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crash-devel - kernel crash and live system analysis utility

Website: http://people.redhat.com/anderson
License: GPLv3
Vendor: Scientific Linux CERN, http://cern.ch/linux
Description:
The core analysis suite is a self-contained tool that can be used to
investigate either live systems, kernel core dumps created from the
netdump, diskdump and kdump packages from Red Hat Linux, the mcore kernel patch
offered by Mission Critical Linux, or the LKCD kernel patch.

Packages

crash-devel-5.1.8-1.el5.x86_64 [67 KiB] Changelog by Dave Anderson (2011-10-04):
- Rebase to upstream version 5.1.8.
  Resolves: rhbz#715072

- Fix for the x86_64 "bt" command if the shutdown NMI is issued to a
  32-bit task that has executed a "sysenter" instruction and the RSP
  still contains the zero value loaded from the MSR_IA32_SYSENTER_ESP
  register.  The backtrace issued a warning message indicating 
  "WARNING: possibly bogus exception frame", and was unable to make a 
  transition from the NMI exception stack back to the process stack. 
  Resolves: rhbz#676408

- Fix for the x86 "bt" command for several backtraces of non-crashing
  active tasks that fail with "bt: cannot resolve stack trace" errors
  due to the failure to properly transition from the shutdown NMI stack 
  back to the process stack.
  Resolves: rhbz#713050

- Fix to more correctly determine the KVM I/O hole size and location.
  The I/O hole size to this point in time is either 1GB or 512MB, but
  its setting is hardwired into the Qemu code that was used to create 
  the dumpfile.  The dumpfile is a "savevm" file that is designed to be
  used for guest migration, and since inter-version save/load is not 
  supported, the I/O hole information does not have to be encoded into the
  dumpfile.  Without the patch, the I/O hole for dumpfiles created by 
  older Qemu version was not being set to 1GB, so if the KVM guest was 
  configured with more than 3GB of memory, the crash session would 
  typically display numerous "read error" messages during session 
  initialization.
  Resolves: rhbz#715070

- Fix for KVM dumpfiles from guests that were provisioned with more
  than 3.5GB of RAM.  KVM virtual systems contain an I/O hole in the
  physical memory region from 0xe0000000 to 0x100000000 (3.5GB to 4GB).
  If a guest is provisioned with more than 3.5GB of RAM, then the
  memory above 3.5GB is "pushed up" to start at 0x100000000 (4GB).
  But the "ram" device headers in the KVM dumpfiles do not reflect
  that, and so without the patch, numerous error messages would be
  displayed during invocation, and in all probability, the session
  would fail.
  Resolves: rhbz#716327
crash-devel-5.1.8-1.el5.i386 [67 KiB] Changelog by Dave Anderson (2011-10-04):
- Rebase to upstream version 5.1.8.
  Resolves: rhbz#715072

- Fix for the x86_64 "bt" command if the shutdown NMI is issued to a
  32-bit task that has executed a "sysenter" instruction and the RSP
  still contains the zero value loaded from the MSR_IA32_SYSENTER_ESP
  register.  The backtrace issued a warning message indicating 
  "WARNING: possibly bogus exception frame", and was unable to make a 
  transition from the NMI exception stack back to the process stack. 
  Resolves: rhbz#676408

- Fix for the x86 "bt" command for several backtraces of non-crashing
  active tasks that fail with "bt: cannot resolve stack trace" errors
  due to the failure to properly transition from the shutdown NMI stack 
  back to the process stack.
  Resolves: rhbz#713050

- Fix to more correctly determine the KVM I/O hole size and location.
  The I/O hole size to this point in time is either 1GB or 512MB, but
  its setting is hardwired into the Qemu code that was used to create 
  the dumpfile.  The dumpfile is a "savevm" file that is designed to be
  used for guest migration, and since inter-version save/load is not 
  supported, the I/O hole information does not have to be encoded into the
  dumpfile.  Without the patch, the I/O hole for dumpfiles created by 
  older Qemu version was not being set to 1GB, so if the KVM guest was 
  configured with more than 3GB of memory, the crash session would 
  typically display numerous "read error" messages during session 
  initialization.
  Resolves: rhbz#715070

- Fix for KVM dumpfiles from guests that were provisioned with more
  than 3.5GB of RAM.  KVM virtual systems contain an I/O hole in the
  physical memory region from 0xe0000000 to 0x100000000 (3.5GB to 4GB).
  If a guest is provisioned with more than 3.5GB of RAM, then the
  memory above 3.5GB is "pushed up" to start at 0x100000000 (4GB).
  But the "ram" device headers in the KVM dumpfiles do not reflect
  that, and so without the patch, numerous error messages would be
  displayed during invocation, and in all probability, the session
  would fail.
  Resolves: rhbz#716327

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