How can I work out what events are being waited for with WinDBG in a kernel debug session
I'm a complete WinDbg newbie and I've been trying to debug a WindowsXP problem that a customer has sent me where our software and some third party software prevent windows from logging off. I've reproduced the problem and have verified that only when our software and the customers software are both installed (although not necessarily running at logoff) does the log off problem occur. I've observed that WM_ENDSESSION messages are not reaching the running windows when the user tries to log off and I know that the third party software uses a kernel driver.
I've been looking at the processes in WinDbg and I know that csrss.exe would normally send all the windows a WM_ENDSESSION message. When I ran:
!process 82356020 6
To look at csrss.exe's stack I can see:
WARNING: Frame IP not in any known module. Following frames may be wrong.
00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 0x7c90e514
THREAD 8246d998 Cid 0248.02a0 Teb: 7ffd7000 Win32Thread: e1627008 WAIT: (WrUserRequest) UserMode Non-Alertable
8243d9f0 SynchronizationEvent
81fe0390 SynchronizationEvent
Not impersonating
DeviceMap e1004450
Owning Process 82356020 Image: csrss.exe
Attached Process N/A Image: N/A
Wait Start TickCount 1813 Ticks: 20748 (0:00:05:24.187)
Context Switch Count 3 LargeStack
UserTime 00:00:00.000
KernelTime 00:00:00.000
Start Address 0x75b67cdf
Stack Init f80bd000 Current f80bc9c8 Base f80bd000 Limit f80ba000 Call 0
Priority 14 BasePriority 13 PriorityDecrement 0 DecrementCount 0
Kernel stack not resident.
ChildEBP RetAddr Args to Child
f80bc9e0 80500ce6 00000000 8246d998 804f9af2 nt!KiSwapContext+0x2e (FPO: [Uses EBP] [0,0,4])
f80bc9ec 804f9af2 804f986e e1627008 00000000 nt!KiSwapThread+0x46 (FPO: [0,0,0])
f80bca24 bf80a4a3 00000002 82475218 00000001 nt!KeWaitForMultipleObjects+0x284 (FPO: [Non-Fpo])
f80bca5c bf88c0a6 00000001 82475218 00000000 win32k!xxxMsgWaitForMultipleObjects+0xb0 (FPO: [Non-Fpo])
f80bcd30 bf87507d bf9ac0a0 00000001 f80bcd54 win32k!xxxDesktopThread+0x339 (FPO: [Non-Fpo])
f80bcd40 bf8010fd bf9ac0a0 f80bcd64 00bcfff4 win32k!xxxCreateSystemThreads+0x6a (FPO: [Non-Fpo])
f80bcd54 8053d648 00000000 00000022 00000000 win32k!NtUserCallOneParam+0x2开发者_开发问答3 (FPO: [Non-Fpo])
f80bcd54 7c90e514 00000000 00000022 00000000 nt!KiFastCallEntry+0xf8 (FPO: [0,0] TrapFrame @ f80bcd64)
This waitForMultipleObjects looks interesting because I'm wondering if csrss.exe is waiting on some event which isn't arriving to allow the logoff. Can anyone tell me how I might find out what event it's waiting for anything else I might do to further investigate the problem?
The objects being waited on are right there in the output:
THREAD 8246d998 Cid 0248.02a0 Teb: 7ffd7000 Win32Thread: e1627008 WAIT: (WrUserRequest) UserMode Non-Alertable
8243d9f0 SynchronizationEvent
81fe0390 SynchronizationEvent
I'll note though that the thread you're looking at is a common thread, just about every system that you look at will have it (not sure what that thread is for exactly, but I recognize the stack...Sometimes I feel like I've been doing this too long!).
I'll also note that you can't trust the parameters on the stack all of the time. See some details here: http://analyze-v.com/?p=7
-scott
To start off, try !object 82475218
to see if that tells you what the object is.
If that fails to help, try this:
http://blogs.msdn.com/search/SearchResults.aspx?q=KeWaitForMultipleObjects
It's a search for KeWaitForMultipleObjects
on the NT Debugging Blog, which is a great blog in for learning about Windows internals.
EDIT:
Here's the documentation for KeWaitForMultipleObjects
:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff553324.aspx Cheers. Jas.
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