obpsym(1M) System Administration Commands obpsym(1M)NAMEobpsym - Kernel Symbolic Debugging for OpenBoot Firmware
SYNOPSIS
modload -p misc/obpsym
DESCRIPTIONobpsym is a kernel module that installs OpenBoot callback handlers that
provide kernel symbol information to OpenBoot. OpenBoot firmware user
interface commands use the callbacks to convert numeric addresses to
kernel symbol names for display purposes, and to convert kernel symbol
names to numeric literals allowing symbolic names to be used as input
arguments to user interface commands.
Once obpsym is installed, kernel symbolic names may be used anywhere at
the OpenBoot firmware's user interface command prompt in place of a
literal (numeric) string. For example, if obpsym is installed, the
OpenBoot firmware commands ctrace and dis typically display symbolic
names and offsets in the form modname:symbolname + offset. User inter‐
face Commands such as dis can be given a kernel symbolic name such as
ufs:ufs_mount instead of a numeric address.
Placing the command
forceload: misc/obpsym
into the system(4) file forces the kernel module misc/obpsym to be
loaded and activates the kernel callbacks during the kernel startup
sequence.
obpsym may be useful as a kernel debugger in situations where other
kernel debuggers are not useful. For example, on SPARC machines, if
obpsym is loaded, you may be able to use the OpenBoot firmware's ctrace
command to display symbolic names in the stack backtrace after a watch‐
dog reset.
Kernel Symbolic Name Syntax
The syntax for a kernel symbolic name is:
[ module-name : ] symbol-name
Where module-name is the name of the kernel module that the symbol sym‐
bol-name appears in. A NULL module name is taken as "all modules, in no
particular order" by obpsym. The module name unix is equivalent to a
NULL module name, so that conflicts with words defined in the
firmware's vocabulary can be avoided.
Typically, OpenBoot firmware reads a word from the input stream and
looks the word up in its internal vocabulary before checking if the
word is a literal. Thus, kernel symbols, such as reset may be given as
unix:reset to avoid the unexpected side effect of the firmware finding
and executing a matching word in its vocabulary.
FILES
/etc/system
System configuration information file.
/platform/platform-name/kernel/misc/obpsym
Platform-specific kernel symbol information.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Availability │system/library/processor │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
SEE ALSOkmdb(1), uname(1), kernel(1M), modload(1M), modunload(1M), system(4),
attributes(5)WARNINGS
Some OpenBoot firmware user interface commands may use system resources
incompatibly with the way they are used by the Unix kernel. These com‐
mands and the use of this feature as a kernel debugger may cause inter‐
actions that the Unix kernel is not prepared to deal with. If this
occurs, the Unix kernel and/or the OpenBoot firmware user interface
commands may react unpredictably and may panic the system, or may hang
or may cause other unpredictable results. For these reasons, the use of
this feature is only minimally supported and recommended to be used
only as a kernel debugger of last resort.
If a breakpoint or watchpoint is triggered while the console frame buf‐
fer is powered off, the system can crash and be left in a state from
which it is difficult to recover. If one of these is triggered while
the monitor is powered off, you will not be able to see the debugger
output.
NOTES
platform-name can be found using the -i option of uname(1)obpsym is supported only on architectures that support OpenBoot
firmware.
On some systems, OpenBoot must be completely RAM resident so the obpsym
symbol callback support can be added to the firmware, if the firmware
doesn't include support for the symbol callbacks. On these systems,
obpsym may complain that it requires that "you must use ramforth to use
this module".
See the for details on how to use the ramforth command, how to place
the command into nvramrc, and how to set use-nvramrc? to true. On sys‐
tems with version 1.x OpenBoot firmware, nvramrc doesn't exist, and the
ramforth command must be typed manually after each reset, in order to
use this module.
Once installed, the symbol table callbacks can be disabled by using the
following OpenBoot firmware command:
0 0 set-symbol-lookup
SunOS 5.11 13 Dec 2001 obpsym(1M)