xref: /openbmc/linux/kernel/panic.c (revision cc8bbe1a)
1 /*
2  *  linux/kernel/panic.c
3  *
4  *  Copyright (C) 1991, 1992  Linus Torvalds
5  */
6 
7 /*
8  * This function is used through-out the kernel (including mm and fs)
9  * to indicate a major problem.
10  */
11 #include <linux/debug_locks.h>
12 #include <linux/interrupt.h>
13 #include <linux/kmsg_dump.h>
14 #include <linux/kallsyms.h>
15 #include <linux/notifier.h>
16 #include <linux/module.h>
17 #include <linux/random.h>
18 #include <linux/ftrace.h>
19 #include <linux/reboot.h>
20 #include <linux/delay.h>
21 #include <linux/kexec.h>
22 #include <linux/sched.h>
23 #include <linux/sysrq.h>
24 #include <linux/init.h>
25 #include <linux/nmi.h>
26 #include <linux/console.h>
27 
28 #define PANIC_TIMER_STEP 100
29 #define PANIC_BLINK_SPD 18
30 
31 int panic_on_oops = CONFIG_PANIC_ON_OOPS_VALUE;
32 static unsigned long tainted_mask;
33 static int pause_on_oops;
34 static int pause_on_oops_flag;
35 static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(pause_on_oops_lock);
36 bool crash_kexec_post_notifiers;
37 int panic_on_warn __read_mostly;
38 
39 int panic_timeout = CONFIG_PANIC_TIMEOUT;
40 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(panic_timeout);
41 
42 ATOMIC_NOTIFIER_HEAD(panic_notifier_list);
43 
44 EXPORT_SYMBOL(panic_notifier_list);
45 
46 static long no_blink(int state)
47 {
48 	return 0;
49 }
50 
51 /* Returns how long it waited in ms */
52 long (*panic_blink)(int state);
53 EXPORT_SYMBOL(panic_blink);
54 
55 /*
56  * Stop ourself in panic -- architecture code may override this
57  */
58 void __weak panic_smp_self_stop(void)
59 {
60 	while (1)
61 		cpu_relax();
62 }
63 
64 /*
65  * Stop ourselves in NMI context if another CPU has already panicked. Arch code
66  * may override this to prepare for crash dumping, e.g. save regs info.
67  */
68 void __weak nmi_panic_self_stop(struct pt_regs *regs)
69 {
70 	panic_smp_self_stop();
71 }
72 
73 atomic_t panic_cpu = ATOMIC_INIT(PANIC_CPU_INVALID);
74 
75 /**
76  *	panic - halt the system
77  *	@fmt: The text string to print
78  *
79  *	Display a message, then perform cleanups.
80  *
81  *	This function never returns.
82  */
83 void panic(const char *fmt, ...)
84 {
85 	static char buf[1024];
86 	va_list args;
87 	long i, i_next = 0;
88 	int state = 0;
89 	int old_cpu, this_cpu;
90 
91 	/*
92 	 * Disable local interrupts. This will prevent panic_smp_self_stop
93 	 * from deadlocking the first cpu that invokes the panic, since
94 	 * there is nothing to prevent an interrupt handler (that runs
95 	 * after setting panic_cpu) from invoking panic() again.
96 	 */
97 	local_irq_disable();
98 
99 	/*
100 	 * It's possible to come here directly from a panic-assertion and
101 	 * not have preempt disabled. Some functions called from here want
102 	 * preempt to be disabled. No point enabling it later though...
103 	 *
104 	 * Only one CPU is allowed to execute the panic code from here. For
105 	 * multiple parallel invocations of panic, all other CPUs either
106 	 * stop themself or will wait until they are stopped by the 1st CPU
107 	 * with smp_send_stop().
108 	 *
109 	 * `old_cpu == PANIC_CPU_INVALID' means this is the 1st CPU which
110 	 * comes here, so go ahead.
111 	 * `old_cpu == this_cpu' means we came from nmi_panic() which sets
112 	 * panic_cpu to this CPU.  In this case, this is also the 1st CPU.
113 	 */
114 	this_cpu = raw_smp_processor_id();
115 	old_cpu  = atomic_cmpxchg(&panic_cpu, PANIC_CPU_INVALID, this_cpu);
116 
117 	if (old_cpu != PANIC_CPU_INVALID && old_cpu != this_cpu)
118 		panic_smp_self_stop();
119 
120 	console_verbose();
121 	bust_spinlocks(1);
122 	va_start(args, fmt);
123 	vsnprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), fmt, args);
124 	va_end(args);
125 	pr_emerg("Kernel panic - not syncing: %s\n", buf);
126 #ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_BUGVERBOSE
127 	/*
128 	 * Avoid nested stack-dumping if a panic occurs during oops processing
129 	 */
130 	if (!test_taint(TAINT_DIE) && oops_in_progress <= 1)
131 		dump_stack();
132 #endif
133 
134 	/*
135 	 * If we have crashed and we have a crash kernel loaded let it handle
136 	 * everything else.
137 	 * If we want to run this after calling panic_notifiers, pass
138 	 * the "crash_kexec_post_notifiers" option to the kernel.
139 	 *
140 	 * Bypass the panic_cpu check and call __crash_kexec directly.
141 	 */
142 	if (!crash_kexec_post_notifiers)
143 		__crash_kexec(NULL);
144 
145 	/*
146 	 * Note smp_send_stop is the usual smp shutdown function, which
147 	 * unfortunately means it may not be hardened to work in a panic
148 	 * situation.
149 	 */
150 	smp_send_stop();
151 
152 	/*
153 	 * Run any panic handlers, including those that might need to
154 	 * add information to the kmsg dump output.
155 	 */
156 	atomic_notifier_call_chain(&panic_notifier_list, 0, buf);
157 
158 	kmsg_dump(KMSG_DUMP_PANIC);
159 
160 	/*
161 	 * If you doubt kdump always works fine in any situation,
162 	 * "crash_kexec_post_notifiers" offers you a chance to run
163 	 * panic_notifiers and dumping kmsg before kdump.
164 	 * Note: since some panic_notifiers can make crashed kernel
165 	 * more unstable, it can increase risks of the kdump failure too.
166 	 *
167 	 * Bypass the panic_cpu check and call __crash_kexec directly.
168 	 */
169 	if (crash_kexec_post_notifiers)
170 		__crash_kexec(NULL);
171 
172 	bust_spinlocks(0);
173 
174 	/*
175 	 * We may have ended up stopping the CPU holding the lock (in
176 	 * smp_send_stop()) while still having some valuable data in the console
177 	 * buffer.  Try to acquire the lock then release it regardless of the
178 	 * result.  The release will also print the buffers out.  Locks debug
179 	 * should be disabled to avoid reporting bad unlock balance when
180 	 * panic() is not being callled from OOPS.
181 	 */
182 	debug_locks_off();
183 	console_flush_on_panic();
184 
185 	if (!panic_blink)
186 		panic_blink = no_blink;
187 
188 	if (panic_timeout > 0) {
189 		/*
190 		 * Delay timeout seconds before rebooting the machine.
191 		 * We can't use the "normal" timers since we just panicked.
192 		 */
193 		pr_emerg("Rebooting in %d seconds..", panic_timeout);
194 
195 		for (i = 0; i < panic_timeout * 1000; i += PANIC_TIMER_STEP) {
196 			touch_nmi_watchdog();
197 			if (i >= i_next) {
198 				i += panic_blink(state ^= 1);
199 				i_next = i + 3600 / PANIC_BLINK_SPD;
200 			}
201 			mdelay(PANIC_TIMER_STEP);
202 		}
203 	}
204 	if (panic_timeout != 0) {
205 		/*
206 		 * This will not be a clean reboot, with everything
207 		 * shutting down.  But if there is a chance of
208 		 * rebooting the system it will be rebooted.
209 		 */
210 		emergency_restart();
211 	}
212 #ifdef __sparc__
213 	{
214 		extern int stop_a_enabled;
215 		/* Make sure the user can actually press Stop-A (L1-A) */
216 		stop_a_enabled = 1;
217 		pr_emerg("Press Stop-A (L1-A) to return to the boot prom\n");
218 	}
219 #endif
220 #if defined(CONFIG_S390)
221 	{
222 		unsigned long caller;
223 
224 		caller = (unsigned long)__builtin_return_address(0);
225 		disabled_wait(caller);
226 	}
227 #endif
228 	pr_emerg("---[ end Kernel panic - not syncing: %s\n", buf);
229 	local_irq_enable();
230 	for (i = 0; ; i += PANIC_TIMER_STEP) {
231 		touch_softlockup_watchdog();
232 		if (i >= i_next) {
233 			i += panic_blink(state ^= 1);
234 			i_next = i + 3600 / PANIC_BLINK_SPD;
235 		}
236 		mdelay(PANIC_TIMER_STEP);
237 	}
238 }
239 
240 EXPORT_SYMBOL(panic);
241 
242 
243 struct tnt {
244 	u8	bit;
245 	char	true;
246 	char	false;
247 };
248 
249 static const struct tnt tnts[] = {
250 	{ TAINT_PROPRIETARY_MODULE,	'P', 'G' },
251 	{ TAINT_FORCED_MODULE,		'F', ' ' },
252 	{ TAINT_CPU_OUT_OF_SPEC,	'S', ' ' },
253 	{ TAINT_FORCED_RMMOD,		'R', ' ' },
254 	{ TAINT_MACHINE_CHECK,		'M', ' ' },
255 	{ TAINT_BAD_PAGE,		'B', ' ' },
256 	{ TAINT_USER,			'U', ' ' },
257 	{ TAINT_DIE,			'D', ' ' },
258 	{ TAINT_OVERRIDDEN_ACPI_TABLE,	'A', ' ' },
259 	{ TAINT_WARN,			'W', ' ' },
260 	{ TAINT_CRAP,			'C', ' ' },
261 	{ TAINT_FIRMWARE_WORKAROUND,	'I', ' ' },
262 	{ TAINT_OOT_MODULE,		'O', ' ' },
263 	{ TAINT_UNSIGNED_MODULE,	'E', ' ' },
264 	{ TAINT_SOFTLOCKUP,		'L', ' ' },
265 	{ TAINT_LIVEPATCH,		'K', ' ' },
266 };
267 
268 /**
269  *	print_tainted - return a string to represent the kernel taint state.
270  *
271  *  'P' - Proprietary module has been loaded.
272  *  'F' - Module has been forcibly loaded.
273  *  'S' - SMP with CPUs not designed for SMP.
274  *  'R' - User forced a module unload.
275  *  'M' - System experienced a machine check exception.
276  *  'B' - System has hit bad_page.
277  *  'U' - Userspace-defined naughtiness.
278  *  'D' - Kernel has oopsed before
279  *  'A' - ACPI table overridden.
280  *  'W' - Taint on warning.
281  *  'C' - modules from drivers/staging are loaded.
282  *  'I' - Working around severe firmware bug.
283  *  'O' - Out-of-tree module has been loaded.
284  *  'E' - Unsigned module has been loaded.
285  *  'L' - A soft lockup has previously occurred.
286  *  'K' - Kernel has been live patched.
287  *
288  *	The string is overwritten by the next call to print_tainted().
289  */
290 const char *print_tainted(void)
291 {
292 	static char buf[ARRAY_SIZE(tnts) + sizeof("Tainted: ")];
293 
294 	if (tainted_mask) {
295 		char *s;
296 		int i;
297 
298 		s = buf + sprintf(buf, "Tainted: ");
299 		for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(tnts); i++) {
300 			const struct tnt *t = &tnts[i];
301 			*s++ = test_bit(t->bit, &tainted_mask) ?
302 					t->true : t->false;
303 		}
304 		*s = 0;
305 	} else
306 		snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "Not tainted");
307 
308 	return buf;
309 }
310 
311 int test_taint(unsigned flag)
312 {
313 	return test_bit(flag, &tainted_mask);
314 }
315 EXPORT_SYMBOL(test_taint);
316 
317 unsigned long get_taint(void)
318 {
319 	return tainted_mask;
320 }
321 
322 /**
323  * add_taint: add a taint flag if not already set.
324  * @flag: one of the TAINT_* constants.
325  * @lockdep_ok: whether lock debugging is still OK.
326  *
327  * If something bad has gone wrong, you'll want @lockdebug_ok = false, but for
328  * some notewortht-but-not-corrupting cases, it can be set to true.
329  */
330 void add_taint(unsigned flag, enum lockdep_ok lockdep_ok)
331 {
332 	if (lockdep_ok == LOCKDEP_NOW_UNRELIABLE && __debug_locks_off())
333 		pr_warn("Disabling lock debugging due to kernel taint\n");
334 
335 	set_bit(flag, &tainted_mask);
336 }
337 EXPORT_SYMBOL(add_taint);
338 
339 static void spin_msec(int msecs)
340 {
341 	int i;
342 
343 	for (i = 0; i < msecs; i++) {
344 		touch_nmi_watchdog();
345 		mdelay(1);
346 	}
347 }
348 
349 /*
350  * It just happens that oops_enter() and oops_exit() are identically
351  * implemented...
352  */
353 static void do_oops_enter_exit(void)
354 {
355 	unsigned long flags;
356 	static int spin_counter;
357 
358 	if (!pause_on_oops)
359 		return;
360 
361 	spin_lock_irqsave(&pause_on_oops_lock, flags);
362 	if (pause_on_oops_flag == 0) {
363 		/* This CPU may now print the oops message */
364 		pause_on_oops_flag = 1;
365 	} else {
366 		/* We need to stall this CPU */
367 		if (!spin_counter) {
368 			/* This CPU gets to do the counting */
369 			spin_counter = pause_on_oops;
370 			do {
371 				spin_unlock(&pause_on_oops_lock);
372 				spin_msec(MSEC_PER_SEC);
373 				spin_lock(&pause_on_oops_lock);
374 			} while (--spin_counter);
375 			pause_on_oops_flag = 0;
376 		} else {
377 			/* This CPU waits for a different one */
378 			while (spin_counter) {
379 				spin_unlock(&pause_on_oops_lock);
380 				spin_msec(1);
381 				spin_lock(&pause_on_oops_lock);
382 			}
383 		}
384 	}
385 	spin_unlock_irqrestore(&pause_on_oops_lock, flags);
386 }
387 
388 /*
389  * Return true if the calling CPU is allowed to print oops-related info.
390  * This is a bit racy..
391  */
392 int oops_may_print(void)
393 {
394 	return pause_on_oops_flag == 0;
395 }
396 
397 /*
398  * Called when the architecture enters its oops handler, before it prints
399  * anything.  If this is the first CPU to oops, and it's oopsing the first
400  * time then let it proceed.
401  *
402  * This is all enabled by the pause_on_oops kernel boot option.  We do all
403  * this to ensure that oopses don't scroll off the screen.  It has the
404  * side-effect of preventing later-oopsing CPUs from mucking up the display,
405  * too.
406  *
407  * It turns out that the CPU which is allowed to print ends up pausing for
408  * the right duration, whereas all the other CPUs pause for twice as long:
409  * once in oops_enter(), once in oops_exit().
410  */
411 void oops_enter(void)
412 {
413 	tracing_off();
414 	/* can't trust the integrity of the kernel anymore: */
415 	debug_locks_off();
416 	do_oops_enter_exit();
417 }
418 
419 /*
420  * 64-bit random ID for oopses:
421  */
422 static u64 oops_id;
423 
424 static int init_oops_id(void)
425 {
426 	if (!oops_id)
427 		get_random_bytes(&oops_id, sizeof(oops_id));
428 	else
429 		oops_id++;
430 
431 	return 0;
432 }
433 late_initcall(init_oops_id);
434 
435 void print_oops_end_marker(void)
436 {
437 	init_oops_id();
438 	pr_warn("---[ end trace %016llx ]---\n", (unsigned long long)oops_id);
439 }
440 
441 /*
442  * Called when the architecture exits its oops handler, after printing
443  * everything.
444  */
445 void oops_exit(void)
446 {
447 	do_oops_enter_exit();
448 	print_oops_end_marker();
449 	kmsg_dump(KMSG_DUMP_OOPS);
450 }
451 
452 #ifdef WANT_WARN_ON_SLOWPATH
453 struct slowpath_args {
454 	const char *fmt;
455 	va_list args;
456 };
457 
458 static void warn_slowpath_common(const char *file, int line, void *caller,
459 				 unsigned taint, struct slowpath_args *args)
460 {
461 	disable_trace_on_warning();
462 
463 	pr_warn("------------[ cut here ]------------\n");
464 	pr_warn("WARNING: CPU: %d PID: %d at %s:%d %pS()\n",
465 		raw_smp_processor_id(), current->pid, file, line, caller);
466 
467 	if (args)
468 		vprintk(args->fmt, args->args);
469 
470 	if (panic_on_warn) {
471 		/*
472 		 * This thread may hit another WARN() in the panic path.
473 		 * Resetting this prevents additional WARN() from panicking the
474 		 * system on this thread.  Other threads are blocked by the
475 		 * panic_mutex in panic().
476 		 */
477 		panic_on_warn = 0;
478 		panic("panic_on_warn set ...\n");
479 	}
480 
481 	print_modules();
482 	dump_stack();
483 	print_oops_end_marker();
484 	/* Just a warning, don't kill lockdep. */
485 	add_taint(taint, LOCKDEP_STILL_OK);
486 }
487 
488 void warn_slowpath_fmt(const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, ...)
489 {
490 	struct slowpath_args args;
491 
492 	args.fmt = fmt;
493 	va_start(args.args, fmt);
494 	warn_slowpath_common(file, line, __builtin_return_address(0),
495 			     TAINT_WARN, &args);
496 	va_end(args.args);
497 }
498 EXPORT_SYMBOL(warn_slowpath_fmt);
499 
500 void warn_slowpath_fmt_taint(const char *file, int line,
501 			     unsigned taint, const char *fmt, ...)
502 {
503 	struct slowpath_args args;
504 
505 	args.fmt = fmt;
506 	va_start(args.args, fmt);
507 	warn_slowpath_common(file, line, __builtin_return_address(0),
508 			     taint, &args);
509 	va_end(args.args);
510 }
511 EXPORT_SYMBOL(warn_slowpath_fmt_taint);
512 
513 void warn_slowpath_null(const char *file, int line)
514 {
515 	warn_slowpath_common(file, line, __builtin_return_address(0),
516 			     TAINT_WARN, NULL);
517 }
518 EXPORT_SYMBOL(warn_slowpath_null);
519 #endif
520 
521 #ifdef CONFIG_CC_STACKPROTECTOR
522 
523 /*
524  * Called when gcc's -fstack-protector feature is used, and
525  * gcc detects corruption of the on-stack canary value
526  */
527 __visible void __stack_chk_fail(void)
528 {
529 	panic("stack-protector: Kernel stack is corrupted in: %p\n",
530 		__builtin_return_address(0));
531 }
532 EXPORT_SYMBOL(__stack_chk_fail);
533 
534 #endif
535 
536 core_param(panic, panic_timeout, int, 0644);
537 core_param(pause_on_oops, pause_on_oops, int, 0644);
538 core_param(panic_on_warn, panic_on_warn, int, 0644);
539 
540 static int __init setup_crash_kexec_post_notifiers(char *s)
541 {
542 	crash_kexec_post_notifiers = true;
543 	return 0;
544 }
545 early_param("crash_kexec_post_notifiers", setup_crash_kexec_post_notifiers);
546 
547 static int __init oops_setup(char *s)
548 {
549 	if (!s)
550 		return -EINVAL;
551 	if (!strcmp(s, "panic"))
552 		panic_on_oops = 1;
553 	return 0;
554 }
555 early_param("oops", oops_setup);
556