... since the original ones are internal to the kernel and won't be
available once KDBG is moved out of it.
Use these functions in the pager/prompt support.
The built string can be:
°°Kernel Debugger: Serial port found: COM1 (Port 0x000003F8) BaudRate 115200°°°°
(with ° representing the \r and \n in the message)
and you can verify that this is more than 80 characters in total.
This one was more subtle because the prompt (KdIoReadLine) functionality
makes a call-back to KDBG own command history getter function KdbGetHistoryEntry.
It is planned for this to become a registered optional callback pointer.
This is done in preparation for moving all this functionality in a
separate KDTERM "KD Terminal Driver" DLL.
Additionally:
- Flush the terminal input before sending ANSI escape sequences.
- In KDBG pager, always use the correct reading-key function (the
same used also for reading keys for a line of user input), and not
the simplistic two-call KdbpGetCharSerial + KdbpTryGetCharSerial
that would split the \r \n across calls.
- Call KdbpGetCommandLineSettings() in KdbInitialize() at BootPhase 0,
which is indirectly called by KdDebuggerInitialize0(). And fix its
command-line parsing too.
Rename KdbpReadCommand as KdIoReadLine. Extract the last-command
repetition functionality out of KdIoReadLine and put it where it
belongs: only in the KDBG command main loop KdbpCliMainLoop.
Use this function instead of KdpDprintf(), otherwise, we send them to
**ALL** the display providers, including for example dmesg. Replaying
the listing with dmesg would then cause the terminal to misbehave later.
For example, it would send the answer of a "Query Device Attributes"
command, as the response to a query for terminal size...
Addendum to commit 84e32e4e.
Explain more accurately what's going on regarding the returned string
and the inaccurate claims made in the official DbgPrompt documentation
in MSDN. (Has been verified by looking through the traffic in WinDbg
debugging of Windows and ReactOS.)
Addendum to commit de892d5b.
The boot options get stripped of their optional command switch '/'
(and replaced by whitspace separation) by the NT loader. Also, forbid
the presence of space between the optional '=' character following
(NO)LOADSYMBOLS.
In addition, fix the default initialization of LoadSymbols in KdbSymInit():
we cannot rely on MmNumberOfPhysicalPages in BootPhase 0 since at this point,
the Memory Manager hasn't been initialized and this variable is not yet set.
(We are called by KdInitSystem(0) -> KdDebuggerInitialize0 at kernel init.)
It gets initialized later on between BootPhase 0 and 1.
Also display a nice KDBG signon showing the status of symbols loading.
CORE-17470
+ KdpDebugLogInit: Add resources cleanup in failure code paths.
Fix, in an NT-compatible manner, how (and when) the KD/KDBG BootPhase >=2
initialization steps are performed.
These are necessary for any functionality KDBG needs, that would depend
on the NT I/O Manager and the storage and filesystem stacks to be running.
This includes, creating the debug log file, and for KDBG, loading its
KDBinit initialization file.
As a result, file debug logging is fixed.
The old ReactOS-specific (NT-incompatible) callback we did in the middle
of IoInitSystem() is removed, in favor of a runtime mechanism that should
work on Windows as well.
The idea for this new mechanism is loosely inspired by the TDL4 rootkit,
see http://blog.w4kfu.com/public/tdl4_article/draft_tdl4article.html
but contrary to it, a specific hook is used instead, as well as the
technique of driver reinitialization:
https://web.archive.org/web/20211021050515/https://driverentry.com.br/en/blog/?p=261
Its rationale is as follows:
We want to be able to perform I/O-related initialization (starting a
logger thread for file log debugging, loading KDBinit file for KDBG,
etc.). A good place for this would be as early as possible, once the
I/O Manager has started the storage and the boot filesystem drivers.
Here is an overview of the initialization steps of the NT Kernel and
Executive:
----
KiSystemStartup(KeLoaderBlock)
if (Cpu == 0) KdInitSystem(0, KeLoaderBlock);
KiSwitchToBootStack() -> KiSystemStartupBootStack()
-> KiInitializeKernel() -> ExpInitializeExecutive(Cpu, KeLoaderBlock)
(NOTE: Any unexpected debugger break will call KdInitSystem(0, NULL); )
KdInitSystem(0, LoaderBlock) -> KdDebuggerInitialize0(LoaderBlock);
ExpInitializeExecutive(Cpu == 0): ExpInitializationPhase = 0;
HalInitSystem(0, KeLoaderBlock); <-- Sets HalInitPnpDriver callback.
...
PsInitSystem(LoaderBlock)
PsCreateSystemThread(Phase1Initialization)
Phase1Initialization(Discard): ExpInitializationPhase = 1;
HalInitSystem(1, KeLoaderBlock);
...
Early initialization of Ob, Ex, Ke.
KdInitSystem(1, KeLoaderBlock);
...
KdDebuggerInitialize1(LoaderBlock);
...
IoInitSystem(LoaderBlock);
...
----
As we can see, KdDebuggerInitialize1() is the last KD initialization
routine the kernel calls, and is called *before* the I/O Manager starts.
Thus, direct Nt/ZwCreateFile ... calls done there would fail. Also,
we want to do the I/O initialization as soon as possible. There does
not seem to be any exported way to be notified about the I/O manager
initialization steps... that is, unless we somehow become a driver and
insert ourselves in the flow!
Since we are not a regular driver, we need to invoke IoCreateDriver()
to create one. However, remember that we are currently running *before*
IoInitSystem(), the I/O subsystem is not initialized yet. Due to this,
calling IoCreateDriver(), much like any other IO functions, would lead
to a crash, because it calls
ObCreateObject(..., IoDriverObjectType, ...), and IoDriverObjectType
is non-initialized yet (it's NULL).
The chosen solution is to hook a "known" exported callback: namely, the
HalInitPnpDriver() callback (it initializes the "HAL Root Bus Driver").
It is set very early on by the HAL via the HalInitSystem(0, ...) call,
and is called early on by IoInitSystem() before any driver is loaded,
but after the I/O Manager has been minimally set up so that new drivers
can be created.
When the hook: KdpInitDriver() is called, we create our driver with
IoCreateDriver(), specifying its entrypoint KdpDriverEntry(), then
restore and call the original HalInitPnpDriver() callback.
Another possible unexplored alternative, could be to insert ourselves
in the KeLoaderBlock->LoadOrderListHead boot modules list, or in the
KeLoaderBlock->BootDriverListHead boot-driver list. (Note that while
we may be able to do this, because boot-drivers are resident in memory,
much like we are, we cannot insert ourselves in the system-driver list
however, since those drivers are expected to come from PE image files.)
Once the KdpDriverEntry() driver entrypoint is called, we register
KdpDriverReinit() for re-initialization with the I/O Manager, in order
to provide more initialization points. KdpDriverReinit() calls the KD
providers at BootPhase >= 2, and schedules further reinitializations
(at most 3 more) if any of the providers request so.
CORE-10749
The dmesg command is now available even if screen output is disabled.
Co-authored-by: Hermès Bélusca-Maïto <hermes.belusca-maito@reactos.org>
- KdbSymInit() in kdb_symbols.c only initializes symbols implementation
support.
- The rest of KdbInitialize gets moved into kdb_cli.c and initializes
the KDBG debugger itself.
- Move KdbDebugPrint to kdb_cli.c as well.
- Use SAL2 annotations.
- KdSendPacket(): Validate DEBUG_IO API call.
- KdReceivePacket(): Take the LengthOfStringRead into account; use
KdbpReadCommand() to read the input, so that correct line edition
is available (backspace, etc.)
If you ask why there are two sets of functions that do the same, it's
because this file (and the kdmain.c) will very soon some day be moved to
a transport dll, outside the kernel, and it will need these functions.
- Remove KdbInit() macro and directly use KdbpCliInit() (since the place
where it was used was already within an #ifdef KDBG block).
- Declare KdpKdbgInit() only when KDBG is defined, move its definition
into kdio.c and remove the legacy wrappers/kdbg.c file.
And in KdbInitialize(), set KdpInitRoutine directly to the former,
instead of using the KdpKdbgInit indirection.
- Don't reset KdComPortInUse in KdpDebugLogInit().
- Minor refactorings: KdpSerialDebugPrint -> KdpSerialPrint and make it
static; argument name "Message" -> "String", "StringLength" -> "Length".
KD64: Raise to HIGH_LEVEL when entering trap
KDBG: lower to DISPATCH_LEVEL when applying IRQL hack & use a worker thread to load symbols
KD&KDBG: Actually unload symbols when required
Phase 2 and 3 were not done anymore since 777a2d94da.
Fix that, by merging phases 1 and 2, and by calling phase 3 later
for log file debugging, when ExpInitializationPhase = 3
CORE-17470