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Stuck when compiling on m1 chip mac os

Open ZonePG opened this issue 3 years ago • 24 comments

I use brew install RISC-V toolchain on m1 mac os, and make qemu

it prints:

qemu-system-riscv64 -machine virt -bios none -kernel kernel/kernel -m 128M -smp 3 -nographic -drive file=fs.img,if=none,format=raw,id=x0 -device virtio-blk-device,drive=x0,bus=virtio-mmio-bus.0

then seems like stuck.

ZonePG avatar Apr 22 '21 15:04 ZonePG

I'm running Arch Linux with an amd64 laptop but meet the same problem.

VitalyAnkh avatar May 14 '21 06:05 VitalyAnkh

I have met the same problem with qemu-system-riscv64: qemu_mprotect__osdep: mprotect failed: Permission denied

gaelwjl avatar May 30 '21 09:05 gaelwjl

What worked for me was to pull the source for Qemu 4.2.1 and compile. I put this 4.2.1 version qemu-system-riscv64 in my path before the system version so it would be preferred.

What I am unsure of is if a later version of Qemu would work, but this atleast let me boot from make qemu. Maybe someone with a faster rig could try newer versions to see if one of them will also suffice.

Another strange thing which I am unsure if this is a generic risc-v/qemu issue or not but I cannot seem to get it to launch a graphics window like the x86_64 version does regardless of the version. Maybe someone more knowledgable can comment.

Virtual-Machine avatar Jun 01 '21 23:06 Virtual-Machine

I'm running Arch Linux with an amd64 laptop but meet the same problem.

@VitalyAnkh I meet the same problem in Archlinux. According to Virtual-Machine 's solution. Because Archlinux update in rolling, qemu 4.2 depending on many old version libraries so it cannot run correctly. After serval tries, I found qemu 5.2 is OK to me.

My OS info

Operating System: Manjaro Linux 21.0.5
Kernel: Linux 5.9.16-1-MANJARO

Here is how to downgrade qemu and qemu-arch-extra

  1. Install downgrade through yay
# install yay
pacman -S yay
# use yay to install downgrade from AUR repo
yay -S downgrade
  1. Use downgrade to downgrade qemu and qemu-arch-extra to 5.2
sudo su
export DOWNGRADE_FROM_ALA=1
downgrade qemu-arch-extra qemu

When asking you which version to downgrade, choose: qemu 5.2.0 4 x86_64 qemu-arch-extra 5.2.0 4 x86_64

Taowyoo avatar Jun 04 '21 00:06 Taowyoo

@Taowyoo Thanks! This makes us run the tutorial smoothly, but I wonder how could we port xv6 to the latest qemu? I think it’s worthing doing.

VitalyAnkh avatar Jun 04 '21 06:06 VitalyAnkh

@Taowyoo Thanks! This makes us run the tutorial smoothly, but I wonder how could we port xv6 to the latest qemu? I think it’s worthing doing.

@VitalyAnkh Yes, that's the best way. I tried to debug xv6 to found the problem: I found the code stuck at https://github.com/mit-pdos/xv6-riscv/blob/077323a8f0b3440fcc3d082096a2d83fe5461d70/kernel/start.c#L49

I am new to RISC-V and xv6 also qemu. But I will continue learning and working on this problem

Taowyoo avatar Jun 05 '21 04:06 Taowyoo

@Taowyoo

Nice catch. I tried debugging as well and I am also getting caught on mret but inside the timervec routine instead... when using QEMU 6.0.0 on Arch. I can send an interrupt signal and it will reloop back and get caught on the mret again.

https://github.com/mit-pdos/xv6-riscv/blob/077323a8f0b3440fcc3d082096a2d83fe5461d70/kernel/kernelvec.S#L121

Virtual-Machine avatar Jun 06 '21 06:06 Virtual-Machine

@Virtual-Machine Yes, same to me. I have updated this problem on QEMU's Gitlab repo: https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/issues/192

I am not sure that's the correct place. Maybe I should create a new issue.

Taowyoo avatar Jun 07 '21 00:06 Taowyoo

This problem should be fixed by #62 I have checked it works correctly with Qemu 6.0.0 on my Arch. @Virtual-Machine @VitalyAnkh

Taowyoo avatar Jun 15 '21 21:06 Taowyoo

I am trying to compile on Mac running Big Sur 11.2.3 and getting qemu-system-riscv64: qemu_mprotect__osdep: mprotect failed: Permission denied

Any idea how to get around this. Any help is appreciated.

kalpesh2001 avatar Jun 19 '21 23:06 kalpesh2001

I am trying to compile on Mac running Big Sur 11.2.3 and getting qemu-system-riscv64: qemu_mprotect__osdep: mprotect failed: Permission denied

Any idea how to get around this. Any help is appreciated.

This article may help you, but applies to qemu5.1.0 and xv6 os run well.

ZonePG avatar Jun 29 '21 08:06 ZonePG

I ran into the same problem. The solution of this blog works

Alice-space avatar Sep 19 '21 14:09 Alice-space

Two patches added to qemu-5.10.0 and it works! See here: https://github.com/ReZeroS/mit6.828-note/issues/3

siwei-li avatar Nov 13 '21 20:11 siwei-li

Solution:

(Steps 2-5 have to be made on Ubuntu)

  1. install Ubuntu LTS for arm64 (I made it by installing on UTM virtual machine https://mac.getutm.app/gallery/ubuntu-20-04)
  2. after successful installation, type to Ubuntu Shell sudo apt-get install git build-essential gdb-multiarch qemu-system-misc gcc-riscv64-linux-gnu binutils-riscv64-linux-gnu
  3. git clone this repository
  4. go to directory where this repository was installed
  5. type make qemu

jcob-sikorski avatar Dec 04 '21 23:12 jcob-sikorski

I tried to debug xv6 to found the problem:

Hi @Taowyoo @Virtual-Machine, I got the same problem but did know how to debug on qemu, especially at the time of os booting. :/

Could I ask how did you debug this scenario?

u2386 avatar Feb 20 '22 08:02 u2386

@u2386 to debug OS boot you can use the provided "make qemu-gdb" which should start up xv6 in qemu waiting for a gdb session to connect. If you then run gdb in another shell you can have it connect to the OS waiting in qemu. From there you should be able to set breakpoints, jump, read, inspect the OS as it boots up etc.

Reviewing the Makefile should be helpful to see how it does this via command line flags.

image

Also of relevance see the .gdbinit file:

image

Virtual-Machine avatar Feb 21 '22 22:02 Virtual-Machine

@u2386 to debug OS boot you can use the provided "make qemu-gdb" which should start up xv6 in qemu waiting for a gdb session to connect. If you then run gdb in another shell you can have it connect to the OS waiting in qemu. From there you should be able to set breakpoints, jump, read, inspect the OS as it boots up etc.

Reviewing the Makefile should be helpful to see how it does this via command line flags.

image

Also of relevance see the .gdbinit file:

image

perfect answer.I used to know run make qemu-gdb to debug,But I never realized to check the Makefile.Now I get it.

fengxiaohu avatar May 18 '22 15:05 fengxiaohu

Try to boot with

riscv64-unknown-elf-gcc (g2ee5e430018-dirty) 12.2.0 QEMU emulator version 7.2.0

and met the same problem.

zhouzilong2020 avatar Dec 22 '22 22:12 zhouzilong2020

I was able to run xv6-x86 on my m1 mac running ubuntu arm64. Perform the following steps:

  1. clone the xv6 from git
  2. Now you need to install a cross compiler: sudo apt install gcc-i686-linux-gnu
  3. Go to the directory and instead of make , type make TOLLPREFIX=i686-linux-gnu-
  4. Now, instead of make qemu-nox, type make TOLLPREFIX=i686-linux-gnu- qemu-nox
  5. Voilà!!

Mazz84002 avatar Apr 03 '23 21:04 Mazz84002

I was able to run xv6-x86 on my m1 mac running ubuntu arm64. Perform the following steps:

1. clone the xv6 from git

2. Now you need to install a cross compiler: `sudo apt install gcc-i686-linux-gnu`

3. Go to the directory and instead of `make` , type `make TOLLPREFIX=i686-linux-gnu-`

4. Now, instead of `make qemu-nox`, type `make TOLLPREFIX=i686-linux-gnu- qemu-nox`

5. Voilà!!

Hey,

I'm also using M1 and a virtual Ubuntu ARM64 using UTM. How do I find the directory you mentioned at the third line?

alex-puchkov avatar Apr 11 '23 14:04 alex-puchkov

By directory I mean the location where you have downloaded the files of xv6. When you type git clone https://github.com/mit-pdos/xv6-public.git, you will have a directory named xv6 inside the directory you are already working in. Then you can use cd xv6 in the terminal to go to the xv6 directory. You can also find this by doing a system search and cd to that directly through the terminal.

Mazz84002 avatar Apr 11 '23 15:04 Mazz84002

By directory I mean the location where you have downloaded the files of xv6. When you type git clone https://github.com/mit-pdos/xv6-public.git, you will have a directory named xv6 inside the directory you are already working in. Then you can use cd xv6 in the terminal to go to the xv6 directory. You can also find this by doing a system search and cd to that directly through the terminal.

Thanks. I'm getting the following error after running make TOLLPREFIX. Any ideas on how to solve it?

`make TOLLPREFIX=i686-linux-gnu-


*** Error: Couldn't find an i386--elf version of GCC/binutils. *** Is the directory with i386-jos-elf-gcc in your PATH? *** If your i386--elf toolchain is installed with a command *** prefix other than 'i386-jos-elf-', set your TOOLPREFIX *** environment variable to that prefix and run 'make' again. *** To turn off this error, run 'gmake TOOLPREFIX= ...'.


gcc -fno-pic -static -fno-builtin -fno-strict-aliasing -O2 -Wall -MD -ggdb -m32 -Werror -fno-omit-frame-pointer -fno-stack-protector -fno-pie -no-pie -fno-pic -O -nostdinc -I. -c bootmain.c gcc: error: unrecognized command-line option ‘-m32’ make: *** [Makefile:104: bootblock] Error 1 `

alex-puchkov avatar Apr 12 '23 13:04 alex-puchkov

To run xv6, you need qemu. Do you have it installed> sudo apt install qemu x86_64-elf-gcc Can you try typing sudo apt install build-essential in your terminal? Not sure if this will work

Mazz84002 avatar Apr 15 '23 17:04 Mazz84002

I was able to run xv6-x86 on my m1 mac running ubuntu arm64. Perform the following steps:

  1. clone the xv6 from git
  2. Now you need to install a cross compiler: sudo apt install gcc-i686-linux-gnu
  3. Go to the directory and instead of make , type make TOLLPREFIX=i686-linux-gnu-
  4. Now, instead of make qemu-nox, type make TOLLPREFIX=i686-linux-gnu- qemu-nox
  5. Voilà!!

Thanks, but there's a crucial typo in your answer, it is TOOLPREFIX not TOLLPREFIX. Here's a corrected answer:

  1. clone the xv6 from git
  2. Now you need to install a cross compiler: sudo apt install gcc-i686-linux-gnu
  3. Go to the directory and instead of make , type make TOOLPREFIX=i686-linux-gnu-
  4. Now, instead of make qemu-nox, type make TOOLPREFIX=i686-linux-gnu- qemu-nox

keichenblat avatar Oct 03 '23 16:10 keichenblat