It just so happens that I have two Webcams on my machine, one being a rather poor one built into the laptop and a 2nd better quality Logitech webcam.
Using the 2nd webcam by default in Empathy for video conference calls required a little bit of hackery with gconf-editor by changing /system/gstreamer/0.10/default/videosrc from v4l2src to vl4l2src device="/dev/video1"
This wasn't entirely the most user friendly way to configure the default. Ho hum..
Thursday, 28 July 2011
Tuesday, 26 July 2011
The semantics of halt.
It appears that the semantics of halt mean it will stop the machine but it may or may not shut it down. Back when I used UNIX boxes, halt basically stopped the machine but never powered it down; to power it down one had to explicitly use "halt -p".
So things change. With upstart, halt is a symbolic link to reboot and reboot calls shutdown -h. The man page to shutdown states for the -h option:
"Requests that the system be either halted or powered off after it has been brought down, with the choice as to which left up to the system."
Hrm, so this vaguely explains why halting some machines may just halt and on others it may also shut the system down. I've not digged into this thoroughly yet, but one suspects that for different processor architectures we get different implementations. Even for x86 we have variations in CPUs and boards/platforms, so it really it is hard to say if halt will power down a machine.
The best bet is to assume halt just halts and if you want it to power down always use "halt -p".
So things change. With upstart, halt is a symbolic link to reboot and reboot calls shutdown -h. The man page to shutdown states for the -h option:
"Requests that the system be either halted or powered off after it has been brought down, with the choice as to which left up to the system."
Hrm, so this vaguely explains why halting some machines may just halt and on others it may also shut the system down. I've not digged into this thoroughly yet, but one suspects that for different processor architectures we get different implementations. Even for x86 we have variations in CPUs and boards/platforms, so it really it is hard to say if halt will power down a machine.
The best bet is to assume halt just halts and if you want it to power down always use "halt -p".
Sunday, 24 July 2011
Using the PCI sysfs interface to dump the Video BIOS ROM
The Linux PCI core driver provides a useful (and probably overlooked) sysfs interface to read PCI ROM resources. A PCI device that has a ROM resource will have a "rom" sysfs file associated with it, writing anything other than 0 to it will enable one to then read the ROM image from this file.
For example, on my laptop, to find PCI devices that have ROM images associated with them I used:
and this corresponds to my Integrated Graphics Controller:
lspci | grep 02.0
00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Mobile GM965/GL960 Integrated Graphics Controller (primary) (rev 0c)
To dump the ROM I used:
echo 1 | sudo tee /sys/devices/pci0000\:00/0000\:00\:02.0/rom
To disassemble this I used ndisasm:
sudo apt-get install nasm
ndisasm -k 0,3 vbios.rom | less
..and just use strings on the ROM image to dump out interesting text, e.g.
strings vbios.rom
000000000000
00IBM VGA Compatible BIOS.
PCIR
(00`
*@0p
H?@0b
..
..and then used a tool like bvi to edit the ROM.
For example, on my laptop, to find PCI devices that have ROM images associated with them I used:
find /sys/devices -name "rom"
/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:02.0/rom
/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:02.0/rom
and this corresponds to my Integrated Graphics Controller:
lspci | grep 02.0
00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Mobile GM965/GL960 Integrated Graphics Controller (primary) (rev 0c)
To dump the ROM I used:
echo 1 | sudo tee /sys/devices/pci0000\:00/0000\:00\:02.0/rom
sudo cat /sys/devices/pci0000\:00/0000\:00\:02.0/rom > vbios.rom
To disassemble this I used ndisasm:
sudo apt-get install nasm
ndisasm -k 0,3 vbios.rom | less
..and just use strings on the ROM image to dump out interesting text, e.g.
strings vbios.rom
000000000000
00IBM VGA Compatible BIOS.
PCIR
(00`
*@0p
H?@0b
..
..and then used a tool like bvi to edit the ROM.
Friday, 15 July 2011
Editing binaries using bvi
I don't want to start a vi vs emacs holy war, but I have found a wonderful binary editor based on the vi command set. The bvi editor is great for tweaking binary files - one can tab between the hex and ASCII representations of the binary data to re-edit the data.
To install use:
As well as basic vi commands, bvi contains bit-level operations to and/or/xor/not/shift bits too. One has to use ':set memmove' to insert/delete data as this is not enabled by default.
Anyhow, install, consult the man page and get editing binary files!
To install use:
sudo apt-get install bvi
As well as basic vi commands, bvi contains bit-level operations to and/or/xor/not/shift bits too. One has to use ':set memmove' to insert/delete data as this is not enabled by default.
Anyhow, install, consult the man page and get editing binary files!
Wednesday, 6 July 2011
Debugging I/O reads/writes used by the ACPI core using SystemTap
SystemTap is a very useful and powerful tool that enables one to insert kernel debug into a running kernel. Today I wanted to inspect the I/O read/write operations occurring when running some ACPI AML, so it was a case of hacking up a few lines of system tap to dump out the relevant state (e.g. which port being accessed, width of the I/O operation in bits and value being written or read).
So instead of spinning a bespoke kernel with a few lines of debug in, I use SystemTap to quickly write a re-usable script. Simple and easy!
I've put the SystemTap script in my git repository for any who are interested.
So instead of spinning a bespoke kernel with a few lines of debug in, I use SystemTap to quickly write a re-usable script. Simple and easy!
I've put the SystemTap script in my git repository for any who are interested.