Thanks for the information.
On Mon, 27 Feb 2006, Jesper Juhl wrote:
On 2/27/06, Justin Piszcz <[email protected]> wrote:
I have a trace that looks like the following, my question is, are the
process(es) at the top of the call trace responible for the actual crash
of the machine? Are they the root cause?
As a general rule, functions near the top of a trace are more likely
to be the cause of the crash than functions near the bottom, but
that's not always the case.
Also sometimes when dealing with race conditions some part of the
kernel messes up and causes a different part of the kernel to crase so
that what you see in the trace is not what actually *caused* the
problem but merely what was affected by a problem somewhere else.
And if there's memory corruption going on then sometimes one part of
the kernel can scrible on random memory and cause a different and
completely unrelated part of the kernel to blow up.
So you cannot always trust a call trace 100%.
Would this point to a bad SCSI board?
I'm sorry, I can't tell you :(
You might want to try enable debugging symbols and frame pointers to
get a more readable trace.
Consider these options (in the Kernel Hacking section of menuconfig) :
CONFIG_DEBUG_KERNEL
CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO
CONFIG_FRAME_POINTER
CONFIG_UNWIND_INFO
There are other options in there as well that may help, read their
description and decide for yourself if you think they will be needed -
or maybe someone else who understands your dump better than me can
advice on what specific options to enable.
Hope this helps you.
--
Jesper Juhl <[email protected]>
Don't top-post http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/T/top-post.html
Plain text mails only, please http://www.expita.com/nomime.html
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