# Kconfig - debug configuration options # # Copyright (c) 2015 Wind River Systems, Inc. # # SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 # menu "Debugging Options" config DEBUG bool "Build kernel with debugging enabled" default n help Build a kernel suitable for debugging. Right now, this option only disables optimization, more debugging variants can be selected from here to allow more debugging. config STACK_USAGE bool "Generate stack usage information" default n help Generate an extra file that specifies the maximum amount of stack used, on a per-function basis. config STACK_SENTINEL bool "Enable stack sentinel" select THREAD_STACK_INFO default n help Store a magic value at the lowest addresses of a thread's stack. Periodically check that this value is still present and kill the thread gracefully if it isn't. This is currently checked in four places: 1) Upon any context switch for the outgoing thread 2) Any hardware interrupt that doesn't context switch, the check is performed for the interrupted thread 3) When a thread returns from its entry point 4) When a thread calls k_yield() but doesn't context switch This feature doesn't prevent corruption and the system may be in an unusable state. However, given the bizarre behavior associated with stack overflows, knowledge that this is happening is very useful. This feature is intended for those systems which lack hardware support for stack overflow protection, or have insufficient system resources to use that hardware support. config PRINTK bool prompt "Send printk() to console" depends on CONSOLE_HAS_DRIVER default y help This option directs printk() debugging output to the supported console device, rather than suppressing the generation of printk() output entirely. Output is sent immediately, without any mutual exclusion or buffering. config PRINTK_BUFFER_SIZE int prompt "printk() buffer size" depends on PRINTK depends on USERSPACE default 32 help If userspace is enabled, printk() calls are buffered so that we do not have to make a system call for every character emitted. Specify the size of this buffer. config STDOUT_CONSOLE bool prompt "Send stdout to console" depends on CONSOLE_HAS_DRIVER default n help This option directs standard output (e.g. printf) to the console device, rather than suppressing it entirely. config EARLY_CONSOLE bool prompt "Send stdout at the earliest stage possible" default n help This option will enable stdout as early as possible, for debugging purpose. For instance, in case of STDOUT_CONSOLE being set it will initialize its driver earlier than normal, in order to get the stdout sent through the console at the earliest stage possible. config ASSERT bool prompt "Enable __ASSERT() macro" default n help This enables the __ASSERT() macro in the kernel code. If an assertion fails, the calling thread is put on an infinite tight loop. Since enabling this adds a significant footprint, it should only be enabled in a non-production system. config ASSERT_LEVEL int prompt "__ASSERT() level" default 2 range 0 2 depends on ASSERT help This option specifies the assertion level used by the __ASSERT() macro. It can be set to one of three possible values: Level 0: off Level 1: on + warning in every file that includes __assert.h Level 2: on + no warning config DEBUG_TRACING_KERNEL_OBJECTS bool "Kernel object tracing (deprecated)" select OBJECT_TRACING default n help For backward compatibility only config OBJECT_TRACING bool prompt "Kernel object tracing" default n help This option enable the feature for tracing kernel objects. This option is for debug purposes and increases the memory footprint of the kernel. config OVERRIDE_FRAME_POINTER_DEFAULT bool prompt "Override compiler defaults for -fomit-frame-pointer" default n help Omitting the frame pointer prevents the compiler from putting the stack frame pointer into a register. Saves a few instructions in function prologues/epilogues and frees up a register for general-purpose use, which can provide good performance improvements on register-constrained architectures like x86. On some architectures (including x86) omitting frame pointers impedes debugging as local variables are harder to locate. At -O1 and above gcc will enable -fomit-frame-pointer automatically but only if the architecture does not require if for effective debugging. Choose Y if you want to override the default frame pointer behavior of your compiler, otherwise choose N. config OMIT_FRAME_POINTER bool prompt "Omit frame pointer" default n depends on OVERRIDE_FRAME_POINTER_DEFAULT help Choose Y for best performance. On some architectures (including x86) this will favor code size and performance over debugability. Choose N in you wish to retain the frame pointer. This option may be useful if your application uses runtime backtracing and does not support parsing unwind tables. If unsure, disable OVERRIDE_FRAME_POINTER_DEFAULT to allow the compiler to adopt sensible defaults for your architecture. # # Generic Debugging Options # config DEBUG_INFO bool "Enable system debugging information" default n depends on X86 help This option enables the addition of various information that can be used by debuggers in debugging the system. NOTE: Does not currently work with the x86 IAMCU ABI. # # Miscellaneous debugging options # config OPENOCD_SUPPORT bool prompt "OpenOCD support [EXPERIMENTAL]" default n select THREAD_MONITOR help This option exports an array of offsets to kernel structs, used by OpenOCD to determine the state of running threads. (This option selects CONFIG_THREAD_MONITOR, so all of its caveats are implied.) endmenu