On 02/07/2011 12:28 PM, Ravi Kumar Kulkarni wrote:
On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 3:24 PM, Avi Kivityavi@redhat.com wrote:
On 02/07/2011 11:47 AM, Ravi Kumar Kulkarni wrote:
That is not the same address. And the code you posted doesn't make any sense.
sorry for the mistake. here's the correct one
(qemu) xp /20iw 0x1e2f3f7b 0x000000001e2f3f7b: (bad) 0x000000001e2f3f7c: std 0x000000001e2f3f7d: (bad) 0x000000001e2f3f7e: (bad)
That looks like garbage. Are you sure you're disassembling the right code?
ok . Just to be clear i ran the command qemu-kvm once and i found got the crash report below which i have attached and in that eip is at 0x1e2f3f77 and then
(qemu) xp /20iw 0x1e2f3f77 0x000000001e2f3f77: pop %ds 0x000000001e2f3f78: inc %edx 0x000000001e2f3f79: loope 0x1e2f3fc8 0x000000001e2f3f7b: pop %ds 0x000000001e2f3f7c: jnp 0x1e2f3f5e 0x000000001e2f3f7e: dec %ebp 0x000000001e2f3f7f: pop %ds 0x000000001e2f3f80: xchg %eax,%esp 0x000000001e2f3f81: aas 0x000000001e2f3f82: das
This still doesn't look like real code. The problem was likely much earlier and caused a branch into a data section.
Someone with a good understanding of your OS needs to examine the trace and see what went wrong.