Daniel Pearson David Solomon Expert Seminars SVR302 Daniel Pearson Started working with Windows NT 3.51 Three years at Digital Equipment Corporation Supporting Intel and Alpha.

Download Report

Transcript Daniel Pearson David Solomon Expert Seminars SVR302 Daniel Pearson Started working with Windows NT 3.51 Three years at Digital Equipment Corporation Supporting Intel and Alpha.

Daniel Pearson
David Solomon Expert Seminars
SVR302
Daniel Pearson
Started working with Windows NT 3.51
Three years at Digital Equipment Corporation
Supporting Intel and Alpha systems running Windows NT
Seven years at Microsoft
Senior Escalation Lead in Windows base team
Worked in the Mobile Internet sustained
engineering team
Instructor for David Solomon, co-author of the
Windows Internals book series
Agenda
Causes of Windows crashes
What happens during a crash
Configuring Windows crash options
Writing a crash dump
Automated and manual crash analysis
Using Driver Verifier to detect errors
Attaching a kernel debugger
* Portions of this session are based on material developed by Mark Russinovich and
David Solomon
Why Analyze a Crash?
When Windows Error Reporting has no solution
or when it blames “a device driver”
Why Does Windows Crash
A device driver or part of the operating system
incurs an unhandled exception
A device driver or part of the operating system
explicitly crashes the system due to an
unrecoverable condition
A page fault occurs at an interrupt request level
of dispatch or higher
A hardware condition such as a nonmaskable
interrupt or faulty memory, disk, etc.
Causes of Windows Crashes
Percentage of Top 500 Crashes for Windows Vista
with Service Pack 11
11%
6%
13%
Third-party device drivers
Microsoft code
Crash too corrupt for analysis
Hardware errors
70%
1. Microsoft Corporation. 2008. Online Crash Analysis research performed in September.
What Happens During a Crash
When a condition is detected that requires a
crash, the kernel API KeBugCheckEx is called
KeBugCheckEx accepts a bugcheck code that
indicates the reason for the crash and four
parameters that supply additional information
KeBugCheckEx(
IN ULONG BugCheckCode,
IN ULONG_PTR BugCheckParameter1,
IN ULONG_PTR BugCheckParameter2,
IN ULONG_PTR BugCheckParameter3,
IN ULONG_PTR BugCheckParameter4
);
Inside of KeBugCheckEx
KeBugCheckEx performs several functions
Disables interrupts
Notifies other CPUs to halt execution
Notifies registered drivers
Writes crash dump information to disk*
Restarts the system*
* Only if the system is configured to do so
The Windows Stop Screen
1
2
3
4
5
Bugcheck Codes
Shared by many components and drivers
The Windows Driver Kit currently documents over
250 unique bugcheck codes
Two of the most common bugcheck codes are
0xA IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL
Usually caused by an invalid memory access
0x1E KMODE_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED
Generated when executing garbage instructions
Usually caused when a stack has been trashed
Memory Dump Types
Small memory dump
Records the smallest set of useful information
Kernel memory dump*
Records only kernel memory, which speeds up the
process of writing a crash dump
Complete memory dump*
Records the entire contents of system memory
* If either a Kernel or Complete memory dump is selected, the system will also create a
minidump and store it in the %SystemRoot%\minidump directory
Configuring Debugging
Information Options
Writing a Crash Dump
Crash dump information is written to the paging
file on the boot volume
Too risky to create a new file on the system
How does the system know its safe?
The boot volume paging file’s on-disk mapping
is obtained when the system starts
Critical crash components are checksummed
When a crash occurs, if the checksum doesn’t
match, a memory dump is not written
Why Would You Not Get a Dump?
Problems with page file configuration
The paging file on the boot volume is too small or
one does not exist
The system crashed before the paging file
was initialized
Critical crash components are corrupted
Windows didn’t crash!
The system spontaneously restarted
The system is hung
When the System Restarts

“MachineCrash”
Session
Manager
User mode
WinInit
Memory.dmp

 WinInit
WerFault

Kernel mode
NtCreatePagingFile
DUMPxxxx.tmp
 SMSS
Paging file
Analyzing a Crash Dump
The Microsoft kernel debuggers can be used to open
and analyze a crash dump
kd, a command line tool and WinDbg, a GUI tool
Available as part of the Debugging Tools for Windows
http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/devtools/debugging/
default.mspx
Configure the debugger to point to symbols
srv*C:\SYMBOLS*http://msdl.microsoft.com/download/
symbols
Automated Analysis
When you open a crash dump with WinDbg or
kd, the debugger performs basic crash analysis*
Displays stop code and parameter information
Takes a guess at the offending driver
The analysis is the result of the automated
execution of the !analyze debugger command
!analyze uses the bugcheck parameters and a set of
heuristics to determine what component is the
likely cause of the crash
* Set the environment variable DBGENG_NO_BUGCHECK_ANALYSIS=1 to disable
Automated Analysis Using !analyze
Buffer Overruns
Occurs when a driver goes past the end,
called an overrun, or the beginning, an underrun,
of it’s memory allocation
Usually detected when overwritten data
is referenced by the kernel or another driver
It’s possible there’s a long delay between
corruption and detection
Viewing the Effects of a Buffer Overrun
Crash Transformation
For crashes that are difficult to analyze
The “victim” crashed the system, not the culprit
The debugger points to ntoskrnl.exe, win32k.sys or
other Windows components
You get many different crash dumps all pointing at
different causes
Your goal isn’t to analyze difficult crashes …
It’s to try to make an “unanalyzable” crash into
one that can be easily analyzed
Driver Verifier
Useful for identifying code defects in drivers
Performs more thorough checks on the system
and device drivers as well as simulating failures
Support is built into the operating system
The requirements for the Windows logo
program state that a driver must not fail while
running under Driver Verifier
Using Driver Verifier to Catch a
Buffer Overrun
Manual Analysis
Sometimes !analyze isn’t enough
It might not tell you anything useful
You want to know in more detail what was happening at the
time of the crash
Several useful commands and techniques
Verify the time of the crash, .time
A short uptime value can mean frequent problems
Check the stack on each CPU, stacks are read from the
bottom to the top
!cpuinfo will display a list of all the CPUs
Use ~s to switch to a different CPU for investigation
k to display the stack
Manual Analysis
Several useful commands and techniques
Look at memory usage, !vm
Make sure memory pools are not depleted or contain errors
Use !poolused to identify large users
Check the currently running thread, !thread
May or may not be related to the crash
Check pending I/O requests using !irp
List all processes on the system, !process 0 0
Make sure you understand what was running at the time
List loaded drivers, lm t n
Make sure all the drivers are recognizable and up to date
* Refer to the Debugging Tools for Windows documentation for additional commands
Manual Analysis of a Crash Dump
Attaching a Kernel Debugger
Required for debugging initialization failures
and crashes where no dump file is created
Requires that the system be started with the
debugger enabled to work
Support for using a null-modem, IEEE 1394 and
USB 2.0 cable as well as virtual machines and
over the network in Windows 7
Limited support for local kernel debugging
Attaching a Kernel Debugger to a
Live System
Hung Systems
Sometimes systems becomes unresponsive
Keyboard and mouse frozen
Two types of hangs
Instant lockup
Kernel synchronization deadlock
Infinite loop at a high IRQL or a very high priority thread
Slowly grinding to a halt
Resource depletion
Initiating a Manual Crash
Using the keyboard
Requires a PS/2 keyboard + registry key
HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\i8042prt\
Parameters\CrashOnCtrlScroll
Using an NMI button
Requires specialized hardware + registry key
HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\
CrashControl\NMICrashDump
Using the debugger
Break in and execute the .crash command
Debugging a Hung System
Additional Information
Windows Internals 5th edition
Debugging Tools for Windows documentation
Mark Russinovich’s Blog
http://blogs.technet.com/markrussinovich
Advanced Windows Debugging Blog
http://blogs.msdn.com/ntdebugging
Crash Dump Analysis and Debugging Portal
http://www.dumpanalysis.org
Additional Information
David Solomon Expert Seminars offers training
on Windows Internals both as public and private
workshops and public webinars via the Internet
Currently scheduled up and coming classes
Public workshop in London scheduled March, 2010
Public webinar scheduled for January, 2010
Visit http://www.solsem.com for further course
descriptions and up to date information
Resources
www.microsoft.com/teched
www.microsoft.com/learning
Sessions On-Demand & Community
Microsoft Certification & Training Resources
http://microsoft.com/technet
http://microsoft.com/msdn
Resources for IT Professionals
Resources for Developers
Complete an evaluation
on CommNet and enter to
win an Xbox 360 Elite!
© 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries.
The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation as of the date of this presentation. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should
not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after the date of this presentation. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS,
IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS PRESENTATION.