table of contents
NETDUMP(4) | Device Drivers Manual | NETDUMP(4) |
NAME¶
netdump
— protocol
for transmitting kernel dumps to a remote server
SYNOPSIS¶
To compile netdump client support into the kernel, place the following line in your kernel configuration file:
options NETDUMP
DESCRIPTION¶
netdump is a UDP-based protocol for transmitting kernel dumps to a
remote host. A netdump client is a panicking kernel, and a netdump server is
a host running the netdump
daemon, available in
ports as ports/ftp/netdumpd.
netdump
clients are configured using the
dumpon(8) utility.
netdump
client messages consist of a
fixed-size header followed by a variable-sized payload. The header contains
the message type, a sequence number, the offset of the payload data in the
kernel dump, and the length of the payload data (not including the header).
The message types are HERALD
,
FINISHED
, KDH
,
VMCORE
, and EKCD_KEY
.
netdump
server messages have a fixed size and
contain only the sequence number of the client message. These messages
indicate that the server has successfully processed the client message with
the corresponding sequence number. All client messages are acknowledged this
way. Server messages are always sent to port 20024 of the client.
To initiate a netdump
, the client sends a
HERALD
message to the server at port 20023. The
client may include a relative path in its payload, in which case the
netdump
server should attempt to save the dump at
that path relative to its configured dump directory. The server will
acknowledge the HERALD
using a random source port,
and the client must send all subsequent messages to that port.
The KDH
, VMCORE
,
and EKCD_KEY
message payloads contain the kernel
dump header, dump contents, and dump encryption key respectively. The offset
in the message header should be treated as a seek offset in the
corresponding file. There are no ordering requirements for these
messages.
A netdump
is completed by sending the
FINISHED
message to the server.
The following network drivers support netdump: alc(4), bge(4), bnxt(4), bxe(4), cxgb(4), em(4), igb(4), ix(4), ixl(4), mlx4en(4), mlx5en(4), re(4), vtnet(4).
SYSCTL VARIABLES¶
The following variables are available as both sysctl(8) variables and loader(8) variables:
- net.netdump.debug
- Control debug message verbosity. Debug messages are disabled by default, but are useful when troubleshooting or when developing driver support.
- net.netdump.path
- Specify a path relative to the server's dump directory in which to store
the dump. For example, if the
netdump
server is configured to store dumps in /var/crash, a path of “foo” will cause the server to attempt to store dumps from the client in /var/crash/foo. The server will not automatically create the relative directory. - net.netdump.polls
- The client will poll the configured network interface while waiting for acknowledgements. This parameter controls the maximum number of poll attempts before giving up, which typically results in a re-transmit. Each poll attempt takes 0.5ms.
- net.netdump.retries
- The number of times the client will re-transmit a packet before aborting a dump due to a lack of acknowledgement. The default may be too small in environments with lots of packet loss.
- net.netdump.arp_retries
- The number of times the client will attempt to learn the MAC address of the configured gateway or server before giving up and aborting the dump.
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
netdump
client support first appeared in
FreeBSD 12.0.
BUGS¶
Only IPv4 is supported.
netdump
may only be used after the kernel
has panicked.
August 25, 2020 | Debian |