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Message-ID: <2f4958ff0703120410j321c88a0pad91f78778520fc8@mail.gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 12 Mar 2007 12:10:19 +0100
From: "Grzegorz JaĆkiewicz" <gryzman@...il.com>
To: linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: pcap app causes kernel panic on 2.4.33.3 right after "NETDEV WATCHDOG: eth1: transmit timed out"
Hi folks.
I have a simple program, that analyzes ethernet packets. Counting
traffic on from/to basis, and dumping that informatio nevery minute.
Everything is cleared - in terms of memory, valgrind doesn't complain
a bit.
But once every 2-3 days the router on which the software is running,
freezes. It is clear kernel panic.
Before that panic occurs, I have "NETDEV WATCHDOG: eth1: transmit
timed out" . always right before crash.
I am sure, the software doesn't have memleaks. Everything in pcap was
programmed according with examples, and double checked - but I can
give source away on request.
I think the problem must lay somewhere between pcap and kernel (the
"transmit timed out" message sounds too dodgee, and it is always there
right before crash - only).
Oops:
Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address 909fe955
c013b582
*pde = 00000000
Oops: 0000
CPU: 0
eax: 909fe93d ebx: 00000001 ecx: 909fe93d edx: 00000000
esi: cf4e6d90 edi: 00000000 ebp: 00000000 esp: c3701c58
ds: 0018 es: 0018 ss: 0018
Process postmaster (pid:3838, stackpage=c3701000)
Stack: c031a7ec 00000000 cf4e6d80 cf4e6d80 c031a847 cf4e6d80 c3701c94 cf4e6d80
c7ad6810 c031a9ae cf4e6d80 00000000 cf4e6d80 c0339a6d cf4e6d80 c031f187
00000000 c0468a5c 00000046 c0468a6c 00000246 cf4e6d80 cfd03740 00000000
Call Trace: [<c031a7ec>] [<c031a847>] [<c031a9ae>] [<c0339a6d>] [<c031f187>]
[<c031f70e>] [<c031f810>] [<c031f97f>] [<c0122586>] [<c033cad0>] [<c0329c28>]
[<c033cad0>] [<c033e58f>] [<c033cad0>] [<c035dfe2>] [<c035dc50>] [<c01868dd>]
[<c017e6fb>] [<c03169e4>] [<c03167bc>] [<c0317be4>] [<c018bbb8>] [<c0186d68>]
[<c0186e9c>] [<c0317c53>] [<c0318637>] [<c0108eff>]
Code: 8b 40 18 f6 c4 40 75 0b f0 ff 49 14 0f 94 c0 84 c0 75 01 c3
Using defaults from ksymoops -t elf32-i386 -a i386
>>esi; cf4e6d90 <_end+f026bf8/10603ec8>
>>esp; c3701c58 <_end+3241ac0/10603ec8>
Trace; c031a7ec <skb_release_data+4c/90>
Trace; c031a847 <kfree_skbmem+17/80>
Trace; c031a9ae <__kfree_skb+fe/160>
Trace; c0339a6d <ip_rcv+ad/4e0>
Trace; c031f187 <netif_rx+97/1f0>
Trace; c031f70e <netif_receive_skb+20e/270>
Trace; c031f810 <process_backlog+a0/140>
Trace; c031f97f <net_rx_action+cf/180>
Trace; c0122586 <do_softirq+76/e0>
Trace; c033cad0 <output_maybe_reroute+0/10>
Trace; c0329c28 <.text.lock.netfilter+b6/ce>
Trace; c033cad0 <output_maybe_reroute+0/10>
Trace; c033e58f <ip_build_xmit+3af/440>
Trace; c033cad0 <output_maybe_reroute+0/10>
Trace; c035dfe2 <udp_sendmsg+232/4a0>
Trace; c035dc50 <udp_getfrag+0/100>
Trace; c01868dd <journal_dirty_metadata+15d/220>
Trace; c017e6fb <ext3_do_update_inode+19b/450>
Trace; c03169e4 <sock_sendmsg+74/d0>
Trace; c03167bc <sockfd_lookup+1c/90>
Trace; c0317be4 <sys_sendto+f4/130>
Trace; c018bbb8 <log_wait_commit+68/b0>
Trace; c0186d68 <journal_stop+168/230>
Trace; c0186e9c <journal_force_commit+6c/90>
Trace; c0317c53 <sys_send+33/40>
Trace; c0318637 <sys_socketcall+167/280>
Trace; c0108eff <system_call+33/38>
Code; 00000000 Before first symbol
00000000 <_EIP>:
Code; 00000000 Before first symbol
0: 8b 40 18 mov 0x18(%eax),%eax
Code; 00000003 Before first symbol
3: f6 c4 40 test $0x40,%ah
Code; 00000006 Before first symbol
6: 75 0b jne 13 <_EIP+0x13>
Code; 00000008 Before first symbol
8: f0 ff 49 14 lock decl 0x14(%ecx)
Code; 0000000c Before first symbol
c: 0f 94 c0 sete %al
Code; 0000000f Before first symbol
f: 84 c0 test %al,%al
Code; 00000011 Before first symbol
11: 75 01 jne 14 <_EIP+0x14>
Code; 00000013 Before first symbol
13: c3 ret
<0>Kernel panic: Aiee, killing interrupt handler!
--
GJ
MOTD: gocr sux so much, words can't describe
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