1*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsTable of Contents 2*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions================= 3*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 4*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions A. How to use lldb for kernel debugging 5*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions B. Design of lldb kernel debugging platform. 6*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions C. Kernel debugging commands. 7*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions i. Using commands. 8*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions ii. Writing new commands. 9*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions D. Kernel type summaries. 10*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions i. Using summaries 11*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions ii. Writing new summary functions 12*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions E. FAQ and General Coding Guidelines 13*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions i. Frequently Asked Questions 14*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions ii. Formatted Output printing guidelines [MUST READ] 15*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions iii. Coding conventions. [MUST READ] 16*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions iv. Submitting changes in lldbmacros [MUST READ] 17*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions v. Common utility functions and paradigms 18*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions F. Development and Debugging on lldb kernel debugging platform. 19*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions i. Reading a exception backtrace 20*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions ii. Loading custom or local lldbmacros and operating_system plugin 21*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions iii. Adding debug related 'printf's 22*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 23*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsA. How to use lldb for kernel debugging 24*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions======================================== 25*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 26*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionslldb can be used for kernel debugging the same way as gdb. The simplest way is to start lldb with kernel symbol file. The lldb environment by default does not allow loading automatic python modules. Please add the following setting in 27*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 28*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions File: ~/.lldbinit 29*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions settings set target.load-script-from-symbol-file true 30*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 31*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsNow lldb will be ready to connect over kdp-remote '\<hostname:port>' or 'gdb-remote \<hostname:port>'. In case using a core file please do 'file --core /path/to/corefile' 32*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 33*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsFollowing are detailed steps on how to debug a panic'ed / NMI'ed machine (For the curious souls). 34*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 35*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionslldb debugging in detail:- 36*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 37*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * start lldb with the right symbols file. If you do not know the version apriori, then enable dsymForUUID to load symbols dynamically. 38*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions bash$ dsymForUUID --enable 39*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions bash$ lldb /path/to/mach_kernel.symbols 40*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Current executable set to '/Sources/Symbols/xnu/xnu-2253~2/mach_kernel' (x86_64). 41*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) 42*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 43*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * connect to remote device or load a core file 44*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions #for kdp 45*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) process connect --plugin kdp-remote udp://17.123.45.67:41139 46*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions #for gdb (eg with astris) 47*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) process connect --plugin gdb-remote gdb://17.123.45.67:8000 48*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions #for loading a core file 49*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) file --core /path/to/core/file /path/to/kernel_symbol_file 50*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 51*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Once connected you can debug with basic lldb commands like print, bt, expr etc. The xnu debug macros will also be loaded automatically from the dSYM files. 52*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions In case if you are working with older kernel files you can load kernel specific commands by doing - 53*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) command script import /path/to/xnu/tools/lldbmacros/xnu.py 54*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) showbootargs 55*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions debug=0x14e ncpus=2 56*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 57*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * You can do `kgmhelp` to get a list of commands available through xnu.py 58*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 59*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsSPECIAL: The `xnu.py` script brings in kernel type summary functions. To enable these please do - 60*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 61*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) showlldbtypesummaries 62*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 63*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsThese could be very handy in printing important information from structures easily. 64*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsFor ex. 65*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 66*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) print (thread_t)0x80d6a620 67*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (thread_t) $45 = 0x80d6a620 68*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions thread thread_id processor pri io_policy state wait_queue wait_event wmesg thread_name 69*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 0x80d6a620 0x317 0x902078c8 61 W 0x910cadd4 0x0 SystemSoundServer 70*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 71*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 72*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 73*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsB. Design of lldb kernel debugging platform. 74*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions============================================= 75*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 76*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsThe lldb debugger provides python scripting bridge for customizing commands and summaries in lldb. Following is the stack of platforms and how commands and summaries interact with it. 77*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 78*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions |------- xnu scripts ----------| 79*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions | |- lldb Command/Scripting-| | <-- provides scriptability for kernel data structures through summary/command invocation. 80*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions | | |--lldb core--| | | <-- interacts with remote kernel or corefile. 81*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions | |-------------------------| | 82*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions |------------------------------| 83*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 84*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsThe xnu script in xnu/tools/lldbmacros provides the following: 85*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 86*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Custom functions to do plumbing of lldb command invocation to python function call. (see doc strings for @lldb_command) 87*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions The command interface provides some common features (which can be invoked after passing '--' on cmd line) like - 88*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 89*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions i. send the output of command to file on disk 90*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions ii. search for a string in the output and selectively print the line containing it. 91*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions iii. -v options to increase verbosity levels in commands. 92*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions For example: (lldb)showalltasks -- -s kernel_task --o /tmp/kernel_task.output -v 93*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions will show task summary output with lines matching string 'kernel_task' into a file /tmp/kernel_task.output and with a verbosity level of (default +1) 94*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 95*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Customization for plugging in summary functions for lldb type summaries. (see doc strings for @lldb_summary) 96*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions It will automatically register given types with the functions within the kernel category. 97*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 98*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Ability to register test cases for macros (see doc strings for @xnudebug_test). 99*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 100*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsThe file layout is like following 101*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 102*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions xnu/ 103*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions |-tools/ 104*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions |-lldbmacros/ 105*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions |-core/ # Core logic about kernel, lldb value abstraction, configs etc. **DO NOT TOUCH THIS DIR** 106*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions |-plugins/ # Holds plugins for kernel commands. 107*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions |-xnu.py # xnu debug framework along with kgmhelp, xnudebug commands. 108*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions |-xnudefines.py 109*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions |-utils.py 110*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions |-process.py # files containing commands/summaries code for each subsystem 111*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions |-... 112*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 113*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 114*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsThe lldbmacros directory has a Makefile that follows the build process for xnu. This packages lldbmacros scripts into the dSYM of each kernel build. This helps in rev-locking the lldb commands with changes in kernel sources. 115*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 116*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 117*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsC. Kernel debugging commands. 118*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions============================== 119*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsi. Using commands. 120*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions------------------ 121*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsUsing xnu debug commands is very similar to kgmacros in gdb. You can use 'kgmhelp' to get a listing of available commands. 122*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsIf you need detailed help for a command please type 'help <command name>' and the documentation for the command will be displayed. 123*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsFor ex. 124*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 125*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) help pmap_walk 126*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Perform a page-table walk in <pmap> for <virtual_address>. 127*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions You can pass -- -v for verbose output. To increase the verbosity add more -v args after the '--'. 128*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Syntax: pmap_walk <pmap> <virtual_address> 129*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 130*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsThe basic format for every command provided under kgmhelp is like follows 131*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 132*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) command_name [cmd_args..] [-CMDOPTIONS] [-xnuoptions] 133*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions where: 134*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions command_name : name of command as registed using the @lldb_command decorator and described in 'kgmhelp' 135*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions cmd_args : shell like arguments that are passed as is to the registered python function. 136*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions If there is error in these arguments than the implementor may display according error message. 137*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions xnuoptions : common options for stream based operations on the output of command_name. 138*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Allowed options are 139*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions -h : show help string of a command 140*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions -s <regexp> : print only the lines matching <regexp> 141*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions -o <file> : direct the output of command to <file>. Will not display anything on terminal 142*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions -v : increase the verbosity of the command. Each '-v' encountered will increase verbosity by 1. 143*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions -p <plugin> : pass the output of command to <plugin> for processing and followup with command requests by it. 144*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions CMDOPTIONS : These are command level options (always a CAPITAL letter option) that are defined by the macro developer. Please do 145*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions help <cmdname> to know how each option operates on that particular command. For an example of how to use CMDOPTIONS, take a look at vm_object_walk_pages in memory.py 146*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 147*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsii. Writing new commands. 148*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions-------------------------- 149*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsThe python modules are designed in such a way that the command from lldb invokes a python function with the arguments passed at lldb prompt. 150*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 151*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsIt is recommended that you do a decoupled development for command interface and core utility function so that any function/code can be called as a simple util function and get the same output. i.e. 152*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 153*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb)showtask 0xabcdef000 is same as python >>> GetTaskSummary(0xabcdef000) or equivalent 154*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 155*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsFollowing is a step by step guideline on how to add a new command ( e.g showtaskvme ). [extra tip: Always good idea to wrap your macro code within # Macro: , # EndMacro.] 156*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 157*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 1. register a command to a function. Use the lldb_command decorator to map a 'command_name' to a function. Optionally you can provide getopt compatible option string for customizing your command invocation. Note: Only CAPITAL letter options are allowed. lowercase options are reserved for the framework level features. 158*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 159*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 2. Immediately after the register define the function to handle the command invocation. The signature is always like Abc(cmd_args=None, cmd_options={}) 160*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 161*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 3. Add documentation for Abc(). This is very important for lldb to show help for each command. [ Follow the guidelines above with documentation ] 162*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 163*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 4. Use cmd_args array to get args passed on command. For example a command like `showtaskvme 0xabcdef00` will put have cmd_args=['0xabcdef00'] 164*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - note that we use core.value class as an interface to underlying C structures. Refer [Section B] for more details. 165*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - use kern.globals.\<variable_name> & kern.GetValueFromAddress for building values from addresses. 166*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - remember that the ideal type of object to be passed around is core.value 167*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - Anything you 'print' will be relayed to lldb terminal output. 168*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 169*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 5. If the user has passed any custom options they would be in cmd_options dict. the format is `{'-<optionflag>':'<value>'}`. The \<value> will be '' (empty string) for non-option flags. 170*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 171*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 6. If your function finds issue with the passed argument then you can `raise ArgumentError('error_message')` to notify the user. The framework will automatically catch this and show appropriate help using the function doc string. 172*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 173*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 7. Please use "##" for commenting your code. This is important because single "#" based strings may be mistakenly considered in `unifdef` program. 174*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 175*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Time for some code example? Try reading the code for function ShowTaskVmeHelper in memory.py. 176*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 177*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsSPECIAL Note: Very often you will find yourself making changes to a file for some command/summary and would like to test it out in lldb. 178*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 179*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsTo easily reload your changes in lldb please follow the below example. 180*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 181*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * you fire up lldb and start using zprint. And soon you need to add functionality to zprint. 182*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 183*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * you happily change a function code in memory.py file to zprint macro. 184*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 185*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * now to reload that particular changes without killing your debug session do 186*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) xnudebug reload memory 187*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions memory is reloaded from ./memory.py 188*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) 189*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 190*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Alternatively, you can use lldb`s command for script loading as 191*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) command script import /path/to/memory.py 192*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions You can re-run the same command every time you update the code in file. 193*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 194*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions It is very important that you do reload using xnudebug command as it does the plumbing of commands and types for your change in the module. Otherwise you could easily get confused 195*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions why your changes are not reflected in the command. 196*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 197*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 198*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsD. Kernel type summaries. 199*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions========================== 200*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsi. Using summaries 201*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions------------------ 202*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsThe lldb debugger provides ways for user to customize how a particular type of object be described when printed. These are very useful in displaying complex and large structures 203*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionswhere only certain fields are important based on some flag or value in some field or variable. The way it works is every time lldb wants to print an object it checks 204*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsfor registered summaries. We can define python functions and hook it up with lldb as callbacks for type summaries. For example. 205*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 206*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) print first_zone 207*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (zone_t) $49 = 0xd007c000 208*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions ZONE TOT_SZ ALLOC_ELTS FREE_ELTS FREE_SZ ELT_SZ ALLOC(ELTS PGS SLK) FLAGS NAME 209*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 0x00000000d007c000 29808 182 25 3600 144 4096 28 1 64 X$ zones 210*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) 211*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsJust printing the value of first_zone as (zone_t) 0xd007c000 wouldnt have been much help. But with the registered summary for zone_t we can see all the interesting info easily. 212*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 213*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsYou do not need to do anything special to use summaries. Once they are registered with lldb they show info automatically when printing objects. However if you wish to 214*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionssee all the registered type summaries run the command `type summary list -w kernel` on lldb prompt. 215*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsAlso if you wish to quickly disable the summaries for a particular command use the `showraw` command. 216*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 217*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsii. Writing new summary functions 218*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions--------------------------------- 219*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionslldb provides really flexible interface for building summaries for complex objects and data. If you find that a struct or list can be 220*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsdiagnosed better if displayed differently, then feel free to add a type summary for that type. Following is an easy guide on how to do that. 221*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 222*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 1. Register a function as a callback for displaying information for a type. Use the `@lldb_type_summary()` decorator with an array of types you wish to register for callback 223*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 224*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 2. Provide a header for the summary using `@header()` decorator. This is a strong requirement for summaries. This gets displayed before the output 225*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions of `GetTypeSummary()` is displayed. [In case you do not wish to have header then still define it as "" (empty string) ] 226*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 227*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 3. Define the function with signature of `GetSomeTypeSummary(valobj)`. It is highly recommended that the naming be consistent to `Get.*?Summary(valobj)` 228*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions The valobj argument holds the core.value object for display. 229*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 230*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 4. Use the utility functions and memory read operations to pull out the required information. 231*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions [ use `kern.globals` & `kern.GetValueFromAddress` for building args to core functions. ] 232*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions [ remember that the ideal type of object to be passed around is core.value ] 233*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 234*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 5. return a string that would be printed by the caller. When lldb makes a call back it expects a str to be returned. So do not print 235*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions directly out to console. [ debug info or logs output is okay to be printed anywhere :) ] 236*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 237*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsTime for some code example? Try reading the code for GetTaskSummary() in process.py. 238*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 239*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 240*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 241*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsE. FAQs and Generel Coding Guidelines 242*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions====================================== 243*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 244*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsi. Frequently Asked Questions 245*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions----------------------------- 246*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 247*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Q. How do I avoid printing the summary and see the actual data in a structure? 248*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 249*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions A. There is a command called `showraw`. This will disable all kernel specific type summaries and execute any command you provide. For ex. 250*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 251*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) print (thread_t) 0x80d6a620 252*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (thread_t) $45 = 0x80d6a620 253*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions thread thread_id processor pri io_policy state wait_queue wait_event wmesg thread_name 254*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 0x80d6a620 0x317 0x902078c8 61 W 0x910cadd4 0x0 SystemSoundServer 255*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) showraw print (thread_t) 0x80d6a620 256*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (thread_t) $48 = 0x80d6a620 257*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 258*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Q. I typed `showallvnodes` and nothing happens for a long time? OR How do I get output of long running command instantly on the terminal? 259*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 260*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions A. The lldb command interface tries to build result object from output of a python function. So in case of functions with very long output or runtime it may 261*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions seem that the lldb process is hung. But it is not. You can use "-i" option to get immediate output on terminal. 262*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 263*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions ex. (lldb) showallvnodes -- -i 264*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Immediate Output 265*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions .... 266*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 267*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Q. I made a change in a python file for a command or summary, but the output is not reflected in the lldb command? 268*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 269*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions A. The python framework does not allow for removing a loaded module and then reloading it. So sometimes if a command has a cached value from 270*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions old code that it will still call the old function and hence will not display new changes in file on disk. If you find yourself in such a situation 271*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions please see [Section C. -> SPECIAL Note]. If the change is to basic class or caching mechanism than it is advised to quit lldb and re-load all modules again. 272*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 273*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Q. I am new to python. I get an error message that I do not understand. what should I do? 274*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 275*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions A. The syntax for python is different from conventional programming languages. If you get any message with SyntaxError or TypeError or ValueError then please review your code and look for common errors like 276*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 277*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - wrong level of indentation? 278*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - missed a ':' at the end of an if, elif, for, while statement? 279*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - referencing a key in dictionary that doesn't exist? You might see KeyError in such cases. 280*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - mistakenly used python reserved keyword as variable? (check http://docs.python.org/release/3.0.1/reference/lexical_analysis.html#id8) 281*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - Trying to modify a string value? You can only create new strings but never modify existing ones. 282*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - Trying to add a non string value to a string? This typically happens in print "time is " + gettime(). here gettime() returns int and not str. 283*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - using a local variable with same name as global variable? 284*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - assigning a value to global variable without declaring first? Its highly recommended to always declare global variable with 'global' keyword 285*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions If you still have difficulty you can look at the python documentation at http://docs.python.org 286*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 287*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 288*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Q. I wish to pass value of variable/expression to xnu lldb macro that accepts only pointers. How can I achieve that? 289*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 290*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions A. Many lldb macros have syntax that accepts pointers (eg showtaskstacks etc). In order to have your expression be evaluated before passing to command use `back ticks`. For example: 291*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 292*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) showtaskstacks `(task_t)tasks.next` 293*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions This way the expressing withing ` ` is evaluated by lldb and the value is passed to the command. 294*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Note that if your argument pointer is bad or the memory is corrupted lldb macros will fail with a long backtrace that may not make sense. gdb used to fail silently but lldb does not. 295*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Please see Section F(i) for more information on reading backtraces. 296*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 297*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Q. I connected to a coredump file with lldb --core corefile and I got RuntimeError: Unable to find lldb thread for tid=XYZ. What should I do? 298*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 299*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions A. This is most likely the case that lldb ignored the operating system plugin in the dSYM and hence threads are not populated. Please put the line 'settings set target.load-script-from-symbol-file true' in your ~/.lldbinit file. If you do not have access you can alternatively do 300*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 301*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions bash# lldb 302*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) settings set target.load-script-from-symbol-file true 303*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions (lldb) file --core corefile 304*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 305*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 306*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsii. Formatted output printing - zen and peace for life 307*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions------------------------------------------------------ 308*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 309*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsTo avoid the horrors of printing a tabular data on console and then 2 weeks later again messing with it for a new field, it is recommended to follow these guidelines. 310*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 311*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * any python string can be invoked to "".format() and hence makes it very easy to play with formats 312*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 313*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * As a convention, I suggest that for printing pointer values in hex use "{0: <#020x}".format(some_int_value). This will print nice 0x prefixed strings with length padded to 20. 314*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 315*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * If you need help with format options take a look at http://docs.python.org/library/string.html#format-string-syntax 316*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 317*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * [ I'd first create a format string for data and then for the header just change the x's and d's to s and pass the header strings to format command. see GetTaskSummary()] 318*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 319*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * If you need to print a string from a core.value object then use str() to get string representation of value. 320*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 321*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 322*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsiii. Coding conventions 323*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions----------------------- 324*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsIt is very very HIGHLY RECOMMENDED to follow these guidelines for writing any python code. 325*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 326*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Python is very sensitive to tabs and spaces for alignment. So please make sure you **INDENT YOUR CODE WITH SPACES** at all times. 327*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 328*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * The standard tab width is 4 spaces. Each increasing indent adds 4 spaces beginning of the line. 329*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 330*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * The format for documentation is - 331*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions """ A one line summary describing what this function / class does 332*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Detailed explanation if necessary along with params and return values. 333*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions """ 334*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 335*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * All Classes and functions should have a doc string describing what the function does 336*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions A consistent format is expected. For ex. 337*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions def SumOfNumbers(a, b, c, d): 338*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions """ Calculate sum of numbers. 339*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions params: 340*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions a - int, value to be added. can be 0 341*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions b - int/float, value to be added. 342*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions returns: 343*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions int/float - Sum of two values 344*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions raises: 345*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions TypeError - If any type is not identified in the params 346*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions """ 347*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 348*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * A Class or Function should always start with CAPITAL letter and be CamelCase. If a function is for internal use only than it starts with '_'. 349*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 350*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Function params should always be lower_case and be word separated with '_' 351*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 352*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * A local variable inside a function should be lower_case and separated with '_' 353*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 354*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * A variable for internal use in object should start with '_'. 355*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 356*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * if a class variable is supposed to hold non native type of object, it is good idea to comment what type it holds 357*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 358*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * A class function with name matching `Get(.*?)Summary()` is always supposed to return a string which can be printed on stdout or any file. 359*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 360*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Functions beginning with "Get" (eg. GetVnodePath()) mean they return a value and will not print any output to stdout. 361*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 362*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Functions beginning with "Show" (eg. ShowZTrace()) mean they will print data on screen and may not return any value. 363*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 364*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 365*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsiv. Submitting changes in lldbmacros 366*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions------------------------------------ 367*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 368*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsTo contribute new commands or fixes to existing one, it is recommended that you follow the procedure below. 369*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 370*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Save the changes requried for new command or fix into lldbmacros directory. 371*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 372*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Make sure that the coding conventions are strictly followed. 373*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 374*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Run syntax checker on each of the modified files. It will find basic formatting errors in the changed files for you. 375*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 376*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * If you are adding new file then please update the Makefile and xnu.py imports to ensure they get compiled during kernel build. 377*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 378*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Do a clean build of kernel from xnu top level directory. 379*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 380*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Verify that your changes are present in the dSYM directory of new build. 381*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 382*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Re-run all your test and verification steps with the lldbmacros from the newly packaged dSYM/Contents/Resources/Python/lldbmacros. 383*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 384*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsv. Common utility functions and paradigms 385*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions----------------------------------------- 386*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsPlease search and look around the code for common util functions and paradigm 387*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 388*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Take a peek at utils.py for common utility like sizeof_fmt() to humanize size strings in KB, MB etc. The convention is to have functions that do self contained actions and does not require intricate knowledge of kernel structures in utils.py 389*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 390*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * If you need to get pagesize of the traget system, do not hard code any value. kern.globals.page_size is your friend. Similarly use config['verbosity'] for finding about configs. 391*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 392*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * If you are developing a command for structure that is different based on development/release kernels please use "hasattr()" functionality to conditionalize referencing #ifdef'ed fields in structure. See example in def GetTaskSummary(task) in process.py 393*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 394*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 395*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsF. Development and Debugging on lldb kernel debugging platform. 396*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions=============================================================== 397*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 398*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsi. Reading a exception backtrace 399*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions-------------------------------- 400*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsIn case of an error the lldbmacros may print out an exception backtrace and halt immediately. The important thing is to 401*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsisolate possible causes of failure, and eventually filing a bug with kernel team. Following are some common ways where 402*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsyou may see an exception instead of your expected result. 403*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 404*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * The lldbmacros cannot divine the type of memory by inspection. If a wrong pointer is passed from commandline then, 405*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions the command code will try to read and show some results. It may still be junk or plain erronous. Please make sure 406*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions your command arguments are correct. For example: a common mistake is to pass task address to showactstack. In such 407*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions a case lldb command may fail and show you a confusing backtrace. 408*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 409*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Kernel debugging is particularly tricky. Many parts of memory may not be readable. There could be failure in network, 410*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions debugging protocol or just plain bad memory. In such a case please try to see if you can examine memory for the object 411*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions you are trying to access. 412*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 413*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * In case of memory corruption, the lldbmacros may have followed wrong pointer dereferencing. This might lead to failure 414*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions and a exception to be thrown. 415*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 416*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsThere are few more options that you can use when a macro is raising exceptions: 417*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 418*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Add --debug to your macro invocation to provide more detailed/verbose exception output. 419*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Add --radar to generate tar.gz archive when filling a new radar for kernel team. 420*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Add --pdb to attach pdb to exception stack for debugging. 421*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 422*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsii. Loading custom or local lldbmacros and operating_system plugin 423*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions------------------------------------------------------------------ 424*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 425*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsThe lldbmacros are packaged right into the dSYM for the kernel executable. This makes debugging very easy since they can get loaded automatically when symbols are loaded. 426*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsHowever, this setup makes it difficult for a lldbmacro developer to load custom/local macros. Following is the suggested solution for customizing your debugging setup: 427*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 428*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * set up environment variable DEBUG_XNU_LLDBMACROS=1 on your shell. This will disable the automatic setup of lldbmacros and the operating_system.py from the symbols. 429*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - bash$ export DEBUG_XNU_LLDBMACROS=1 430*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 431*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * start lldb from the shell 432*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - bash$ lldb 433*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 434*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * [optional] If you are making changes in the operating_system plugin then you need to set the plugin path for lldb to find your custom operating_system plugin file. 435*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - (lldb)settings set target.process.python-os-plugin-path /path/to/xnu/tools/lldbmacros/core/operating_system.py 436*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions If you do not wish to change anything in operating_system plugin then just leave the setting empty. The symbol loading module will set one up for you. 437*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 438*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * Load the xnu debug macros from your custom location. 439*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - (lldb)command script import /path/to/xnu/tools/lldbmacros/xnu.py 440*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 441*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 442*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributionsiii. Adding debug related 'printf's 443*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions----------------------------------- 444*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 445*c54f35caSApple OSS DistributionsThe xnu debug framework provides a utility function (debuglog) in utils.py. Please use this for any of your debugging needs. It will not print any output unless the user turns on debug logging on the command. Please check the documentaiton of debuglog for usage and options. 446*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 447*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions * To enable/disable logging 448*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions - (lldb) xnudebug debug 449*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions Enabled debug logging. 450*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 451*c54f35caSApple OSS Distributions 452