On Thu, Jul 26, 2007 at 06:06:20PM -0700, Peter Wemm wrote: > The other option is to find the kernel.debug for this crash, and do > this: > kgdb kernel.debug > gdb> l *0xffffffff8033953c > This will tell us the file and line number that the crash happened in. > There is no need to reboot for this unless you no longer have a > crashing kernel. I've played with this a little while, and after turning INVARIANTS on, it paniced in lapic_ipi_raw() on the KASSERT(lapic != NULL, ("%s called too early", __func__)); so I assume, that this function was called before lapic_init(), where lapic is initialized, which is wrong. It was clean current kernel with no other patches, now I don't have local access to that machine so I can test it in few days. btw. how can one get trace in text form, I mean syslog stop after panic and all I got logged is that it paniced. Anything I type in db> is lost. I know that this can be done by remote gdb, but unfortunatelly this isn't possible. ThanksReceived on Fri Jul 27 2007 - 05:48:38 UTC
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