1Tainted kernels 2--------------- 3 4The kernel will mark itself as 'tainted' when something occurs that might be 5relevant later when investigating problems. Don't worry too much about this, 6most of the time it's not a problem to run a tainted kernel; the information is 7mainly of interest once someone wants to investigate some problem, as its real 8cause might be the event that got the kernel tainted. That's why bug reports 9from tainted kernels will often be ignored by developers, hence try to reproduce 10problems with an untainted kernel. 11 12Note the kernel will remain tainted even after you undo what caused the taint 13(i.e. unload a proprietary kernel module), to indicate the kernel remains not 14trustworthy. That's also why the kernel will print the tainted state when it 15notices an internal problem (a 'kernel bug'), a recoverable error 16('kernel oops') or a non-recoverable error ('kernel panic') and writes debug 17information about this to the logs ``dmesg`` outputs. It's also possible to 18check the tainted state at runtime through a file in ``/proc/``. 19 20 21Tainted flag in bugs, oops or panics messages 22~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 23 24You find the tainted state near the top in a line starting with 'CPU:'; if or 25why the kernel was tainted is shown after the Process ID ('PID:') and a shortened 26name of the command ('Comm:') that triggered the event:: 27 28 BUG: unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at 0000000000000000 29 Oops: 0002 [#1] SMP PTI 30 CPU: 0 PID: 4424 Comm: insmod Tainted: P W O 4.20.0-0.rc6.fc30 #1 31 Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 0.5.1 01/01/2011 32 RIP: 0010:my_oops_init+0x13/0x1000 [kpanic] 33 [...] 34 35You'll find a 'Not tainted: ' there if the kernel was not tainted at the 36time of the event; if it was, then it will print 'Tainted: ' and characters 37either letters or blanks. In the example above it looks like this:: 38 39 Tainted: P W O 40 41The meaning of those characters is explained in the table below. In this case 42the kernel got tainted earlier because a proprietary Module (``P``) was loaded, 43a warning occurred (``W``), and an externally-built module was loaded (``O``). 44To decode other letters use the table below. 45 46 47Decoding tainted state at runtime 48~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 49 50At runtime, you can query the tainted state by reading 51``cat /proc/sys/kernel/tainted``. If that returns ``0``, the kernel is not 52tainted; any other number indicates the reasons why it is. The easiest way to 53decode that number is the script ``tools/debugging/kernel-chktaint``, which your 54distribution might ship as part of a package called ``linux-tools`` or 55``kernel-tools``; if it doesn't, you can download the script from 56`git.kernel.org <https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/plain/tools/debugging/kernel-chktaint>`_ 57and execute it with ``sh kernel-chktaint``, which would print something like 58this on the machine that had the statements in the logs that were quoted earlier:: 59 60 Kernel is Tainted for following reasons: 61 * Proprietary module was loaded (#0) 62 * Kernel issued warning (#9) 63 * Externally-built ('out-of-tree') module was loaded (#12) 64 See Documentation/admin-guide/tainted-kernels.rst in the Linux kernel or 65 https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/admin-guide/tainted-kernels.html for 66 a more details explanation of the various taint flags. 67 Raw taint value as int/string: 4609/'P W O ' 68 69You can try to decode the number yourself. That's easy if there was only one 70reason that got your kernel tainted, as in this case you can find the number 71with the table below. If there were multiple reasons you need to decode the 72number, as it is a bitfield, where each bit indicates the absence or presence of 73a particular type of taint. It's best to leave that to the aforementioned 74script, but if you need something quick you can use this shell command to check 75which bits are set:: 76 77 $ for i in $(seq 18); do echo $(($i-1)) $(($(cat /proc/sys/kernel/tainted)>>($i-1)&1));done 78 79Table for decoding tainted state 80~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 81 82=== === ====== ======================================================== 83Bit Log Number Reason that got the kernel tainted 84=== === ====== ======================================================== 85 0 G/P 1 proprietary module was loaded 86 1 _/F 2 module was force loaded 87 2 _/S 4 kernel running on an out of specification system 88 3 _/R 8 module was force unloaded 89 4 _/M 16 processor reported a Machine Check Exception (MCE) 90 5 _/B 32 bad page referenced or some unexpected page flags 91 6 _/U 64 taint requested by userspace application 92 7 _/D 128 kernel died recently, i.e. there was an OOPS or BUG 93 8 _/A 256 ACPI table overridden by user 94 9 _/W 512 kernel issued warning 95 10 _/C 1024 staging driver was loaded 96 11 _/I 2048 workaround for bug in platform firmware applied 97 12 _/O 4096 externally-built ("out-of-tree") module was loaded 98 13 _/E 8192 unsigned module was loaded 99 14 _/L 16384 soft lockup occurred 100 15 _/K 32768 kernel has been live patched 101 16 _/X 65536 auxiliary taint, defined for and used by distros 102 17 _/T 131072 kernel was built with the struct randomization plugin 103 18 _/N 262144 an in-kernel test has been run 104 19 _/J 524288 userspace used a mutating debug operation in fwctl 105=== === ====== ======================================================== 106 107Note: The character ``_`` is representing a blank in this table to make reading 108easier. 109 110More detailed explanation for tainting 111~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 112 113 0) ``G`` if all modules loaded have a GPL or compatible license, ``P`` if 114 any proprietary module has been loaded. Modules without a 115 MODULE_LICENSE or with a MODULE_LICENSE that is not recognised by 116 insmod as GPL compatible are assumed to be proprietary. 117 118 1) ``F`` if any module was force loaded by ``insmod -f``, ``' '`` if all 119 modules were loaded normally. 120 121 2) ``S`` if the kernel is running on a processor or system that is out of 122 specification: hardware has been put into an unsupported configuration, 123 therefore proper execution cannot be guaranteed. 124 Kernel will be tainted if, for example: 125 126 - on x86: PAE is forced through forcepae on intel CPUs (such as Pentium M) 127 which do not report PAE but may have a functional implementation, an SMP 128 kernel is running on non officially capable SMP Athlon CPUs, MSRs are 129 being poked at from userspace. 130 - on arm: kernel running on certain CPUs (such as Keystone 2) without 131 having certain kernel features enabled. 132 - on arm64: there are mismatched hardware features between CPUs, the 133 bootloader has booted CPUs in different modes. 134 - certain drivers are being used on non supported architectures (such as 135 scsi/snic on something else than x86_64, scsi/ips on non 136 x86/x86_64/itanium, have broken firmware settings for the 137 irqchip/irq-gic on arm64 ...). 138 - x86/x86_64: Microcode late loading is dangerous and will result in 139 tainting the kernel. It requires that all CPUs rendezvous to make sure 140 the update happens when the system is as quiescent as possible. However, 141 a higher priority MCE/SMI/NMI can move control flow away from that 142 rendezvous and interrupt the update, which can be detrimental to the 143 machine. 144 145 3) ``R`` if a module was force unloaded by ``rmmod -f``, ``' '`` if all 146 modules were unloaded normally. 147 148 4) ``M`` if any processor has reported a Machine Check Exception, 149 ``' '`` if no Machine Check Exceptions have occurred. 150 151 5) ``B`` If a page-release function has found a bad page reference or some 152 unexpected page flags. This indicates a hardware problem or a kernel bug; 153 there should be other information in the log indicating why this tainting 154 occurred. 155 156 6) ``U`` if a user or user application specifically requested that the 157 Tainted flag be set, ``' '`` otherwise. 158 159 7) ``D`` if the kernel has died recently, i.e. there was an OOPS or BUG. 160 161 8) ``A`` if an ACPI table has been overridden. 162 163 9) ``W`` if a warning has previously been issued by the kernel. 164 (Though some warnings may set more specific taint flags.) 165 166 10) ``C`` if a staging driver has been loaded. 167 168 11) ``I`` if the kernel is working around a severe bug in the platform 169 firmware (BIOS or similar). 170 171 12) ``O`` if an externally-built ("out-of-tree") module has been loaded. 172 173 13) ``E`` if an unsigned module has been loaded in a kernel supporting 174 module signature. 175 176 14) ``L`` if a soft lockup has previously occurred on the system. 177 178 15) ``K`` if the kernel has been live patched. 179 180 16) ``X`` Auxiliary taint, defined for and used by Linux distributors. 181 182 17) ``T`` Kernel was build with the randstruct plugin, which can intentionally 183 produce extremely unusual kernel structure layouts (even performance 184 pathological ones), which is important to know when debugging. Set at 185 build time. 186 187 18) ``N`` if an in-kernel test, such as a KUnit test, has been run. 188 189 19) ``J`` if userpace opened /dev/fwctl/* and performed a FWTCL_RPC_DEBUG_WRITE 190 to use the devices debugging features. Device debugging features could 191 cause the device to malfunction in undefined ways. 192