On 31.01.2011 22:46, John Baldwin wrote: >># gdb kernel >> GNU gdb 6.1.1 [FreeBSD] >> Copyright 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc. >> GDB is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License, and you are >> welcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it under certain > conditions. >> Type "show copying" to see the conditions. >> There is absolutely no warranty for GDB. Type "show warranty" for details. >> This GDB was configured as "amd64-marcel-freebsd"... >> (gdb) l *0xffffffff803c1315 >> 0xffffffff803c1315 is in ng_address_hook > (/home/src/sys/netgraph/ng_base.c:3504). >> 3499 * Quick sanity check.. >> 3500 * Since a hook holds a reference on it's node, once we know >> 3501 * that the peer is still connected (even if invalid,) we > know >> 3502 * that the peer node is present, though maybe invalid. >> 3503 */ >> 3504 if ((hook == NULL) || >> 3505 NG_HOOK_NOT_VALID(hook) || >> 3506 NG_HOOK_NOT_VALID(peer = NG_HOOK_PEER(hook)) || >> 3507 NG_NODE_NOT_VALID(peernode = NG_PEER_NODE(hook))) { >> 3508 NG_FREE_ITEM(item); > > Hmmm. I think you might have a hardware problem. Notice the fault address, > it is 0x200000030. Can you do 'x/i <instruction pointer>'?
(gdb) x/i 0xffffffff803c1315 0xffffffff803c1315 <ng_address_hook+37>: testb $0x1,0x28(%rdx) (gdb) x/i *0xffffffff803c1315 0x12842f6: Cannot access memory at address 0x12842f6 > I suspect it is > doing a memory access from that has a constant offset of 0x30, in which case > the original pointer was 0x200000000, meaning it would be NULL except it has > a > single-bit error. That would likely be caused by a hardware issue such as > failing RAM, etc. This is SuperMicro server with ECC RAM. I've already tested it with memtest86+ during long time, no memory problems found. Eugene Grosbein _______________________________________________ freebsd-net@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-net To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-net-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"