I suppose the module is built with debug info included. If so, you can use gdb or objdump to find out which source file and line each address belongs to. Something like this:
$ gdb "$(modinfo -n my_module)"
(gdb) list *(some_function+0x12c)
Gdb will now tell the name of the source file and the line in it.
You can also do a similar thing with objdump but it is a bit more difficult. First, disassemble the module:
objdump -dSlr my_module.ko > my_module.disasm
When called with -S
option, objdump will include the source lines in the resulting listing where appropriate.
You can now scroll the listing down to the code of some_function
, find the instruction at offset 0x12c from the beginning of the function. The source line will be indicated above it.
EDIT:
After many experiments, I found that although addr2line
can indeed be used for kernel modules, eu-addr2line
(a similar tool from elfutils) seems to be more reliable. That is, sometimes addr2line
output incorrect source lines but eu-add2line
did things right.
To use eu-addr2line
, one may need to install libdw and libebl libraries if they are not already installed along with elfutils.
The usage is similar to that of addr2line
:
eu-addr2line -f -e <path_to_the_module> -j <section_name> <offset_in_section>
If the debug information for a kernel module is stored in separate file (this is often the case for the kernels provided by the major Linux distros), the path to that file should be used as <path_to_the_module>
.
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