I am using the latest Ubuntu Linux with a custom kernel (4.2.0-36-generic), in which i have disabled the CONFIG_STRICT_DEVNEM, because I need to dump and search some terms in memory during a project.
However, when using dd if=/dev/mem
to print it on screen, dd if=/dev/mem of=/home/user/Documents/file.dump
to save it as a file or dd if=/dev/mem | hexdump -C | grep 'term'
to directly find what I'm looking for, the system freezes and reboots while in the process.
I have checked with df -h
and my disc has plenty of free space. Also, the process always stops after writting a 2.1Gb to 2.5Gb, out of a 8Gb RAM and before reaching addresses that start with 4 (if these make any difference). In addition, checking /var/log/syslog
and /var/log/kern.log
shows nothing relevant before the freezing.
Also, using parameters bs=1G count=2
successfully copies the first 2GB of the memory but then trying bs=1G count=2 skip=2
to get then next 2GB again freezes the system.
Would you suggest any solution so it is possible to dump the full memory or some other way to directly search terms in memory?
tail -f /var/log/kern.log
andtail -f /var/log/messages
to see if the kernel outputs a message before crashing. Then, look at those files after the reboot. Also, change the kernel's debug level to make it easier to see what the problem is. Consider asking the question on unix.stackexchange.com or askubuntu.com./var/log/kern.log
or/var/log/syslog
. However, by asking on unix.stackexchange.com I got an answer. By looking in/var/log/kern.log
and `/proc/iomem' I found which memory areas are safe to access. Thank you.