On Thu, 2014-06-19 at 20:20 +0900, Masami Hiramatsu wrote: > (2014/06/19 20:01), Masami Hiramatsu wrote: > > >>>>> Ah, those messages should be shown in dmesg when booting if it doesn't > >>>>> work, > >>>>> because the messages are printed by initialization process of kprobe > >>>>> blacklist. > >>>>> So, reproducing it is just enabling CONFIG_KPROBES and boot it. > >>>> Well, we don't get those messages on Power, since the kallsyms has the > >>>> entries for ".function_name". The correct way to verify is, either : > >>> > >>> Hmm, that seems another issue on powerpc. Is that expected(and designed) > >>> behavior? > >> AFAIK, yes, it is. > >> To be more precise : > >> > >> we have 'foo' and '.foo' for a function foo(), where 'foo' points to the > >> function_entry and '.foo' points to the actual function. > > > > Ah, I see. So if we run > > > > func_ptr p = foo; > > return p == kallsyms_lookup_name(".foo"); > > > > it returns true. > > One more thing I should know, is the address of ".function_name" within the > kernel text? In other words, does kernel_text_address() return true for that > address? If not, it's easy to verify the address.
Yes. That is the text address, kernel_text_address() should definitely return true. On 64-bit, ABIv1, "foo" points to the function descriptor, in the ".opd" section. ".foo" points to the actual text of the function, in ".text". On 64-bit, ABIv2, "foo" points to the text in ".text". There are no dot symbols. cheers _______________________________________________ Linuxppc-dev mailing list Linuxppc-dev@lists.ozlabs.org https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/linuxppc-dev