Files
kdumpst/kdump-load.sh
Guilherme G. Piccoli ecbf6f298f all: Add/improve config options
As part of the upstreaming effort, we need to add some extra tunings
in the package. Especially related to GRUB autosetting and Pstore
memory settings:

(a) Currently the ramoops record size and memory amount are hardcoded
in the kdump-load script - we change it here, by having these settings
on the kdump config file;

(b) GRUB autosetting is pretty simple and everything is hardcoded.
We hereby add a bunch of configurable settings in the kdump conf file,
in order we can customize the GRUB handling, to make it work in both
Arch and SteamOS.

While at it, fixed some related comments and renamed some variables,
usually dropping KDUMP_ name when it applies to pstore as well.
Also, bumped the crashkernel memory from 192M to 256M - recent kernels
demand more memory, let's play safe.

Signed-off-by: Guilherme G. Piccoli <gpiccoli@igalia.com>
2023-03-31 15:34:42 -03:00

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#!/bin/bash
#
# SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1+
#
# Copyright (c) 2021 Valve.
# Maintainer: Guilherme G. Piccoli <gpiccoli@igalia.com>
#
# Script that loads the panic kdump (from within a systemd service) and/or
# configures the Pstore-RAM mechanism. If the proper parameters are passed
# also, either it creates the minimal kdump initramfs for the running kernel
# or removes all the previously created ones. Since it runs on boot time,
# extra care is required to avoid boot hangs.
#
# This function has 2 purposes: if 'kdump' is passed as argument and we don't
# have crashkernel memory reserved, we edit grub config file and recreate
# grub.cfg, so next boot has it reserved; in this case, we also bail-out,
# since kdump can't be loaded anyway.
#
# If 'pstore' is passsed as argument, we try to unset crashkernel iff it's
# already set AND the pattern in grub config is the one added by us - if the
# users set crashkernel themselves, we don't mess with that.
grub_update() {
CRASHK="$(cat /sys/kernel/kexec_crash_size)"
SED_ADD="s/^GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=\"/GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=\"${GRUB_CMDLINE}/g"
if [ "${GRUB_AUTOSET}" -eq 1 ]; then
if [ "$1" = "kdump" ] && [ "${CRASHK}" -eq 0 ]; then
sed -i "${SED_ADD}" "${GRUB_CFG_FILE}"
if ! grub-mkconfig -o "${GRUB_BOOT_FILE}" 1>/dev/null; then
logger "kdump: failed to execute command \"${GRUB_CMD}\""
exit 1
fi
sync "${GRUB_BOOT_FILE}" 2>/dev/null
logger "kdump: kexec won't succeed, no reserved memory in this boot..."
logger "kdump: but we automatically set crashkernel for next boot."
exit 0 # this is considered a successful run
fi
if [ "$1" = "pstore" ] && [ "${CRASHK}" -ne 0 ]; then
sed -i "s/\"${GRUB_CMDLINE}/\"/g" "${GRUB_CFG_FILE}"
if ! grub-mkconfig -o "${GRUB_BOOT_FILE}" 1>/dev/null; then
logger "kdump: failed to execute command \"${GRUB_CMD}\""
exit 1
fi
sync "${GRUB_BOOT_FILE}" 2>/dev/null
logger "kdump: cleared crashkernel memory previously set."
fi
fi
}
# This function is responsible for creating the kdump initrd, either
# via command-line call or in case initrd doesn't exist during kdump load.
create_initrd() {
rm -f "${MOUNT_FOLDER}/kdump-initrd-$(uname -r).img"
echo "Creating the kdump initramfs for kernel \"$(uname -r)\" ..."
DRACUT_NO_XATTR=1 dracut --no-early-microcode --host-only -q -m\
"bash systemd systemd-initrd systemd-sysusers modsign dbus-daemon kdump dbus udev-rules dracut-systemd base fs-lib shutdown"\
--kver "$(uname -r)" "${MOUNT_FOLDER}/kdump-initrd-$(uname -r).img"
}
# This routine performs a clean-up by deleting the old/useless remaining
# kdump initrd files.
cleanup_unused_initrd() {
INSTALLED_KERNELS="${MOUNT_FOLDER}/.installed_kernels"
find /lib/modules/* -maxdepth 0 -type d -exec basename {} \;>"${INSTALLED_KERNELS}"
find "${MOUNT_FOLDER}"/* -name "kdump-initrd*" -type f -print0 | while IFS= read -r -d '' file
do
FNAME="$(basename "${file}" .img)"
KVER="${FNAME#kdump-initrd-}"
if ! grep -q "${KVER}" "${INSTALLED_KERNELS}" ; then
rm -f "${MOUNT_FOLDER}/${FNAME}.img"
logger "kdump: removed unused file \"${FNAME}.img\""
fi
done
rm -f "${INSTALLED_KERNELS}"
}
# Load the necessary external variables, otherwise it'll fail later.
HAVE_CFG_FILES=0
shopt -s nullglob
for cfg in "/usr/share/kdump.d"/*; do
if [ -f "$cfg" ]; then
. "$cfg"
HAVE_CFG_FILES=1
fi
done
shopt -u nullglob
if [ ${HAVE_CFG_FILES} -eq 0 ]; then
logger "kdump: no config files in /usr/share/kdump.d/ - aborting."
exit 1
fi
# Find the proper mount point expected for kdump collection:
DEVN_MOUNTED="$(findmnt "${MOUNT_DEVNODE}" -fno TARGET)"
# Create the kdump main folder here, as soon as possible, given
# the importance of such directory in all kdump/pstore steps.
MOUNT_FOLDER="${DEVN_MOUNTED}/${MOUNT_FOLDER}"
mkdir -p "${MOUNT_FOLDER}"
echo "${MOUNT_FOLDER}" > "${MNT_TMP}"
sync "${MNT_TMP}"
# Notice that at this point it's required to have the full
# MOUNT_FOLDER, so this must remain after the DEVNODE operations above.
if [ "$1" = "initrd" ]; then
create_initrd
exit 0
fi
if [ "$1" = "clear" ]; then
rm -f "${MOUNT_FOLDER}"/kdump-initrd-*
exit 0
fi
# Pstore-RAM load; if it is configured via the config files and fails
# to configure pstore, we still try to load the kdump. We try to reserve
# here a ${MEM_REQUIRED} memory region.
# Notice that we assume ramoops is a module here - if built-in, users
# should properly load it through command-line parameters.
if [ "${USE_PSTORE_RAM}" -eq 1 ]; then
MEM_REQUIRED="${PSTORE_MEM_AMOUNT}"
RECORD_SIZE="${PSTORE_RECORD_SZ}"
RANGE=$(grep "RAM buffer" /proc/iomem | head -n1 | cut -f1 -d\ )
MEM_END=$(echo "$RANGE" | cut -f2 -d-)
MEM_START=$(echo "$RANGE" | cut -f1 -d-)
MEM_SIZE=$(( 16#${MEM_END} - 16#${MEM_START} ))
if [ ${MEM_SIZE} -ge "${MEM_REQUIRED}" ]; then
if modprobe ramoops mem_address=0x"${MEM_START}" mem_size="${MEM_REQUIRED}" record_size="${RECORD_SIZE}"; then
# If Pstore is set, update grub.cfg to avoid reserving crashkernel memory.
logger "kdump: pstore-RAM was loaded successfully"
cleanup_unused_initrd
grub_update pstore
exit 0
fi
logger "kdump: pstore-RAM load failed...will try kdump"
fi
# Fallback to kdump load - if we fail when configuring pstore, better
# trying kdump; in case we have crashkernel memory reserved, lucky us.
# If not, we're going to set that automatically on grub_update().
# Notice that if it's not set, we bail-out in grub_update() - there's
# no point in continuing since kdump cannot work.
fi
cleanup_unused_initrd
grub_update kdump
# Stolen from Debian kdump
KDUMP_CMDLINE=$(sed -re 's/(^| )(crashkernel|hugepages|hugepagesz)=[^ ]*//g;s/"/\\\\"/' /proc/cmdline)
KDUMP_CMDLINE="${KDUMP_CMDLINE} panic=-1 oops=panic fsck.mode=force fsck.repair=yes nr_cpus=1 reset_devices"
VMLINUX="$(grep -o 'BOOT_IMAGE=[^ ]*' /proc/cmdline)"
# In case we don't have a valid initrd, for some reason, try creating
# one before loading kdump (or else it will fail).
INITRD_FNAME="${MOUNT_FOLDER}/kdump-initrd-$(uname -r).img"
if [ ! -s "${INITRD_FNAME}" ]; then
create_initrd
fi
if ! kexec -s -p "${VMLINUX#*BOOT_IMAGE=}" --initrd "${INITRD_FNAME}" --append="${KDUMP_CMDLINE}"; then
logger "kdump: kexec load failed"
exit 1
fi
logger "kdump: panic kexec loaded successfully"