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- Tainted kernels
- ---------------
- Some oops reports contain the string **'Tainted: '** after the program
- counter. This indicates that the kernel has been tainted by some
- mechanism. The string is followed by a series of position-sensitive
- characters, each representing a particular tainted value.
- 1) ``G`` if all modules loaded have a GPL or compatible license, ``P`` if
- any proprietary module has been loaded. Modules without a
- MODULE_LICENSE or with a MODULE_LICENSE that is not recognised by
- insmod as GPL compatible are assumed to be proprietary.
- 2) ``F`` if any module was force loaded by ``insmod -f``, ``' '`` if all
- modules were loaded normally.
- 3) ``S`` if the oops occurred on an SMP kernel running on hardware that
- hasn't been certified as safe to run multiprocessor.
- Currently this occurs only on various Athlons that are not
- SMP capable.
- 4) ``R`` if a module was force unloaded by ``rmmod -f``, ``' '`` if all
- modules were unloaded normally.
- 5) ``M`` if any processor has reported a Machine Check Exception,
- ``' '`` if no Machine Check Exceptions have occurred.
- 6) ``B`` if a page-release function has found a bad page reference or
- some unexpected page flags.
- 7) ``U`` if a user or user application specifically requested that the
- Tainted flag be set, ``' '`` otherwise.
- 8) ``D`` if the kernel has died recently, i.e. there was an OOPS or BUG.
- 9) ``A`` if the ACPI table has been overridden.
- 10) ``W`` if a warning has previously been issued by the kernel.
- (Though some warnings may set more specific taint flags.)
- 11) ``C`` if a staging driver has been loaded.
- 12) ``I`` if the kernel is working around a severe bug in the platform
- firmware (BIOS or similar).
- 13) ``O`` if an externally-built ("out-of-tree") module has been loaded.
- 14) ``E`` if an unsigned module has been loaded in a kernel supporting
- module signature.
- 15) ``L`` if a soft lockup has previously occurred on the system.
- 16) ``K`` if the kernel has been live patched.
- The primary reason for the **'Tainted: '** string is to tell kernel
- debuggers if this is a clean kernel or if anything unusual has
- occurred. Tainting is permanent: even if an offending module is
- unloaded, the tainted value remains to indicate that the kernel is not
- trustworthy.
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