Re: Top 10 kernel oopses for the week ending January 12th, 2008

From: Arjan van de Ven
Date: Sat Jan 12 2008 - 18:46:36 EST


Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Jan 12, 2008 at 03:13:29PM -0800, Arjan van de Ven wrote:
Adrian Bunk wrote:
All the other reports only contain the plain trace. Is there any way to get more information whether the former is a pattern or not, and to
get this information somehow displayed on the webpage?
IF the kernel prints that its tainted or whatever it'll be shown, as well
as the exact versions etc etc if they are there.
Sadly none of this information is there prior to 2.6.24-rc4.
...

OK, the problem might actually not be the omission of displaying the tainted information but the omission of considering any relevant context.

Looking deeper:

Number #2424 is WARN_ON-after-tainted-oops.

Is your rank 1 just a symptom that the system is in a bad state after running in what is your rank 8?

In this case the information when following e.g. #2827 is quite useless since wherever you got this trace from all related context information like e.g. whether it's like #2424 just the symptom of a previous Oops is not displayed.

the tainted flags have a flag for "there was a previous oops", and if that's set,
the kerneloops.org website ignores the report. Simple as that.

In the worst case, an entry might only contain WARN_ON traces without any information where the traces came from and whether it's worth looking at them or whether the system always already was in a known-bad state when they occured?

again as of 2.6.24-rc4 or so, this is just no longer the case. The problem is with
older kernels which had a WARN_ON() that didn't print ANY information other than
a plain backtrace.
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