linux-bk/Documentation/BUG-HUNTING
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   1[Sat Mar  2 10:32:33 PST 1996 KERNEL_BUG-HOWTO lm@sgi.com (Larry McVoy)]
   2
   3This is how to track down a bug if you know nothing about kernel hacking.  
   4It's a brute force approach but it works pretty well.
   5
   6You need:
   7
   8        . A reproducible bug - it has to happen predictably (sorry)
   9        . All the kernel tar files from a revision that worked to the
  10          revision that doesn't
  11
  12You will then do:
  13
  14        . Rebuild a revision that you believe works, install, and verify that.
  15        . Do a binary search over the kernels to figure out which one
  16          introduced the bug.  I.e., suppose 1.3.28 didn't have the bug, but 
  17          you know that 1.3.69 does.  Pick a kernel in the middle and build
  18          that, like 1.3.50.  Build & test; if it works, pick the mid point
  19          between .50 and .69, else the mid point between .28 and .50.
  20        . You'll narrow it down to the kernel that introduced the bug.  You
  21          can probably do better than this but it gets tricky.  
  22
  23        . Narrow it down to a subdirectory
  24
  25          - Copy kernel that works into "test".  Let's say that 3.62 works,
  26            but 3.63 doesn't.  So you diff -r those two kernels and come
  27            up with a list of directories that changed.  For each of those
  28            directories:
  29
  30                Copy the non-working directory next to the working directory
  31                as "dir.63".  
  32                One directory at time, try moving the working directory to
  33                "dir.62" and mv dir.63 dir"time, try 
  34
  35                        mv dir dir.62
  36                        mv dir.63 dir
  37                        find dir -name '*.[oa]' -print | xargs rm -f
  38
  39                And then rebuild and retest.  Assuming that all related
  40                changes were contained in the sub directory, this should 
  41                isolate the change to a directory.  
  42
  43                Problems: changes in header files may have occurred; I've
  44                found in my case that they were self explanatory - you may 
  45                or may not want to give up when that happens.
  46
  47        . Narrow it down to a file
  48
  49          - You can apply the same technique to each file in the directory,
  50            hoping that the changes in that file are self contained.  
  51            
  52        . Narrow it down to a routine
  53
  54          - You can take the old file and the new file and manually create
  55            a merged file that has
  56
  57                #ifdef VER62
  58                routine()
  59                {
  60                        ...
  61                }
  62                #else
  63                routine()
  64                {
  65                        ...
  66                }
  67                #endif
  68
  69            And then walk through that file, one routine at a time and
  70            prefix it with
  71
  72                #define VER62
  73                /* both routines here */
  74                #undef VER62
  75
  76            Then recompile, retest, move the ifdefs until you find the one
  77            that makes the difference.
  78
  79Finally, you take all the info that you have, kernel revisions, bug
  80description, the extent to which you have narrowed it down, and pass 
  81that off to whomever you believe is the maintainer of that section.
  82A post to linux.dev.kernel isn't such a bad idea if you've done some
  83work to narrow it down.
  84
  85If you get it down to a routine, you'll probably get a fix in 24 hours.
  86
  87My apologies to Linus and the other kernel hackers for describing this
  88brute force approach, it's hardly what a kernel hacker would do.  However,
  89it does work and it lets non-hackers help fix bugs.  And it is cool
  90because Linux snapshots will let you do this - something that you can't
  91do with vendor supplied releases.
  92
  93
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