Questions about Core Dump Analysis - Crashes in WiFi and TCP/IP Tasks

squirtle321
Posts: 11
Joined: Tue Jan 11, 2022 9:26 pm

Questions about Core Dump Analysis - Crashes in WiFi and TCP/IP Tasks

Postby squirtle321 » Wed Jun 07, 2023 5:48 pm

Hello there,

I'm working on a project with many remote units in the field, and we've just set up the project to stream the coredump ELF to our cloud systems after a crash. I could use some help understanding the meaning of some of the coredumps we've received.


tiT task (InstFetchProhibitedCause):
I see that the fetched instruction in the program counter in 0x0. As well, the stack trace for the crashed thread appears to contain all non-instructions (all addresses are not in 0x3fxxxxxx - 0x6xxxxxxx range). What would cause the stack trace to be corrupted in this way for this task? Any suggestions on where to look next for this?

Code: Select all

===============================================================
==================== ESP32 CORE DUMP START ====================

Crashed task handle: 0x3ffdd3e4, name: 'tiT', GDB name: 'process 1073599460'

================== CURRENT THREAD REGISTERS ===================
exccause       0x14 (InstFetchProhibitedCause)
excvaddr       0x0
epc1           0x4011182b
epc2           0x0
epc3           0x0
epc4           0x0
epc5           0x0
epc6           0x0
eps2           0x0
eps3           0x0
eps4           0x0
eps5           0x0
eps6           0x0
pc             0x0                 0x0
lbeg           0x40127d54          1074953556
lend           0x40127d6b          1074953579
lcount         0x0                 0
sar            0x16                22
ps             0x60b20             396064
threadptr      <unavailable>
br             <unavailable>
scompare1      <unavailable>
acclo          <unavailable>
acchi          <unavailable>
m0             <unavailable>
m1             <unavailable>
m2             <unavailable>
m3             <unavailable>
expstate       <unavailable>
f64r_lo        <unavailable>
f64r_hi        <unavailable>
f64s           <unavailable>
fcr            <unavailable>
fsr            <unavailable>
a0             0x80171e8b          -2145968501
a1             0x3ffdd260          1073599072
a2             0x3ffde580          1073603968
a3             0x3ffe49ac          1073629612
a4             0x0                 0
a5             0x3ffdc344          1073595204
a6             0x1                 1
a7             0x60023             393251
a8             0x801921dc          -2145836580
a9             0x3ffdd220          1073599008
a10            0x0                 0
a11            0x3ffe49ac          1073629612
a12            0x0                 0
a13            0x0                 0
a14            0x0                 0
a15            0x0                 0

==================== CURRENT THREAD STACK =====================
#0  0x00000000 in ?? ()
#1  0x00171e8b in ?? ()
#2  0x0011a182 in ?? ()
#3  0x00123906 in ?? ()
#4  0x00123a2f in ?? ()
#5  0x0011f738 in ?? ()
#6  0x0011f891 in ?? ()
#7  0x0011822f in ?? ()


wifi task (StoreProhibitedCause):
The stack trace seems to end here at the panic handler, which seems strange since that totally masks what would have invoked the panic. I see that excvaddr contains 0x0 which in combination with the StoreProhibitedCause could mean that the application has attempted to dereference a NULL pointer. Is this still relevant given that the program seems to have exited in the panic handler and not at some other line of code?

Code: Select all

===============================================================
==================== ESP32 CORE DUMP START ====================

Crashed task handle: 0x3ffdf310, name: 'wifi', GDB name: 'process 1073607440'

================== CURRENT THREAD REGISTERS ===================
exccause       0x1d (StoreProhibitedCause)
excvaddr       0x0
epc1           0x4011182b
epc2           0x0
epc3           0x0
epc4           0x0
epc5           0x0
epc6           0x0
eps2           0x0
eps3           0x0
eps4           0x0
eps5           0x0
eps6           0x0
pc             0x40081eed          0x40081eed <panic_abort+21>
lbeg           0x4000c349          1073791817
lend           0x4000c36b          1073791851
lcount         0x0                 0
sar            0x10                16
ps             0x60021             393249
threadptr      <unavailable>
br             <unavailable>
scompare1      <unavailable>
acclo          <unavailable>
acchi          <unavailable>
m0             <unavailable>
m1             <unavailable>
m2             <unavailable>
m3             <unavailable>
expstate       <unavailable>
f64r_lo        <unavailable>
f64r_hi        <unavailable>
f64s           <unavailable>
fcr            <unavailable>
fsr            <unavailable>
a0             0x80092610          -2146884080
a1             0x3ffbea80          1073474176
a2             0x3ffbeac0          1073474240
a3             0x3ffbeaed          1073474285
a4             0xa                 10
a5             0x3ffbead0          1073474256
a6             0x3                 3
a7             0x60023             393251
a8             0x0                 0
a9             0x1                 1
a10            0x3ffbeb0d          1073474317
a11            0x3ffbeb0d          1073474317
a12            0x0                 0
a13            0x3ffbeaa0          1073474208
a14            0x3ff60000          1073086464
a15            0xe7ffffff          -402653185

==================== CURRENT THREAD STACK =====================
#0  0x40081eed in panic_abort (details=0x3ffbeac0 \"abort() was called at PC 0x40112150 on core 0\") at C:/Espressif/frameworks/esp-idf-v4.4.1/components/esp_system/panic.c:402
#1  0x40092610 in esp_system_abort (details=0x3ffbeac0 \"abort() was called at PC 0x40112150 on core 0\") at C:/Espressif/frameworks/esp-idf-v4.4.1/components/esp_system/esp_system.c:128
Backtrace stopped: previous frame identical to this frame (corrupt stack?)

The current ESP-IDF for the project is v4.4.1. I'm thinking to upgrade to v4.4.4 to possibly address these problems.

Please let me know if anyone can point me in the right direction here.

Thanks

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