line utility that is installed and run on the guest, that serves as a CLI front-end for the <>

Its source is present in the gem5 tree: https://github.com/gem5/gem5/blob/6925bf55005c118dc2580ba83e0fa10b31839ef9/util/m5/m5.c

It is possible to guess what most tools do from the corresponding <>, but let's at least document the less obvious ones here.

===== m5 exit

End the simulation.

Sane Python scripts will exit gem5 with status 0, which is what `fs.py` does.

===== m5 fail

End the simulation with a failure exit event:

....
m5 fail 1
....

Sane Python scripts would use that as the exit status of gem5, which would be useful for testing purposes, but `fs.py` at 200281b08ca21f0d2678e23063f088960d3c0819 just prints an error message:

....
Simulated exit code not 0! Exit code is 1
....

and exits with status 0.

TODO: it used to exit non 0, be like that, but it actually got changed to just print the message. Why? https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/c/public/gem5/+/4880

`m5 fail` is just a superset of `m5 exit`, which is just:

....
m5 fail 0
....

as can be seen from the source: https://github.com/gem5/gem5/blob/50a57c0376c02c912a978c4443dd58caebe0f173/src/sim/pseudo_inst.cc#L303

===== m5 writefile

Send a guest file to the host. <<9p>> is a more advanced alternative.

Guest:

....
echo mycontent > myfileguest
m5 writefile myfileguest myfilehost
....

Host:

....
cat "$(./getvar --arch aarch64 --gem5 m5out_dir)/myfilehost"
....

Does not work for subdirectories, gem5 crashes:

....
m5 writefile myfileguest mydirhost/myfilehost
....

===== m5 readfile

Read a host file pointed to by the `fs.py --script` option to stdout.

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49516399/how-to-use-m5-readfile-and-m5-execfile-in-gem5/49538051#49538051

Host:

....
date > "$(./getvar gem5_readfile)"
....

Guest:

....
m5 readfile
....

Outcome: date shows on guest.

===== m5 initparam

Ermm, just another <> that only takes integers and only from CLI options? Is this software so redundant?

Host:

....
./run --gem5 --gem5-restore 1 -- --initparam 13
./run --gem5 --gem5-restore 1 -- --initparam 42
....

Guest:

....
m5 initparm
....

Outputs the given paramter.

===== m5 execfile

Trivial combination of `m5 readfile` + execute the script.

Host:

....
printf '#!/bin/sh
echo asdf
' > "$(./getvar gem5_readfile)"
....

Guest:

....
touch /tmp/execfile
chmod +x /tmp/execfile
m5 execfile
....

Outcome:

....
adsf
....

==== m5ops instructions

The executable `/m5ops.out` illustrates how to hard code with inline assembly the m5ops that you are most likely to hack into the benchmark you are analysing:

....
# checkpoint
/m5ops.out c

# dumpstats
/m5ops.out d

# exit
/m5ops.out e

# dump resetstats
/m5ops.out r
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/m5ops.h[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/m5ops.c[]

That executable is of course a subset of <> and useless by itself: its goal is only illustrate how to hardcode some <> yourself as one-liners.

In theory, the cleanest way to add m5ops to your benchmarks would be to do exactly what the `m5` tool does:

* include link:https://github.com/gem5/gem5/blob/05c4c2b566ce351ab217b2bd7035562aa7a76570/include/gem5/asm/generic/m5ops.h[`include/gem5/asm/generic/m5ops.h`]
* link with the `.o` file under `util/m5` for the correct arch, e.g. `m5op_arm_A64.o` for aarch64.

However, I think it is usually not worth the trouble of hacking up the build system of the benchmark to do this, and I recommend just hardcoding in a few raw instructions here and there, and managing it with version control + `sed`.

Related: https://www.mail-archive.com/gem5-users@gem5.org/msg15418.html

===== m5ops instructions interface

Let's study how <> uses them:

* link:https://github.com/gem5/gem5/blob/05c4c2b566ce351ab217b2bd7035562aa7a76570/include/gem5/asm/generic/m5ops.h[`include/gem5/asm/generic/m5ops.h`]: defines the magic constants that represent the instructions
* link:https://github.com/gem5/gem5/blob/05c4c2b566ce351ab217b2bd7035562aa7a76570/util/m5/m5op_arm_A64.S[`util/m5/m5op_arm_A64.S`]: use the magic constants that represent the instructions using C preprocessor magic
* link:https://github.com/gem5/gem5/blob/05c4c2b566ce351ab217b2bd7035562aa7a76570/util/m5/m5.c[`util/m5/m5.c`]: the actual executable. Gets linked to `m5op_arm_A64.S` which defines a function for each m5op.

We notice that there are two different implementations for each arch:

* magic instructions, which don't exist in the corresponding arch
* magic memory addresses on a given page

TODO: what is the advantage of magic memory addresses? Because you have to do more setup work by telling the kernel never to touch the magic page. For the magic instructions, the only thing that could go wrong is if you run some crazy kind of fuzzing workload that generates random instructions.

Then, in aarch64 magic instructions for example, the lines:

....
.macro m5op_func, name, func, subfunc
.globl \name
\name:
.long 0xff000110 | (\func << 16) | (\subfunc << 12)
ret
....

define a simple function function for each m5op. Here we see that:

* `0xff000110` is a base mask for the magic non-existing instruction
* `\func` and `\subfunc` are OR-applied on top of the base mask, and define m5op this is.
+
Those values will loop over the magic constants defined in `m5ops.h` with the deferred preprocessor idiom.
+
For example, `exit` is `0x21` due to:
+
....
#define M5OP_EXIT 0x21
....

Finally, `m5.c` calls the defined functions as in:

....
m5_exit(ints[0]);
....

Therefore, the runtime "argument" that gets passed to the instruction, e.g. the delay in ticks until the exit for `m5 exit`, gets passed directly through the link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calling_convention#ARM_(A64)[aarch64 calling convention].

Keep in mind that for all archs, `m5.c` does the calls with 64-bit integers:

....
uint64_t ints[2] = {0,0};
parse_int_args(argc, argv, ints, argc);
m5_fail(ints[1], ints[0]);
....

Therefore, for example:

* aarch64 uses `x0` for the first argument and `x1` for the second, since each is 64 bits log already
* arm uses `r0` and `r1` for the first argument, and `r2` and `r3` for the second, since each register is only 32 bits long

That convention specifies that `x0` to `x7` contain the function arguments, so `x0` contains the first argument, and `x1` the second.

In our `m5ops` example, we just hardcode everything in the assembly one-liners we are producing.

We ignore the `\subfunc` since it is always 0 on the ops that interest us.

===== m5op annotations

`include/gem5/asm/generic/m5ops.h` also describes some annotation instructions.

What they mean: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50583962/what-are-the-gem5-annotations-mops-magic-instructions-and-how-to-use-them

=== gem5 arm Linux kernel patches

https://gem5.googlesource.com/arm/linux/ contains an ARM Linux kernel fork with a few gem5 specific Linux kernel patches on top of mainline created by ARM Holdings.

Those patches look interesting, but it is obviously not possible to understand what they actually do from their commit message.

So let's explain them one by one here as we understand them:

* `drm: Add component-aware simple encoder` allows you to see images through VNC: <>
* `gem5: Add support for gem5's extended GIC mode` adds support for more than 8 cores: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50248067/how-to-run-a-gem5-arm-aarch64-full-system-simulation-with-fs-py-with-more-than-8/50248068#5024806

=== m5term

We use the `m5term` in-tree executable to connect to the terminal instead of a direct `telnet`.

If you use `telnet` directly, it mostly works, but certain interactive features don't, e.g.:

* up and down arrows for history havigation
* tab to complete paths
* `Ctrl-C` to kill processes

TODO understand in detail what `m5term` does differently than `telnet`.

=== gem5 stats

Lets try to understand some stats better.

==== rdtsc

link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Stamp_Counter[x86 instruction] that returns the cycle count since reset:

....
./build-buildroot --gem5 --kernel-modules && \
./run --eval '/rdtsc.out;m5 exit;' --gem5 && \
./gem5-stat && \
:;
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/rdtsc.c[]

`rdtsc` outputs a cycle count which we compare with gem5's `gem5-stat`:

* `3828578153`: `rdtsc`
* `3830832635`: `gem5-stat`

which gives pretty close results, and serve as a nice sanity check that the cycle counter is coherent.

It is also nice to see that `rdtsc` is a bit smaller than the `stats.txt` value, since the latter also includes the exec syscall for `m5`.

Bibliography:

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Stamp_Counter
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9887839/clock-cycle-count-wth-gcc/9887979

===== pmccntr

TODO We didn't manage to find a working ARM analogue to <>: link:packages/kernel_modules/pmccntr.c[] is oopsing, and even it if weren't, it likely won't give the cycle count since boot since it needs to be activate before it starts counting anything:

* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/40454157/is-there-an-equivalent-instruction-to-rdtsc-in-arm
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/31620375/arm-cortex-a7-returning-pmccntr-0-in-kernel-mode-and-illegal-instruction-in-u/31649809#31649809
* https://blog.regehr.org/archives/794

=== gem5 Python scripts without rebuild

We have made a crazy setup that allows you to just `cd` into `submodules/gem5`, and edit Python scripts directly there.

This is not normally possible with Buildroot, since normal Buildroot packages first copy files to the output directory (`$(./getvar -a build_dir)/`), and then build there.

So if you modified the Python scripts with this setup, you would still need to `./build` to copy the modified files over.

For gem5 specifically however, we have hacked up the build so that we `cd` into the `submodules/gem5` tree, and then do an link:https://www.mail-archive.com/gem5-users@gem5.org/msg15421.html[out of tree] build to `out/common/gem5`.

Another advantage of this method is the we factor out the `arm` and `aarch64` gem5 builds which are identical and large, as well as the smaller arch generic pieces.

Using Buildroot for gem5 is still convenient because we use it to:

* to cross build `m5` for us
* check timestamps and skip the gem5 build when it is not requested

The out of build tree is required, because otherwise Buildroot would copy the output build of all archs to each arch directory, resulting in `arch^2` build copies, which is significant.

=== gem5 fs_bigLITTLE

By default, we use `configs/example/fs.py` script.

The `--gem5-biglittle` option enables the alternative `configs/example/arm/fs_bigLITTLE.py` script instead.

First apply:

....
patch -d "$(./getvar gem5_src_dir)" -p 1 < patches/manual/gem5-biglittle.patch
....

then:

....
./run --arch aarch64 --gem5 --gem5-biglittle
....

Advantages over `fs.py`:

* more representative of mobile ARM SoCs, which almost always have big little cluster
* simpler than `fs.py`, and therefore easier to understand and modify

Disadvantages over `fs.py`:

* only works for ARM, not other archs
* not as many configuration options as `fs.py`, many things are hardcoded

We setup 2 big and 2 small CPUs, but `cat /proc/cpuinfo` shows 4 identical CPUs instead of 2 of two different types, likely because gem5 does not expose some informational register much like the caches: https://www.mail-archive.com/gem5-users@gem5.org/msg15426.html `config.ini` does show that the two big ones are `DerivO3CPU` and the small ones are `MinorCPU`.

TODO: why is the `--dtb` required despite `fs_bigLITTLE.py` having a DTB generation capability? Without it, nothing shows on terminal, and the simulation terminates with `simulate() limit reached @ 18446744073709551615`. The magic `vmlinux.vexpress_gem5_v1.20170616` works however without a DTB.

Tested on: link:http://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/18c1c823feda65f8b54cd38e261c282eee01ed9f[18c1c823feda65f8b54cd38e261c282eee01ed9f]

=== gem5 unit tests

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/52279971/how-to-run-the-gem5-unit-tests

Not currently exposed here.

== Buildroot

=== Rebuild Buildroot packages

After making changes to a Buildroot package, you must explicitly request it to be rebuilt.

For example, if you modify the kernel modules, which is a Buildroot package, you must rebuild with:

....
./build-buildroot -- kernel_modules-reconfigure
....

where `kernel_modules` is the name of our Buildroot package that contains the kernel modules.

Since rebuilding this package is such a common case, we have a shortcut for it:

....
./build-buildroot --kernel-modules
....

The rebuild must be requested explicitly, otherwise the package does not rebuild, even if its files were modified.

This is because Buildroot builds dozens of packages, and just reading there Makefiles and checking the stamps generates too much overhead

So you must tell Buildroot yourself about the rebuild.

=== Custom Buildroot configs

We provide the following mechanisms:

* `./build-buildroot --buildroot-config-fragment data/br2`: append the Buildroot configuration file `data/br2` to a single build. Must be passed every time you run `./build`. The format is the same as link:br2/default[].
* `./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_SOME_OPTION="myval"'`: append a single option to a single build.

For example, if you decide to <> after an initial build is finished, you must <> and rebuild:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_OPTIMIZE_3=y' kernel_modules-dirclean kernel_modules-reconfigure
....

as explained at: https://buildroot.org/downloads/manual/manual.html#rebuild-pkg

The clean is necessary because the source files didn't change, so `make` would just check the timestamps and not build anything.

You will then likely want to make those more permanent with: <>

==== Enable Buildroot compiler optimizations

If you are benchmarking compiled programs instead of hand written assembly, remember that we configure Buildroot to disable optimizations by default with:

....
BR2_OPTIMIZE_0=y
....

to improve the debugging experience.

You will likely want to change that to:

....
BR2_OPTIMIZE_3=y
....

Our link:packages/kernel_modules/user[] package correctly forwards the Buildroot options to the build with `$(TARGET_CONFIGURE_OPTS)`, so you don't have to do any extra work.

Don't forget to do that if you are <> with your own build system.

Then, you have two choices:

* if you already have a full `-O0` build, you can choose to rebuild just your package of interest to save some time as described at: <>
+
....
./build-buildroot \
--buildroot-config 'BR2_OPTIMIZE_3=y' \
-- \
kernel_modules-dirclean \
kernel_modules-reconfigure \
;
....
+
However, this approach might not be representative since calls to an unoptimized libc and other libraries will have a negative performance impact.
+
Maybe you can get away with rebuilding libc, but I'm not sure that it will work properly.
+
Kernel-wise it should be fine though due to: <>
* <> and rebuild from scratch:
+
....
mv out out~
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_OPTIMIZE_3=y'
....

=== Find Buildroot options with make menuconfig

`make menuconfig` is a convenient way to find Buildroot configurations:

....
cd "$(./getvar buildroot_build_dir)"
make menuconfig
....

Hit `/` and search for the settings.

Save and quit.

....
diff -u .config.olg .config
....

Then copy and paste the diff additions to link:br2/default[] to make them permanent.

=== Change user

At startup, we login automatically as the `root` user.

If you want to switch to another user to test some permissions, we have already created an `user0` user through the link:user_table[] file, and you can just login as that user with:

....
login user0
....

and password:

....
a
....

Then test that the user changed with:

....
id
....

which gives:

....
uid=1000(user0) gid=1000(user0) groups=1000(user0)
....

=== ccache

We have link:https://buildroot.org/downloads/manual/manual.html#ccache[enabled ccached] builds by default.

`BR2_CCACHE_USE_BASEDIR=n` is used, which means that:

* absolute paths are used and GDB can find source files
* but builds are not reused across separated LKMC directories

ccache can considerably speed up builds when you:

* are switching between multiple configurations for a given package to bisect something out, as mentioned at: <>
* clean the build because things stopped working. We store the cache outside of this repository, so you can nuke away without fear

The default ccache environment variables are honored if you have them set, which we recommend you do. E.g., in your `.bashrc`:

....
export CCACHE_DIR=~/.ccache
export CCACHE_MAXSIZE="20G"
....

The choice basically comes down to:

* should I store my cache on my HD or SSD?
* how big is my build, and how many build configurations do I need to keep around at a time?

If you don't set it, the default is to use `~/.buildroot-ccache` with `5G`, which is a bit small for us.

I find it very relaxing to watch ccache at work with:

....
watch -n1 'make -C "$(./getvar buildroot_build_dir)" ccache-stats'
....

or if you have it installed on host and the environment variables exported simply with:

....
watch -n1 'ccache -s'
....

while a build is going on in another terminal and my cooler is humming. Especially when the hit count goes up ;-) The joys of system programming.

=== Add new Buildroot packages

First, see if you can't get away without actually adding a new package, for example:

* if you have a standalone C file with no dependencies besides the C standard library to be compiled with GCC, just add a new file under link:packages/kernel_modules/user[] and you are done
* if you have a dependency on a library, first check if Buildroot doesn't have a package for it already with `ls buildroot/package`. If yes, just enable that package as explained at: <>

If none of those methods are flexible enough for you, create a new package as follows:

* use link:packages/sample_package[] as a starting point
* fork this repository, and modify that package to do what you want
* read the comments on that package to get an idea of how to start
* check the main manual for more complicated things: https://buildroot.org/downloads/manual/manual.html
* don't forget to rebuild with:
+
....
./build-buildroot -- sample_package-reconfigure
./run --eval-busybox '/sample_package.out'
....
+
if you make any changes to that package after the initial build: <>

=== Build variants

It often happens that you are comparing two versions of the build, a good and a bad one, and trying to figure out why the bad one is bad.

Our build variants system allows you to keep multipmle built versions of all major components, so that you can easily switching between running one or the other.

==== Buildroot build variants

If you want to have multiple versions of the GCC toolchain or root filesystem, this is for you:

....
# Build master.
./build-buildroot

# Build another branch.
git -C "$(./getvar buildroot_src_dir)" checkout 2018.05
./build-buildroot --buildroot-build-id 2018.05

# Restore master.
git -C "$(./getvar buildroot_src_dir)" checkout -

# Run master.
./run

# Run another branch.
./run --buildroot-build-id 2018.05
....

==== Linux kernel build variants

Since the Linux kernel is so important to us, we have created a convenient dedicated mechanism for it.

For example, if you want to keep two builds around, one for the latest Linux version, and the other for Linux `v4.16`:

....
./build-buildroot
git -C "$(./getvar linux_src_dir)" checkout v4.16
./build-buildroot --linux-build-id v4.16
git -C "$(./getvar linux_src_dir)" checkout -
./run
./run --linux-build-id v4.16
....

The `-L` option should be passed to all scripts that support it, much like `-a` for the <>, e.g. to step debug:

.....
./rungdb --linux-build-id v4.16
.....

This technique is implemented semi-hackishly by moving symlinks around inside the Buildroot build dir at build time, and selecting the right build directory at runtime.

==== QEMU build variants

Analogous to the <> but with the `-Q` option instead:

....
./build-qemu
git -C "$(./getvar qemu_src_dir)" checkout v2.12.0
./build-qemu --qemu-build-id v2.12.0
git -C "$(./getvar qemu_src_dir)" checkout -
./run
./run --qemu-build-id v2.12.0
....

==== gem5 build variants

Analogous to the <> but with the `-M` option instead:

....
# Build master.
./build-gem5

# Build another branch.
git -C "$(./getvar gem5_src_dir)" checkout some-branch
./build-gem5 --gem5-build-id some-branch

# Restore master.
git -C "$(./getvar gem5_src_dir)" checkout -

# Run master.
./run --gem5

# Run another branch.
git -C "$(./getvar gem5_src_dir)" checkout some-branch
./run --gem5-build-id some-branch --gem5
....

Don't forget however that gem5 has Python scripts in its source code tree, and that those must match the source code of a given build.

Therefore, you can't forget to checkout to the sources to that of the corresponding build before running, unless you explicitly tell gem5 to use a non-default source tree with `--gem5-worktree`.

This becomes inevitable when you want to launch <>.

===== gem5 simultaneous runs with build variants

In order to checkout multiple gem5 builds and run them simultaneously, you also need to use the `--gem5-worktree` flag:

....
# Build master.
./build-gem5

# Build another branch.
git -C "$(./getvar linux_src_dir)" checkout some-branch
./build-gem5 --gem5-build-id some-branch --gem5-worktree some-branch

# Restore master.
git -C "$(./getvar linux_src_dir)" checkout -

# Run master.
./run --gem5 --run-id 0 &>/dev/null &

# Run another branch using the worktree for the scripts,
# without the need to check out anything.
./run --gem5 --gem5-build-id some-branch --gem5-worktree some-branch --run-id 1 &>/dev/null &
....

When `--gem5-worktree` is not given, the default source tree under `submodules/gem5` is used.

The `--gem5-worktree ` determines the location of the gem5 tree to be used for both:

* the input C files of the build at build time
* the Python scripts to be used at runtime

The difference between `--gem5-build-id` and `--gem5-worktree` is that `--gem5-build-id` specifies the gem5 build output directory, while `--gem5-worktree` specifies the source input directory.

If `--gem5-worktree ` is given, the directory used is `data/gem5/`, and:

* if that directory does not exist, create a `git worktree` at a branch `wt/` on current commit of `submodules/gem5` there.
+
The `wt/` branch name prefix stands for `WorkTree`, and is done to allow us to checkout to a test `some-branch` branch under `submodules/gem5` and still use `--gem5-worktree some-branch`, without conflict for the worktree branch, which can only be checked out once.
* otherwise, leave that worktree untouched, without updating it

Therefore, future builds for `worktree-id` will not automatically modify the revision of the worktree, and to do that you must manually check it out:

....
git -C data/gem5/some-branch checkout some-branch-v2
./build-buildroot --gem5 --gem5-build-id some-branch --gem5-worktree some-branch
....

`--gem5-worktree` is only required if you have multiple gem5 checkouts, e.g. it would not be required for multiple builds of the same tree, e.g. a <> and a non-debug one.

===== gem5 debug build

Built and run `gem5.debug`, which has optimizations turned off unlike the default `gem5.opt`:

....
./build-gem5 --arch aarch64 --gem5-build-id debug --gem5-build-type debug
./run --arch aarch64 --gem5 --gem5-build-id debug --gem5-build-type debug
....

We generate a separate build folder with `--gem5-build-id` just to prevent the `opt` build from getting overwritten, so we can keep both around at the same time.

A Linux kernel boot was about 14 times slower than opt at 71e927e63bda6507d5a528f22c78d65099bdf36f between the commands:

....
./run --arch aarch64 --eval 'm5 exit' --gem5 --linux-build-id v4.16
./run --arch aarch64 --eval 'm5 exit' --gem5 --linux-build-id v4.16 --gem5-build-id debug --gem5-build-type debug
....

Therefore the performance different is very big, making debug mode almost unusable.

==== Generic package build variants

This hack-ish technique allows us to rebuild just one package at a time:

....
./build-buildroot KERNEL_MODULE_VERSION=mybranch
....

and now you can see that a new version of `kernel_modules` was built and put inside the image:

....
ls "$(./getvar build_dir)/kernel_modules-mybranch"
....

Unfortunately we don't have a nice runtime selection with `./run` implemented currently, you have to manually move packages around.

TODO: is there a way to do it nicely for `*_OVERRIDE_SRCDIR` packages from link:buildroot_override[]? I tried:

....
./build-buildroot -l LINUX_VERSION=mybranch
....

but it fails with:

....
linux/linux.mk:492: *** LINUX_SITE cannot be empty when LINUX_SOURCE is not. Stop.
....

and theI tried:

....
./build-buildroot -l LINUX_VERSION=mybranch LINUX_SITE="$(pwd)/linux"
....

but it feels hackish, and the build was slower than normal, looks like the build was single threaded?

=== BR2_TARGET_ROOTFS_EXT2_SIZE

When adding new large package to the Buildroot root filesystem, it may fail with the message:

....
Maybe you need to increase the filesystem size (BR2_TARGET_ROOTFS_EXT2_SIZE)
....

The solution is to simply add:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config 'BR2_TARGET_ROOTFS_EXT2_SIZE="512M"'
....

where 512Mb is "large enough".

Note that dots cannot be used as in `1.5G`, so just use Megs as in `1500M` instead.

Unfortunately, TODO we don't have a perfect way to find the right value for `BR2_TARGET_ROOTFS_EXT2_SIZE`. One good heuristic is:

....
du -hsx "$(./getvar --arch arm target_dir)"
....

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49211241/is-there-a-way-to-automatically-detect-the-minimum-required-br2-target-rootfs-ex

libguestfs is very promising link:https://serverfault.com/questions/246835/convert-directory-to-qemu-kvm-virtual-disk-image/916697#916697[], in particular link:http://libguestfs.org/guestfish.1.html#vfs-minimum-size[`vfs-minimum-size`].

One way to overcome this problem is to mount benchmarks from host instead of adding them to the root filesystem, e.g. with: <<9p>>.

[[rpath]]
=== Buildroot rebuild is slow when the root filesystem is large

Buildroot is not designed for large root filesystem images, and the rebuild becomes very slow when we add a large package to it.

This is due mainly to the `pkg-generic` `GLOBAL_INSTRUMENTATION_HOOKS` sanitation which go over the entire tree doing complex operations... I no like, in particular `check_bin_arch` and `check_host_rpath`

We have applied link:https://github.com/cirosantilli/buildroot/commit/983fe7910a73923a4331e7d576a1e93841d53812[983fe7910a73923a4331e7d576a1e93841d53812] to out Buildroot fork which removes part of the pain by not running:

....
>>> Sanitizing RPATH in target tree
....

which contributed to a large part of the slowness.

Test how Buildroot deals with many files with:

....
./build-buildroot \
--buildroot-config 'BR2_PACKAGE_LKMC_MANY_FILES=y' \
-- \
lkmc_many_files-reconfigure \
|& \
ts -i '%.s' \
;
./build-buildroot |& ts -i '%.s'
....

and notice how the second build, which does not rebuilt the package at all, still gets stuck in the `RPATH` check forever without our Buildroot patch.

=== Report upstream bugs

When asking for help on upstream repositories outside of this repository, you will need to provide the commands that you are running in detail without referencing our scripts.

For example, QEMU developers will only want to see the final QEMU command that you are running.

For the configure and build, search for the `Building` and `Configuring` parts of the build log, then try to strip down all Buildroot related paths, to keep only options that seem to matter.

We make that easy by building commands as strings, and then echoing them before evaling.

So for example when you run:

....
./run --arch arm
....

the very first stdout output of that script is the actual QEMU command that is being run.

The command is also saved to a file for convenience:

....
cat "$(./getvar --arch arm run_cmd_file)"
....

which you can manually modify and execute during your experiments later:

....
vim "$(./getvar --arch arm run_cmd_file)"
./"$(./getvar --arch arm run_cmd_file)"
....

Next, you will also want to give the relevant images to save them time. Zip the images with:

....
./build-all -G
./zip-img
....

Source: link:zip-img[]

This generates a zip file:

....
out/lkmc-*.zip
....

which you can then upload somewhere, e.g. GitHub release assets as in https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/releases/tag/test-replay-arm

Finally, do a clone of the relevant repository out of tree and reproduce the bug there, to be 100% sure that it is an actual upstream bug, and to provide developers with the cleanest possible commands.

For QEMU and Buildroot, we have the following convenient setups respectively:

* https://github.com/cirosantilli/qemu-test
* https://github.com/cirosantilli/buildroot/tree/in-tree-package-master

== Benchmark this repo

In this section document how benchmark builds and runs of this repo, and how to investigate what the bottleneck is.

Ideally, we should setup an automated build server that benchmarks those things continuously for us, but our <> attempt failed.

So currently, we are running benchmarks manually when it seems reasonable and uploading them to: https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat-regression

All benchmarks were run on the <> machine, unless stated otherwise.

Run all benchmarks and upload the results:

....
cd ..
git clone https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat-regression
cd -
./bench-all -A
....

=== Travis

We tried to automate it on Travis with link:.travis.yml[] but it hits the current 50 minute job timeout: https://travis-ci.org/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/builds/296454523 And I bet it would likely hit a disk maxout either way if it went on.

=== Benchmark this repo benchmarks

==== Benchmark Linux kernel boot

Benchmark all:

....
./build-all
./bench-boot
cat "$(./getvar bench_boot)"
....

Sample results at 2bddcc2891b7e5ac38c10d509bdfc1c8fe347b94:

....
cmd ./run --arch x86_64 --eval '/poweroff.out'
time 7.46
exit_status 0

cmd ./run --arch x86_64 --eval '/poweroff.out' --kvm
time 7.61
exit_status 0

cmd ./run --arch x86_64 --eval '/poweroff.out' --trace exec_tb
time 8.04
exit_status 0
instructions 1665023

cmd ./run --arch x86_64 --eval 'm5 exit' --gem5
time 254.32
exit_status 0
instructions 380799337

cmd ./run --arch arm --eval '/poweroff.out'
time 5.56
exit_status 0

cmd ./run --arch arm --eval '/poweroff.out' --trace exec_tb
time 5.78
exit_status 0
instructions 742319

cmd ./run --arch aarch64 --eval '/poweroff.out'
time 4.85
exit_status 0

cmd ./run --arch aarch64 --eval '/poweroff.out' --trace exec_tb
time 4.91
exit_status 0
instructions 245471

cmd ./run --arch aarch64 --eval 'm5 exit' --gem5
time 68.71
exit_status 0
instructions 120555566
....

TODO: aarch64 gem5 and QEMU use the same kernel, so why is the gem5 instruction count so much much higher?

===== gem5 arm HPI boot takes much longer than aarch64

TODO 62f6870e4e0b384c4bd2d514116247e81b241251 takes 33 minutes to finish at 62f6870e4e0b384c4bd2d514116247e81b241251:

....
cmd ./run --arch arm --eval 'm5 exit' --gem5 -- --caches --cpu-type=HPI
....

while aarch64 only 7 minutes.

I had previously documented on README 10 minutes at: 2eff007f7c3458be240c673c32bb33892a45d3a0 found with `git log` search for `10 minutes`. But then I checked out there, run it, and kernel panics before any messages come out. Lol?

Logs of the runs can be found at: https://github.com/cirosantilli-work/gem5-issues/tree/0df13e862b50ae20fcd10bae1a9a53e55d01caac/arm-hpi-slow

The cycle count is higher for `arm`, 350M vs 250M for `aarch64`, not nowhere near the 5x runtime time increase.

A quick look at the boot logs show that they are basically identical in structure: the same operations appear more ore less on both, and there isn't one specific huge time pit in arm: it is just that every individual operation seems to be taking a lot longer.

===== gem5 x86_64 DerivO3CPU boot panics

https://github.com/cirosantilli-work/gem5-issues/issues/2

....
Kernel panic - not syncing: Attempted to kill the idle task!
....

==== Benchmark builds

The build times are calculated after doing `./configure` and link:https://buildroot.org/downloads/manual/manual.html#_offline_builds[`make source`], which downloads the sources, and basically benchmarks the <>.

Sample build time at 2c12b21b304178a81c9912817b782ead0286d282: 28 minutes, 15 with full ccache hits. Breakdown: 19% GCC, 13% Linux kernel, 7% uclibc, 6% host-python, 5% host-qemu, 5% host-gdb, 2% host-binutils

Single file change on `./build-buildroot kernel_modules-reconfigure`: 7 seconds.

Buildroot automatically stores build timestamps as milliseconds since Epoch. Convert to minutes:

....
awk -F: 'NR==1{start=$1}; END{print ($1 - start)/(60000.0)}' "$(./getvar build_dir)/build-time.log"
....

Or to conveniently do a clean build without affecting your current one:

....
./bench-all -b
cat ../linux-kernel-module-cheat-regression/*/build-time.log
....

===== Find which packages are making the build slow and big

....
./build-buildroot --skip-configure -- graph-build graph-size graph-depends
cd "$(./getvar buildroot_build_dir)/graphs"
xdg-open build.pie-packages.pdf
xdg-open graph-depends.pdf
xdg-open graph-size.pdf
....

Our philosophy is:

* keep the root filesystem as tiny as possible to make prebuilts small. It is easy to add new packages once you have the toolchain.
* enable every feature possible on the toolchain (GCC, Binutils), because changes imply Buildroot rebuilds
* runtime is sacred. Faster systems are:
+
--
** easier to understand
** run faster, which is specially for <> which is slow
--
+
Runtime basically just comes down to how we configure the Linux kernel, since in the root filesystem all that matters is `init=`, and that is easy to control.
+
One possibility we could play with is to build loadable modules instead of built-in modules to reduce runtime, but make it easier to get started with the modules.

[[prebuilt-toolchain]]
====== Buildroot use prebuilt host toolchain

The biggest build time hog is always GCC, and it does not look like we can use a precompiled one: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10833672/buildroot-environment-with-host-toolchain

===== Benchmark Buildroot build baseline

This is the minimal build we could expect to get away with.

We will run this whenever the Buildroot submodule is updated.

On the upstream Buildroot repo at :

....
./bench-all -B
....

Sample time on 2017.08: 11 minutes, 7 with full ccache hits. Breakdown: 47% GCC, 15% Linux kernel, 9% uclibc, 5% host-binutils. Conclusions:

* we have bloated our kernel build 3x with all those delicious features :-)
* GCC time increased 1.5x by our bloat, but its percentage of the total was greatly reduced, due to new packages being introduced.
+
`make graph-depends` shows that most new dependencies come from QEMU and GDB, which we can't get rid of anyways.

A quick look at the system monitor reveals that the build switches between times when:

* CPUs are at a max, memory is fine. So we must be CPU / memory speed bound. I bet that this happens during heavy compilation.
* CPUs are not at a max, and memory is fine. So we are likely disk bound. I bet that this happens during configuration steps.

This is consistent with the fact that ccache reduces the build time only partially, since ccache should only overcome the CPU bound compilation steps, but not the disk bound ones.

The instructions counts varied very little between the baseline and LKMC, so runtime overhead is not a big deal apparently.

Size:

* `bzImage`: 4.4M
* `rootfs.cpio`: 1.6M

Zipped: 4.9M, `rootfs.cpio` deflates 50%, `bzImage` almost nothing.

===== Benchmark gem5 build

How long it takes to build gem5 itself.

We will update this whenever the gem5 submoule is updated.

Sample results at gem5 2a9573f5942b5416fb0570cf5cb6cdecba733392: 10 to 12 minutes.

Get results with:

....
./bench-all --gem5
tail -n+1 ../linux-kernel-module-cheat-regression/*/gem5-bench-build-*.txt
....

However, I have noticed that for some builds, with the exact same commands, it just take way longer sometimes, but I haven't been able to pin it down: https://github.com/cirosantilli-work/gem5-issues/issues/10

=== Benchmark machines

==== P51

Lenovo ThinkPad link:https://www3.lenovo.com/gb/en/laptops/thinkpad/p-series/P51/p/22TP2WPWP51[P51 laptop]:

* 2500 USD in 2018 (high end)
* Intel Core i7-7820HQ Processor (8MB Cache, up to 3.90GHz) (4 cores 8 threads)
* 32GB(16+16) DDR4 2400MHz SODIMM
* 512GB SSD PCIe TLC OPAL2
* NVIDIA Quadro M1200 Mobile, latest Ubuntu supported proprietary driver
* Latest Ubuntu

=== Benchmark Internets

==== 38Mbps

2c12b21b304178a81c9912817b782ead0286d282:

* shallow clone of all submodules: 4 minutes.
* `make source`: 2 minutes

Google M-lab speed test: 36.4Mbps

=== Benchmark this repo bibliography

gem5:

* link:https://www.mail-archive.com/gem5-users@gem5.org/msg15262.html[] which parts of the gem5 code make it slow
* what are the minimum system requirements:
** https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47997565/gem5-system-requirements-for-decent-performance/48941793#48941793
** https://github.com/gem5/gem5/issues/25

== About this repo

=== Run command after boot

If you just want to run a command after boot ends without thinking much about it, just use the `--eval-busybox` option, e.g.:

....
./run --eval-busybox 'echo hello'
....

This option passes the command to our init scripts through <>, and uses a few clever tricks along the way to make it just work.

See <> for the gory details.

=== Default command line arguments

It gets annoying to retype `--arch aarch64` for every single command, or to remember `--buildroot-config` setups.

So simplify that, do:

....
cp config.example data/config
....

and then edit the `data/config` file to your needs.

=== Clean the build

You did something crazy, and nothing seems to work anymore?

All our build outputs are stored under `out/`, so the coarsest and most effective thing you can do is:

....
rm -rf out
....

This implies a full rebuild for all archs however, so you might first want to explore finer grained cleans first.

All our individual `build-*` scripts have a `--clean` option to completely nuke their builds:

....
./build-gem5 --clean
./build-qemu --clean
./build-buildroot --clean
....

Verify with:

....
ls "$(./getvar qemu_build_dir)"
ls "$(./getvar gem5_build_dir)"
ls "$(./getvar buildroot_build_dir)"
....

Note that host tools like QEMU and gem5 store all archs in a single directory to factor out build objects, so cleaning one arch will clean all of them.

To only nuke one one Buildroot package, we can use the link:https://buildroot.org/downloads/manual/manual.html#pkg-build-steps[]`-dirclean`] Buildroot target:

....
./build-buildroot --no-all -- -dirclean
....

e.g.:

....
./build-buildroot --no-all -- kernel_modules-dirclean
....

Verify with:

....
ls "$(./getvar build_dir)"
....

=== Build the documentation

You don't need to depend on GitHub:

....
./build-doc
xdg-open out/README.html
....

Source: link:build-doc[]

=== Simultaneous runs

When doing long simulations sweeping across multiple system parameters, it becomes fundamental to do multiple simulations in parallel.

This is specially true for gem5, which runs much slower than QEMU, and cannot use multiple host cores to speed up the simulation: link:https://github.com/cirosantilli-work/gem5-issues/issues/15[], so the only way to parallelize is to run multiple instances in parallel.

This also has a good synergy with <>.

First shell:

....
./run
....

Another shell:

....
./run --run-id 1
....

and now you have two QEMU instances running in parallel.

The default run id is `0`.

Our scripts solve two difficulties with simultaneous runs:

* port conflicts, e.g. GDB and link:gem5-shell[]
* output directory conflicts, e.g. traces and gem5 stats overwriting one another

Each run gets a separate output directory. For example:

....
./run --arch aarch64 --gem5 --run-id 0 &>/dev/null &
./run --arch aarch64 --gem5 --run-id 1 &>/dev/null &
....

produces two separate `m5out` directories:

....
echo "$(./getvar --arch aarch64 --gem5 --run-id 0 m5out_dir)"
echo "$(./getvar --arch aarch64 --gem5 --run-id 1 m5out_dir)"
....

and the gem5 host executable stdout and stderr can be found at:

....
less "$(./getvar --arch aarch64 --gem5 --run-id 0 termout_file)"
less "$(./getvar --arch aarch64 --gem5 --run-id 1 termout_file)"
....

Each line is prepended with the timestamp in seconds since the start of the program when it appeared.

To have more semantic output directories names for later inspection, you can use a non numeric string for the run ID, and indicate the port offset explicitly:

....
./run --arch aarch64 --gem5 --run-id some-experiment --port-offset 1
....

`--port-offset` defaults to the run ID when that is a number.

Like <>, you will need to pass the `-n` option to anything that needs to know runtime information, e.g. <>:

....
./run --run-id 1
./rungdb --run-id 1
....

To run multiple gem5 checkouts, see: <>.

Implementation note: we create multiple namespaces for two things:

* run output directory
* ports
** QEMU allows setting all ports explicitly.
+
If a port is not free, it just crashes.
+
We assign a contiguous port range for each run ID.
** gem5 automatically increments ports until it finds a free one.
+
gem5 60600f09c25255b3c8f72da7fb49100e2682093a does not seem to expose a way to set the terminal and VNC ports from `fs.py`, so we just let gem5 assign the ports itself, and use `-n` only to match what it assigned. Those ports both appear on `config.ini`.
+
The GDB port can be assigned on `gem5.opt --remote-gdb-port`, but it does not appear on `config.ini`.

=== Directory structure

* `data`: gitignored user created data. Deleting this might lead to loss of data. Of course, if something there becomes is important enough to you, git track it.
** `data/9p`: see <<9p>>
** `data/gem5/`: see: <>
* link:packages/kernel_modules[]: Buildroot package that contains our kernel modules and userland C tests
* `out`: gitignored Build outputs. You won't lose data by deleting this folder since everything there can be re-generated, only time.
** `out/`: arch specific outputs
*** `out//buildroot`: standard Buildroot output
**** `out//buildroot/build/linux-custom`: symlink to a variant, custom madness that we do on top of Buildroot: <>
**** `out//buildroot/build/linux-custom.`: what `linux-custom` points to
*** `out//qemu`: QEMU runtime outputs
*** `out//qemu//run.sh`: full CLI used to run QEMU. See: <>
*** `out//gem5//`: gem5 runtime outputs
**** `out//gem5//m5out`
**** `out//gem5//run.sh`: full CLI used to run gem5. See: <>
** `out/common`: cross arch outputs, for when we can gain a lot of time and space by sharing things that are common across different archs.
*** `out/common/dl/`: Buildroot caches downloaded source there due to `BR2_DL_DIR`
*** `out/common/gem5/`: `arm` and `aarch64` have the same build.
**** `out/common/gem5//`: gem5 build output. In common to share the ARM and aarch64 builds.
***** `out/common/gem5//build/`: main build outputs, including the `gem5.opt` executable and object files
***** `out/common/gem5//system/`: `M5_PATH` directory, with DTBs and bootloaders

==== gem5 directory

We Build the gem5 emulator through Buildroot basically just to reuse its timestamping system to avoid rebuilds.

There is also the `m5` tool that we must build through Buildroot ans install on the root filesystem, but we could just make two separate builds.

This directory has the following structure:

==== packages directory

Every directory inside it is a Buildroot package.

Those packages get automatically added to Buildroot's `BR2_EXTERNAL`, so all you need to do is to turn them on during build, e.g.:

....
./build-buildroot --buildroot-config BR2_SAMPLE_PACKAGE=y
....

If you want to add something to the root filesystem, possibly involving cross-compilation, then packages are the way to go.

In particular, our kernel modules are stored inside a Buildroot package: link:packages/kernel_modules[].

==== patches

===== patches/buildroot

Every `.patch` file in this directory gets applied to Buildroot before anything else is done.

This directory has been made kind of useless when we decided to use our own Buildroot fork, but we've kept the functionality just in case we someday go back to upstream Buildroot.

===== patches/global

Has the following structure:

....
package-name/00001-do-something.patch
....

The patches are then applied to the corresponding packages before build.

Uses `BR2_GLOBAL_PATCH_DIR`.

===== patches/manual

Patches in this directory are never applied automatically: it is up to users to manually apply them before usage following the instructions in this documentation.

These are typically patches that don't contain fundamental functionality, so we don't feel like forking the target repos.

==== rootfs_overlay

Copied into the target filesystem.

We use it for:

* customized configuration files
* userland module test scripts that don't need to be compiled.
+
C files for example need compilation, and must go through the regular package system, e.g. through link:packages/kernel_modules/user[].

=== CONTRIBUTING

==== Testing

Testing that should be done for every functional patch.

===== Guest testing

Build for all stable archs and run basic fast tests:

....
./build-all
./test
echo $?
....

Should output 0.

Sources:

* link:build-all[]
* link:test[]

Test that the Internet works:

....
./run --arch x86_64 --kernel-cli '- lkmc_eval="/sbin/ifup -a;wget -S google.com;poweroff;"'
....

Source: link:rootfs_overlay/test_all.sh[].

===== Host testing

Shell 1:

....
./run --debug-guest
....

Shell 2:

....
./rungdb start_kernel
....

Should break GDB at `start_kernel`.

Then proceed to do the following tests:

* `/count.sh` and `b __x64_sys_write`
* `insmod /timer.ko` and `b lkmc_timer_callback`

==== Bisection

When updating the Linux kernel, QEMU and gem5, things sometimes break.

However, for many types of crashes, it is trivial to bisect down to the offending commit, in particular because we can make QEMU and gem5 exit with status 1 on kernel panic: <>.

For example, when updating from QEMU `v2.12.0` to `v3.0.0-rc3`, the Linux kernel boot started to panic for `arm`.

We then bisected it as explained at: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4713088/how-to-use-git-bisect/22592593#22592593 with the link:qemu-bisect-boot[] script:

....
root_dir="$(pwd)"
cd "$(./getvar qemu_src_dir)"
git bisect start

# Check that our test script fails on v3.0.0-rc3 as expected, and mark it as bad.
"${root_dir}/qemu-bisect-boot"
# Should output 1.
echo #?
git bisect bad

# Same for the good end.
git checkout v2.12.0
"${root_dir}/qemu-bisect-boot"
# Should output 0.
echo #?
git bisect good

# This leaves us at the offending commit.
git bisect run ../biset-qemu-linux-boot

# Clean up after the bisection.
git bisect reset
git submodule update
"${root_dir}/build-qemu" --clean --qemu-build-id bisect
....

An example of Linux kernel commit bisection on gem5 boots can be found at: link:bisect-linux-boot-gem5[].

==== Update a forked submodule

This is a template update procedure for submodules for which we have some patches on on top of mainline.

This example is based on the Linux kernel, for which we used to have patches, but have since moved to mainline:

....
# Last point before out patches.
last_mainline_revision=v4.15
next_mainline_revision=v4.16
cd "$(./getvar linux_src_dir)"

# Create a branch before the rebase in case things go wrong.
git checkout -b "lkmc-${last_mainline_revision}"
git remote set-url origin git@github.com:cirosantilli/linux.git
git push
git checkout master

git remote add up git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux-stable.git
git fetch up
git rebase --onto "$next_mainline_revision" "$last_mainline_revision"

# And update the README to show off.
git commit -m "linux: update to ${next_mainline_revision}"
....

==== Sanity checks

Basic C and C++ hello worlds:

....
/hello.out
/hello_cpp.out
....

Output:

....
hello
hello cpp
....

Sources:

* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/hello.c[]
* link:packages/kernel_modules/user/hello_cpp.c[]

===== rand_check.out

Print out several parameters that normally change randomly from boot to boot:

....
./run --eval-busybox '/rand_check.out;/poweroff.out'
....

Source: link:packages/kernel_modules/user/rand_check.c[]

This can be used to check the determinism of:

* <>
* <>

==== Releases

This is not yet super stable, but one day maybe this script will automatically do a release:

....
./release
....

Source: link:release[].

This should in particular enable to easily update <>.

=== Bibliography

Runnable stuff:

* https://lwn.net/Kernel/LDD3/ the best book, but outdated. Updated source: https://github.com/martinezjavier/ldd3 But examples non-minimal and take too much brain power to understand.
* https://github.com/satoru-takeuchi/elkdat manual build process without Buildroot, very few and simple kernel modules. But it seem ktest + QEMU working, which is awesome. `./test` there patches ktest config dynamically based on CLI! Maybe we should just steal it since GPL licensed.
* https://github.com/tinyclub/linux-lab Buildroot based, no kernel modules?
* https://github.com/agelastic/eudyptula
* https://github.com/linux-kernel-labs Yocto based, source inside a kernel fork subdir: https://github.com/linux-kernel-labs/linux/tree/f08b9e4238dfc612a9d019e3705bd906930057fc/tools/labs which the author would like to upstream https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/79w2q9/linux_device_driver_labs_the_linux_kernel/dp6of43/
* Android AOSP: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1809774/how-to-compile-the-android-aosp-kernel-and-test-it-with-the-android-emulator/48310014#48310014 AOSP is basically a uber bloated Buildroot (2 hours build vs 30 minutes), Android is Linux based, and QEMU is the emulator backend. These instructions might work for debugging the kernel: https://github.com/Fuzion24/AndroidKernelExploitationPlayground
* https://github.com/s-matyukevich/raspberry-pi-os Does both an OS from scratch, and annotates the corresponding kernel source code. For RPI3, no QEMU support: https://github.com/s-matyukevich/raspberry-pi-os/issues/8

Theory:

* http://nairobi-embedded.org you will fall here a lot when you start popping the hard QEMU Google queries. They have covered everything we do here basically, but with a more manual approach, while this repo automates everything.
+
I couldn't find the markup source code for the tutorials, and as a result when the domain went down in May 2018, you have to use http://web.archive.org/ to see the pages...
* https://balau82.wordpress.com awesome low level resource
* https://rwmj.wordpress.com/ awesome red hatter
* https://lwn.net
* http://www.makelinux.net
* https://notes.shichao.io/lkd/

Awesome lists:

* https://github.com/gurugio/lowlevelprogramming-university
* https://github.com/uhub/awesome-c