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From e30c24a5572c33f9ca5157bfb4e504897b1bb7c9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Denys Vlasenko <dvlasenk@redhat.com>
Date: Mon, 6 Jan 2014 16:04:37 +0100
Subject: [ABRT PATCH 26/27] MCE: cover cases where kernel version isn't
 detected on Fedora 20.

With this change, both fata and non-fatal MCEs are caught on default
Fedora 20 installation.

Signed-off-by: Denys Vlasenko <dvlasenk@redhat.com>

Related to rhbz#1032077

Signed-off-by: Jakub Filak <jfilak@redhat.com>
---
 doc/MCE_readme.txt            |  9 ++++++++-
 src/lib/kernel.c              |  2 +-
 src/plugins/abrt-dump-oops.c  |  3 ++-
 src/plugins/koops_event.conf  | 11 +++++++++++
 src/plugins/vmcore_event.conf | 14 ++++++++++++--
 5 files changed, 34 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/MCE_readme.txt b/doc/MCE_readme.txt
index ed5b627..5dff636 100644
--- a/doc/MCE_readme.txt
+++ b/doc/MCE_readme.txt
@@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ echo "Exitcode:$?"
 
 It requires files which describe MCE to simulate. I grabbed a few examples
 from mce-test.tar.gz (source tarball of mce-test project).
-I used this this file to cause a non-fatal MCE:
+I used this file to cause a non-fatal MCE:
 
 CPU 0 BANK 2
 STATUS VAL OVER EN
@@ -84,3 +84,10 @@ RIP 12343434
 MISC 11
 
 (Not sure what failures exactly they imitate, maybe there are better examples).
+
+
+For testing fatal MCEs you need to set up kdump. Mini-recipe:
+(1) yum install --enablerepo='*debuginfo*' kexec-tools crash kernel-debuginfo
+(2) add "crashkernel=128M" to the kernel's command line, reboot
+(3) before injecting fatal MCE, start kdump service:
+    systemctl start kdump.service
diff --git a/src/lib/kernel.c b/src/lib/kernel.c
index 340ec39..ad20c65 100644
--- a/src/lib/kernel.c
+++ b/src/lib/kernel.c
@@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ static void record_oops(GList **oops_list, struct line_info* lines_info, int oop
         {
             *oops_list = g_list_append(
                         *oops_list,
-                        xasprintf("%s\n%s", (version ? version : "undefined"), oops)
+                        xasprintf("%s\n%s", (version ? version : ""), oops)
             );
         }
         else
diff --git a/src/plugins/abrt-dump-oops.c b/src/plugins/abrt-dump-oops.c
index 5e33f0a..12291be 100644
--- a/src/plugins/abrt-dump-oops.c
+++ b/src/plugins/abrt-dump-oops.c
@@ -115,7 +115,8 @@ static void save_oops_data_in_dump_dir(struct dump_dir *dd, char *oops, const ch
     char *second_line = (char*)strchr(first_line, '\n'); /* never NULL */
     *second_line++ = '\0';
 
-    dd_save_text(dd, FILENAME_KERNEL, first_line);
+    if (first_line[0])
+        dd_save_text(dd, FILENAME_KERNEL, first_line);
     dd_save_text(dd, FILENAME_BACKTRACE, second_line);
 
     /* check if trace doesn't have line: 'Your BIOS is broken' */
diff --git a/src/plugins/koops_event.conf b/src/plugins/koops_event.conf
index 37a79a9..b1472ce 100644
--- a/src/plugins/koops_event.conf
+++ b/src/plugins/koops_event.conf
@@ -3,6 +3,17 @@ EVENT=post-create analyzer=Kerneloops
         # >> instead of > is due to bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=854266
         abrt-action-analyze-oops &&
         dmesg >>dmesg &&
+        {
+        # action-analyze-oops tries to save kernel version,
+        # but for some oopses it can't do that (e.g. MCEs).
+        # If it failed, try to extract version from dmesg:
+        test -f kernel ||
+            {
+            k=`sed -n '/Linux version/ s/.*Linux version \([^ ]*\) .*/\1/p' dmesg | tail -n1`
+            test "$k" != "" && printf "%s" "$k" >kernel
+            true   # ignore possible failures in previous command
+            }
+        } &&
         abrt-action-save-kernel-data &&
         # Do not fail the event (->do not delete problem dir)
         # if check-oops-for-hw-error exits nonzero:
diff --git a/src/plugins/vmcore_event.conf b/src/plugins/vmcore_event.conf
index 655d842..a525ec7 100644
--- a/src/plugins/vmcore_event.conf
+++ b/src/plugins/vmcore_event.conf
@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
 # analyze
 EVENT=analyze_VMcore analyzer=vmcore
         # If kdump machinery already extracted dmesg...
+        (
         if test -f vmcore-dmesg.txt; then
             # ...use that
             abrt-dump-oops -o vmcore-dmesg.txt >backtrace || exit $?
@@ -15,8 +16,17 @@ EVENT=analyze_VMcore analyzer=vmcore
             test "$k" != "" && printf "%s" "$k" >kernel
         else
             # No vmcore-dmesg.txt, do it the hard way:
-            abrt-action-analyze-vmcore
-        fi &&
+            abrt-action-analyze-vmcore || exit $?
+            #
+            # Does "kernel" element exist?
+            test -f kernel && exit 0
+            #
+            # Try creating it from dmesg_log (created by abrt-action-analyze-vmcore):
+            test -f dmesg_log || exit 0
+            k=`sed -n '/Linux version/ s/.*Linux version \([^ ]*\) .*/\1/p' dmesg_log | tail -n1`
+            test "$k" != "" && printf "%s" "$k" >kernel
+        fi
+        ) &&
         abrt-action-analyze-oops &&
         abrt-action-save-kernel-data
 
-- 
1.8.3.1