linux/Documentation/admin-guide/pstore-blk.rst
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   1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
   2
   3pstore block oops/panic logger
   4==============================
   5
   6Introduction
   7------------
   8
   9pstore block (pstore/blk) is an oops/panic logger that writes its logs to a
  10block device and non-block device before the system crashes. You can get
  11these log files by mounting pstore filesystem like::
  12
  13    mount -t pstore pstore /sys/fs/pstore
  14
  15
  16pstore block concepts
  17---------------------
  18
  19pstore/blk provides efficient configuration method for pstore/blk, which
  20divides all configurations into two parts, configurations for user and
  21configurations for driver.
  22
  23Configurations for user determine how pstore/blk works, such as pmsg_size,
  24kmsg_size and so on. All of them support both Kconfig and module parameters,
  25but module parameters have priority over Kconfig.
  26
  27Configurations for driver are all about block device and non-block device,
  28such as total_size of block device and read/write operations.
  29
  30Configurations for user
  31-----------------------
  32
  33All of these configurations support both Kconfig and module parameters, but
  34module parameters have priority over Kconfig.
  35
  36Here is an example for module parameters::
  37
  38        pstore_blk.blkdev=/dev/mmcblk0p7 pstore_blk.kmsg_size=64 best_effort=y
  39
  40The detail of each configurations may be of interest to you.
  41
  42blkdev
  43~~~~~~
  44
  45The block device to use. Most of the time, it is a partition of block device.
  46It's required for pstore/blk. It is also used for MTD device.
  47
  48When pstore/blk is built as a module, "blkdev" accepts the following variants:
  49
  501. /dev/<disk_name> represents the device number of disk
  51#. /dev/<disk_name><decimal> represents the device number of partition - device
  52   number of disk plus the partition number
  53#. /dev/<disk_name>p<decimal> - same as the above; this form is used when disk
  54   name of partitioned disk ends with a digit.
  55
  56When pstore/blk is built into the kernel, "blkdev" accepts the following variants:
  57
  58#. <hex_major><hex_minor> device number in hexadecimal representation,
  59   with no leading 0x, for example b302.
  60#. PARTUUID=00112233-4455-6677-8899-AABBCCDDEEFF represents the unique id of
  61   a partition if the partition table provides it. The UUID may be either an
  62   EFI/GPT UUID, or refer to an MSDOS partition using the format SSSSSSSS-PP,
  63   where SSSSSSSS is a zero-filled hex representation of the 32-bit
  64   "NT disk signature", and PP is a zero-filled hex representation of the
  65   1-based partition number.
  66#. PARTUUID=<UUID>/PARTNROFF=<int> to select a partition in relation to a
  67   partition with a known unique id.
  68#. <major>:<minor> major and minor number of the device separated by a colon.
  69
  70It accepts the following variants for MTD device:
  71
  721. <device name> MTD device name. "pstore" is recommended.
  73#. <device number> MTD device number.
  74
  75kmsg_size
  76~~~~~~~~~
  77
  78The chunk size in KB for oops/panic front-end. It **MUST** be a multiple of 4.
  79It's optional if you do not care oops/panic log.
  80
  81There are multiple chunks for oops/panic front-end depending on the remaining
  82space except other pstore front-ends.
  83
  84pstore/blk will log to oops/panic chunks one by one, and always overwrite the
  85oldest chunk if there is no more free chunk.
  86
  87pmsg_size
  88~~~~~~~~~
  89
  90The chunk size in KB for pmsg front-end. It **MUST** be a multiple of 4.
  91It's optional if you do not care pmsg log.
  92
  93Unlike oops/panic front-end, there is only one chunk for pmsg front-end.
  94
  95Pmsg is a user space accessible pstore object. Writes to */dev/pmsg0* are
  96appended to the chunk. On reboot the contents are available in
  97*/sys/fs/pstore/pmsg-pstore-blk-0*.
  98
  99console_size
 100~~~~~~~~~~~~
 101
 102The chunk size in KB for console front-end.  It **MUST** be a multiple of 4.
 103It's optional if you do not care console log.
 104
 105Similar to pmsg front-end, there is only one chunk for console front-end.
 106
 107All log of console will be appended to the chunk. On reboot the contents are
 108available in */sys/fs/pstore/console-pstore-blk-0*.
 109
 110ftrace_size
 111~~~~~~~~~~~
 112
 113The chunk size in KB for ftrace front-end. It **MUST** be a multiple of 4.
 114It's optional if you do not care console log.
 115
 116Similar to oops front-end, there are multiple chunks for ftrace front-end
 117depending on the count of cpu processors. Each chunk size is equal to
 118ftrace_size / processors_count.
 119
 120All log of ftrace will be appended to the chunk. On reboot the contents are
 121combined and available in */sys/fs/pstore/ftrace-pstore-blk-0*.
 122
 123Persistent function tracing might be useful for debugging software or hardware
 124related hangs. Here is an example of usage::
 125
 126 # mount -t pstore pstore /sys/fs/pstore
 127 # mount -t debugfs debugfs /sys/kernel/debug/
 128 # echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/pstore/record_ftrace
 129 # reboot -f
 130 [...]
 131 # mount -t pstore pstore /sys/fs/pstore
 132 # tail /sys/fs/pstore/ftrace-pstore-blk-0
 133 CPU:0 ts:5914676 c0063828  c0063b94  call_cpuidle <- cpu_startup_entry+0x1b8/0x1e0
 134 CPU:0 ts:5914678 c039ecdc  c006385c  cpuidle_enter_state <- call_cpuidle+0x44/0x48
 135 CPU:0 ts:5914680 c039e9a0  c039ecf0  cpuidle_enter_freeze <- cpuidle_enter_state+0x304/0x314
 136 CPU:0 ts:5914681 c0063870  c039ea30  sched_idle_set_state <- cpuidle_enter_state+0x44/0x314
 137 CPU:1 ts:5916720 c0160f59  c015ee04  kernfs_unmap_bin_file <- __kernfs_remove+0x140/0x204
 138 CPU:1 ts:5916721 c05ca625  c015ee0c  __mutex_lock_slowpath <- __kernfs_remove+0x148/0x204
 139 CPU:1 ts:5916723 c05c813d  c05ca630  yield_to <- __mutex_lock_slowpath+0x314/0x358
 140 CPU:1 ts:5916724 c05ca2d1  c05ca638  __ww_mutex_lock <- __mutex_lock_slowpath+0x31c/0x358
 141
 142max_reason
 143~~~~~~~~~~
 144
 145Limiting which kinds of kmsg dumps are stored can be controlled via
 146the ``max_reason`` value, as defined in include/linux/kmsg_dump.h's
 147``enum kmsg_dump_reason``. For example, to store both Oopses and Panics,
 148``max_reason`` should be set to 2 (KMSG_DUMP_OOPS), to store only Panics
 149``max_reason`` should be set to 1 (KMSG_DUMP_PANIC). Setting this to 0
 150(KMSG_DUMP_UNDEF), means the reason filtering will be controlled by the
 151``printk.always_kmsg_dump`` boot param: if unset, it'll be KMSG_DUMP_OOPS,
 152otherwise KMSG_DUMP_MAX.
 153
 154Configurations for driver
 155-------------------------
 156
 157A device driver uses ``register_pstore_device`` with
 158``struct pstore_device_info`` to register to pstore/blk.
 159
 160.. kernel-doc:: fs/pstore/blk.c
 161   :export:
 162
 163Compression and header
 164----------------------
 165
 166Block device is large enough for uncompressed oops data. Actually we do not
 167recommend data compression because pstore/blk will insert some information into
 168the first line of oops/panic data. For example::
 169
 170        Panic: Total 16 times
 171
 172It means that it's OOPS|Panic for the 16th time since the first booting.
 173Sometimes the number of occurrences of oops|panic since the first booting is
 174important to judge whether the system is stable.
 175
 176The following line is inserted by pstore filesystem. For example::
 177
 178        Oops#2 Part1
 179
 180It means that it's OOPS for the 2nd time on the last boot.
 181
 182Reading the data
 183----------------
 184
 185The dump data can be read from the pstore filesystem. The format for these
 186files is ``dmesg-pstore-blk-[N]`` for oops/panic front-end,
 187``pmsg-pstore-blk-0`` for pmsg front-end and so on.  The timestamp of the
 188dump file records the trigger time. To delete a stored record from block
 189device, simply unlink the respective pstore file.
 190
 191Attentions in panic read/write APIs
 192-----------------------------------
 193
 194If on panic, the kernel is not going to run for much longer, the tasks will not
 195be scheduled and most kernel resources will be out of service. It
 196looks like a single-threaded program running on a single-core computer.
 197
 198The following points require special attention for panic read/write APIs:
 199
 2001. Can **NOT** allocate any memory.
 201   If you need memory, just allocate while the block driver is initializing
 202   rather than waiting until the panic.
 203#. Must be polled, **NOT** interrupt driven.
 204   No task schedule any more. The block driver should delay to ensure the write
 205   succeeds, but NOT sleep.
 206#. Can **NOT** take any lock.
 207   There is no other task, nor any shared resource; you are safe to break all
 208   locks.
 209#. Just use CPU to transfer.
 210   Do not use DMA to transfer unless you are sure that DMA will not keep lock.
 211#. Control registers directly.
 212   Please control registers directly rather than use Linux kernel resources.
 213   Do I/O map while initializing rather than wait until a panic occurs.
 214#. Reset your block device and controller if necessary.
 215   If you are not sure of the state of your block device and controller when
 216   a panic occurs, you are safe to stop and reset them.
 217
 218pstore/blk supports psblk_blkdev_info(), which is defined in
 219*linux/pstore_blk.h*, to get information of using block device, such as the
 220device number, sector count and start sector of the whole disk.
 221
 222pstore block internals
 223----------------------
 224
 225For developer reference, here are all the important structures and APIs:
 226
 227.. kernel-doc:: fs/pstore/zone.c
 228   :internal:
 229
 230.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/pstore_zone.h
 231   :internal:
 232
 233.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/pstore_blk.h
 234   :internal:
 235