diff options
author | Stefan Tauner <stefan.tauner@gmx.at> | 2016-05-02 23:16:57 +0200 |
---|---|---|
committer | Patrick Georgi <pgeorgi@google.com> | 2018-12-19 10:21:32 +0000 |
commit | 47d6663bba233014dc6d418b94ad6161751f2176 (patch) | |
tree | ef0dd9194c847142522ac74f7a952a25edbd8dde /util | |
parent | 43825e89607db06ac96926ab9872887980fb2ad3 (diff) |
utils: introduce find_usbdebug.sh to help find USB debug ports
Carl-Daniel made this script a long time ago but it never was picked up
in the tree. Now that USB debugging is way more common it makes
sense to include it.
I have made a number of changes to the original version:
* -h help text
* check for running as root
* enhanced readability (test -> if)
* new execution flow and refined output that better shows the device(s)
attached to the debug port(s)
* handling of Intel rate-matching hubs
* hiding of (bogus) error messages from lspci and lsusb
Signed-off-by: Stefan Tauner <stefan.tauner@gmx.at>
Change-Id: Iadf775e990f5c5f91a28d57e3331d1f59acee305
Reviewed-on: https://review.coreboot.org/c/9305
Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins) <no-reply@coreboot.org>
Reviewed-by: Patrick Georgi <pgeorgi@google.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'util')
-rw-r--r-- | util/README.md | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | util/find_usbdebug/description.md | 1 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | util/find_usbdebug/find_usbdebug.sh | 169 |
3 files changed, 171 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/util/README.md b/util/README.md index bd1398bafb..470013ed25 100644 --- a/util/README.md +++ b/util/README.md @@ -38,6 +38,7 @@ _coreboot.org-status_ and _docs.coreboot.org_ Controller (EC). `C` * __exynos__ - Computes and fills Exynos ROM checksum (for BL1 or BL2). `Python2` +* __find_usbdebug__ - Help find USB debug ports * __futility__ - Firmware utility for signing ChromeOS images `Make` * __fuzz-tests__ - Create test cases that crash the jpeg code. `C` * __genbuild_h__ - Generate build system definitions `Shell` diff --git a/util/find_usbdebug/description.md b/util/find_usbdebug/description.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..1497603314 --- /dev/null +++ b/util/find_usbdebug/description.md @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +Help find USB debug ports diff --git a/util/find_usbdebug/find_usbdebug.sh b/util/find_usbdebug/find_usbdebug.sh new file mode 100755 index 0000000000..c7b2e7e8da --- /dev/null +++ b/util/find_usbdebug/find_usbdebug.sh @@ -0,0 +1,169 @@ +#!/bin/bash + +# Copyright 2008 Carl-Daniel Hailfinger +# Copyright 2015 Stefan Tauner +# +# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify +# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by +# the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License. +# +# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, +# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the +# GNU General Public License for more details. + +LANG=C +# Some tools emit errors that don't matter (bugs in lspci/PCI firmware and lsusb). +# To shown them anyway (e.g. for debugging) comment next line. +exec 2>/dev/null + +if [ "$1" = "-h" ]; then + printf "Usage: $0 [-h | path to dmesg log] + +This script tries to find USB ports compatible with USB2/EHCI debug devices and +helps you to find their physical locations. To that end, attach at least one +uniquely identifiable device to a USB port and run this script. The device needs +to be visible in the output of \"lsusb -t\" (debug devices are often *not*!). + +After determining compatibility of the USB controllers the script will print the +devices attached to the debug port as shown by lsusb. If nothing shows up simply +switch ports and repeat the process. + +Note: usually only one port is supported for debugging.\n" + exit 0 +fi +uid=`id -u` +if [ "$uid" -ne 0 ]; then + echo "Must be run as root. Exiting." + exit 1 +fi +dmesgfile=$1 + +find_devs_in_tree () { + bus=$1 + port=$2 + busstr=`printf "Bus %02d" "$bus"` + portstr="Port $port" + + hubs_to_ignore="8087:0020 8087:0024" + reqlvl=1 + + found= + # Iterate over the output of lsusb -t because it contains the physical port numbers + while IFS='' read -r line; do + # We need to keep track of the current bus "branch" + # Look out for lines starting with /: (that indicate a bus) + if [ "${line#*/:}" != "$line" ]; then + if [ "${line#*$busstr}" != "$line" ]; then + cur_bus=$busstr + else + cur_bus= + fi + continue + fi + + # Skip all lines not belonging to the wanted bus number + if [ "$cur_bus" != "$busstr" ]; then + continue + fi + + # Calculate current USB tier/level + spaces="${line%%[!' ']*}" + curlvl=$((${#spaces} / 4)) + if [ $curlvl -ne $reqlvl ]; then + continue + fi + + # Fetch USB IDs of the current device + dev=`echo ${line#*Dev } | cut -d ',' -f 1` + lsusbline=`lsusb -s "$bus":"$dev"` + if [[ ! "$lsusbline" =~ .*([[:xdigit:]]{4}:[[:xdigit:]]{4}) ]]; then + printf "Unexpected output from \"%s\": \"%s\"\n" "lsusb -s $bus:$dev" "$usbline" + exit 1 + fi + ids=${BASH_REMATCH[1]} + + # Skip over rate matching hubs + if [[ "$hubs_to_ignore" == *"$ids"* ]]; then + ((reqlvl += 1)) + continue + fi + + # Check for matching physical USB port + if [ "${line#*$portstr}" != "$line" ]; then + echo "$lsusbline" + return + fi + done<< EOF +$(lsusb -t) +EOF + if [ -z "$found" ]; then + echo "none" + fi +} + +debug_lspci_devs=`lspci -nvvD | + grep -i "^[0-9a-f]\|debug port" | + grep -iB1 --no-group-separator "debug port" | + grep -vi "debug port" | + cut -f 1 -d" " | + sort | + xargs echo` + +if [ -z "$debug_lspci_devs" ]; then + printf "No USB controller with debug capability found by lspci.\n +Possible reasons: lspci too old, USB controller does not support a debug device, ... Exiting.\n" + exit 1 +fi +printf "The following PCI devices support a USB debug port (says lspci): $debug_lspci_devs\n" + +debug_dmesg_devs_with_port=`( test -z "$dmesgfile" && + dmesg || + cat "$dmesgfile") | + grep -i "ehci.*debug port" | + sed "s/.* \([0-9a-f]*:*[0-9a-f]\{2\}:[0-9a-f]\{2\}\.[0-9a-f]\).*ebug port /\1 /" | + sort` + +debug_dmesg_devs=`echo "$debug_dmesg_devs_with_port" | + cut -f 1 -d" " | + xargs echo` + +if [ -z "$debug_dmesg_devs" ]; then + printf "dmesg does not show any supported ports.\n +Possible reasons: dmesg scrolled off, kernel too old, USB controller does not support a debug device, ... Exiting.\n +Note: You can specify a file containing kernel messages as an argument to this program (e.g. /var/log/dmesg)." + exit 1 +fi + +if [ "$debug_lspci_devs" != "$debug_dmesg_devs" ]; then + echo "lspci and the kernel do not agree on USB debug device support. Exiting." + exit 1 +fi + +printf "and the kernel agrees, good.\n\n" + +while true; do + for dev in $debug_dmesg_devs; do + bus=`lsusb -v | + grep "^Bus\|iSerial.*" | + grep -B1 --no-group-separator "iSerial.*$dev" | + grep "^Bus" | + sed "s/Bus *0*\([0-9a-f]*\).*/\1/"` + port=`echo "$debug_dmesg_devs_with_port" | + grep "^$dev" | + cut -f 2 -d" "` + + echo "Device(s) currently connected to the debug-capable port $port on PCI device $dev, USB bus $bus:" + + find_devs_in_tree "$bus" "$port" + echo + done + + echo "Enter 'q' to abort or anything else to repeat" + read -r r + if [ $? -ne 0 -o "$r" = "q" ]; then + break; + fi +done + +exit 0 |