1994-10-26 10:22:45 +03:00
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$NetBSD: Debug.tips,v 1.2 1994/10/26 07:22:49 cgd Exp $
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1994-05-23 09:49:17 +04:00
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NOTE: this description applies to the hp300 system with the old BSD
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virtual memory system. It has not been updated to reflect the new,
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Mach-derived VM system, but should still be useful.
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The new system has no fixed-address "u.", but has a fixed mapping
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for the kernel stack at 0xfff00000.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Some quick notes on the HPBSD VM layout and kernel debugging.
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Physical memory:
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Physical memory always ends at the top of the 32 bit address space; i.e. the
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last addressible byte is at 0xFFFFFFFF. Hence, the start of physical memory
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varies depending on how much memory is installed. The kernel variable "lowram"
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contains the starting locatation of memory as provided by the ROM.
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The low 128k (I think) of the physical address space is occupied by the ROM.
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This is accessible via /dev/mem *only* if the kernel is compiled with DEBUG.
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[ Maybe it should always be accessible? ]
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Virtual address spaces:
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The hardware page size is 4096 bytes. The hardware uses a two-level lookup.
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At the highest level is a one page segment table which maps a page table which
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maps the address space. Each 4 byte segment table entry (described in
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hp300/pte.h) contains the page number of a single page of 4 byte page table
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entries. Each PTE maps a single page of address space. Hence, each STE maps
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4Mb of address space and one page containing 1024 STEs is adequate to map the
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entire 4Gb address space.
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Both page and segment table entries look similar. Both have the page frame
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in the upper part and control bits in the lower. This is the opposite of
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the VAX. It is easy to convert the page frame number in an STE/PTE to a
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physical address, simply mentally mask out the low 12 bits. For example
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if a PTE contains 0xFF880019, the physical memory location mapped starts at
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0xFF880000.
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Kernel address space:
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The kernel resides in its own virtual address space independent of all user
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processes. When the processor is in supervisor mode (i.e. interrupt or
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exception handling) it uses the kernel virtual mapping. The kernel segment
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table is called Sysseg and is allocated statically in hp300/locore.s. The
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kernel page table is called Systab is also allocated statically in
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hp300/locore.s and consists of the usual assortment of SYSMAPs.
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The size of Systab (Syssize) depends on the configured size of the various
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maps but as currently configured is 9216 PTEs. Both segment and page tables
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are initialized at bootup in hp300/locore.s. The segment table never changes
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(except for bits maintained by the hardware). Portions of the page table
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change as needed. The kernel is mapped into the address space starting at 0.
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Theoretically, any address in the range 0 to Syssize * 4096 (0x2400000 as
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currently configured) is valid. However, certain addresses are more common
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in dumps than others. Those are (for the current configuration):
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0 - 0x800000 kernel text and permanent data structures
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0x917000 - 0x91a000 u-area; 1st page is user struct, last k-stack
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0x1b1b000 - 0x2400000 user page tables, also kmem_alloc()ed data
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User address space:
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The user text and data are loaded starting at VA 0. The user's stack starts
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at 0xFFF00000 and grows toward lower addresses. The pages above the user
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stack are used by the kernel. From 0xFFF00000 to 0xFFF03000 is the u-area.
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The 3 PTEs for this range map (read-only) the same memory as does 0x917000
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to 0x91a000 in the kernel address space. This address range is never used
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by the kernel, but exists for utilities that assume that the u-area sits
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above the user stack. The pages from FFF03000 up are not used. They
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exist so that the user stack is in the same location as in HPUX.
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The user segment table is allocated along with the page tables from Usrptmap.
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They are contiguous in kernel VA space with the page tables coming before
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the segment table. Hence, a process has p_szpt+1 pages allocated starting
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at kernel VA p_p0br.
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The user segment table is typically very sparse since each entry maps 4Mb.
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There are usually only two valid STEs, one at the start mapping the text/data
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potion of the page table, and one at the end mapping the stack/u-area. For
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example if the segment table was at 0xFFFFA000 there would be valid entries
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at 0xFFFFA000 and 0xFFFFAFFC.
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Random notes:
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An important thing to note is that there are no hardware length registers
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on the HP. This implies that we cannot "pack" data and stack PTEs into the
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same page table page. Hence, every user page table has at least 2 pages
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(3 if you count the segment table).
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The HP maintains the p0br/p0lr and p1br/p1lr PCB fields the same as the
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VAX even though they have no meaning to the hardware. This also keeps many
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utilities happy.
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There is no seperate interrupt stack (right now) on the HPs. Interrupt
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processing is handled on the kernel stack of the "current" process.
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Following is a list of things you might want to be able to do with a kernel
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core dump. One thing you should always have is a ps listing from the core
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file. Just do:
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ps klaw vmunix.? vmcore.?
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Exception related panics (i.e. those detected in hp300/trap.c) will dump
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out various useful information before panicing. If available, you should
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get this out of the /usr/adm/messages file. Finally, you should be in adb:
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adb -k vmunix.? vmcore.?
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Adb -k will allow you to examine the kernel address space more easily.
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It automatically maps kernel VAs in the range 0 to 0x2400000 to physical
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addresses. Since the kernel and user address spaces overlap (i.e. both
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start at 0), adb can't let you examine the address space of the "current"
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process as it does on the VAX.
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--------
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1. Find out what the current process was at the time of the crash:
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If you have the dump info from /usr/adm/messages, it should contain the
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PID of the active process. If you don't have this info you can just look
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at location "Umap". This is the PTE for the first page of the u-area; i.e.
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the user structure. Forget about the last 3 hex digits and compare the top
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5 to the ADDR column in the ps listing.
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2. Locating a process' user structure:
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Get the ADDR field of the desired process from the ps listing. This is the
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page frame number of the process' user structure. Tack 3 zeros on to the
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end to get the physical address. Note that this doesn't give you the kernel
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stack since it is in a different page than the user-structure and pages of
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the u-area are not physically contiguous.
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3. Locating a process' proc structure:
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First find the process' user structure as described above. Find the u_procp
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field at offset 0x200 from the beginning. This gives you the kernel VA of
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the proc structure.
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4. Locating a process' page table:
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First find the process' user structure as described above. The first part
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of the user structure is the PCB. The second longword (third field) of the
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PCB is pcb_ustp, a pointer to the user segment table. This pointer is
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actually the page frame number. Again adding 3 zeros yields the physical
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address. You can now use the values in the segment table to locate the
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page tables. For example, to locate the first page of the text/data part
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of the page table, use the first STE (longword) in the segment table.
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5. Locating a process' kernel stack:
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First find the process' page table as described above. The kernel stack
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is near the end of the user address space. So, locate the last entry in the
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user segment table (base+0xFFC) and use that entry to find the last page of
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the user page table. Look at the last 256 entries of this page
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(pagebase+0xFE0) The first is the PTE for the user-structure. The second
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was intended to be a read-only page to protect the user structure from the
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kernel stack. Currently it is read/write and actually allocated. Hence
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it can wind up being a second page for the kernel stack. The third is the
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kernel stack. The last 253 should be zero. Hence, indirecing through the
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third of these last 256 PTEs will give you the kernel stack page.
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An alternate way to do this is to use the p_addr field of the proc structure
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which is found as described above. The p_addr field is at offset 0x10 in the
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proc structure and points to the first of the PTEs mentioned above (i.e. the
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user structure PTE).
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6. Interpreting the info in a "trap type N..." panic:
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As mentioned, when the kernel crashes out of hp300/trap.c it will dump some
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useful information. This dates back to the days when I was debugging the
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exception handling code and had no kernel adb or even kernel crash dump code.
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"trap type" (decimal) is as defined in hp300/trap.h, it doesn't really
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correlate with anything useful. "code" (hex) is only useful for MMU
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(trap type 8) errors. It is the concatination of the MMU status register
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(see hp300/cpu.h) in the high 16 bits and the 68020 special status word
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(see the 020 manual page 6-17) in the low 16. "v" (hex) is the virtual
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address which caused the fault. "pid" (decimal) is the ID of the process
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running at the time of the exception. Note that if we panic in an interrupt
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routine, this process may not be related to the panic. "ps" (hex) is the
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value of the 68020 status register (see page 1-4 of 020 manual) at the time
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of the crash. If the 0x2000 bit is on, we were in supervisor (kernel) mode
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at the time, otherwise we were in user mode. "pc" (hex) is the value of the
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PC saved on the hardware exception frame. It may *not* be the PC of the
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instruction causing the fault (see the 020 manual for details). The 0x2000
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bit of "ps" dictates whether this is a kernel or user VA. "sfc" and "dfc"
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are the 68020 source/destination function codes. They should always be one.
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"p0" and "p1" are the VAX-like region registers. They are of the form:
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<length> '@' <kernel VA>
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where both are in hex. Following these values are a dump of the processor
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registers (hex). Check the address registers for values close to "v", the
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fault address. Most faults are causes by dereferences of bogus pointers.
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Most such dereferences are the result of 020 instructions using the:
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<address-register> '@' '(' offset ')'
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addressing mode. This can help you track down the faulting instruction (since
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the PC may not point to it). Note that the value of a7 (the stack pointer) is
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ALWAYS the user SP. This is brain-dead I know. Finally, is a dump of the
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stack (user/kernel) at the time of the offense. Before kernel crash dumps,
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this was very useful.
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7. Converting kernel virtual address to a physical address.
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Adb -k already does this for you, but sometimes you want to know what the
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resulting physical address is rather than what is there. Doing this is
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simply a matter of indexing into the kernel page table. In theory we would
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first have to do a lookup in the kernel segment table, but we know that the
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kernel page table is physically contiguous so this isn't necessary. The
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base of the system page table is "Sysmap", so to convert an address V just
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divide the address by 4096 to get the page number, multiply that by 4 (the
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size of a PTE in bytes) to get a byte offset, and add that to "Sysmap".
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This gives you the address of the PTE mapping V. You can then get the
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physical address by masking out the low 12 bits of the contents of that PTE.
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To wit:
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*(Sysmap+(VA%1000*4))&fffff000
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where VA is the virtual address in question.
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This technique should also work for user virtual addresses if you replace
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"Sysmap" with the value of the appropriate processes' P0BR. This works
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because a user's page table is *virtually* contiguous in the kernel
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starting at P0BR, and adb will handle translating the kernel virtual addresses
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for you.
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