On 8/22/2024 6:18 PM, Bruce Richardson wrote: > On Thu, Aug 22, 2024 at 06:14:55PM +0100, Bruce Richardson wrote: >> On Thu, Aug 22, 2024 at 05:53:27PM +0100, Ferruh Yigit wrote: >>> On 8/22/2024 11:41 AM, Bruce Richardson wrote: >>>> Testpmd supports the "--cmdline-file" parameter to read a set of initial >>>> commands from a file. However, the only indication that this has been >>>> done successfully on startup is a single-line message, no output from >>>> the commands is seen. >>>> >>> >>> For user I think it makes sense to see the command [1], only concern is >>> if someone parsing testpmd output may be impacted on this, although I >>> expect it should be trivial to update the relevant parsing. >>> >>> [1] >>> Btw, I can still see the command output, I assume because command does >>> the printf itself, for example for 'show port summary 0' command: >>> - before patch: >>> ... >>> Number of available ports: 2 >>> Port MAC Address Name Driver Status Link >>> 0 xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx xxxx:xx:xx.x aaaaaaaa up xxx Gbps >>> ... >>> >>> - after patch >>> ... >>> testpmd> show port summary 0 >>> Number of available ports: 2 >>> Port MAC Address Name Driver Status Link >>> 0 xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx xxxx:xx:xx.x aaaaaaaa up xxx Gbps >>> ... >>> >>> Only difference above is, after patch the command itself also printed. >>> >>> >> >> That's because the function uses printf itself, which is actually wrong. >> Any output from a cmdline function should use the "cmdline_printf" call >> which outputs to the proper cmdline filehandle. >>
Got it. But in existing testpmd code, only a handful cmdline functions use the 'cmdline_printf' and most of them are in the same help function. At this stage I think no need to update them. There is already some confusion on testpmd logging between printf & TESTPMD_LOG(). >>>> To improve usability here, we can use cmdline_new rather than >>>> cmdline_file_new and have the output from the various commands sent to >>>> stdout, allowing the user to see better what is happening. >>>> >>>> Signed-off-by: Bruce Richardson <bruce.richard...@intel.com> >>>> >>>> --- >>>> v2: use STDOUT_FILENO in place of hard-coded "1" >>>> --- >>>> app/test-pmd/cmdline.c | 14 +++++++++++++- >>>> 1 file changed, 13 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) >>>> >>>> diff --git a/app/test-pmd/cmdline.c b/app/test-pmd/cmdline.c >>>> index b7759e38a8..52e64430d9 100644 >>>> --- a/app/test-pmd/cmdline.c >>>> +++ b/app/test-pmd/cmdline.c >>>> @@ -6,6 +6,7 @@ >>>> #include <ctype.h> >>>> #include <stdarg.h> >>>> #include <errno.h> >>>> +#include <fcntl.h> >>>> #include <stdio.h> >>>> #include <stdint.h> >>>> #include <stdlib.h> >>>> @@ -13431,7 +13432,18 @@ cmdline_read_from_file(const char *filename) >>>> { >>>> struct cmdline *cl; >>>> >>>> - cl = cmdline_file_new(main_ctx, "testpmd> ", filename); >>>> + /* cmdline_file_new does not produce any output which is not ideal here. >>>> + * Much better to show output of the commands, so we open filename >>>> directly >>>> + * and then pass that to cmdline_new with stdout as the output path. >>>> + */ >>>> + int fd = open(filename, O_RDONLY); >>>> + if (fd < 0) { >>>> + fprintf(stderr, "Failed to open file %s: %s\n", >>>> + filename, strerror(errno)); >>>> + return; >>>> + } >>>> + >>>> + cl = cmdline_new(main_ctx, "testpmd> ", fd, STDOUT_FILENO); >>>> >>> >>> Above is almost save as 'cmdline_file_new()' function with only >>> difference that it uses '-1' for 's_out'. >>> >>> If this usecase may be required by others, do you think does it have a >>> value to pass 's_out' to 'cmdline_file_new()' or have a new version of >>> API that accepts 's_out' as parameter? >>> >> >> Yes, I thought about this, and actually started implementing a new API for >> cmdline library to that. However, I decided that, given the complexity >> here, that it's not really necessary - especially as there is no clear way >> to do things. The options are: >> >> * extend cmdline_file_new to have a flag to echo to stdout (which would be >> the very common case here). >> * extend cmdline_file_new to take a file handle - this is more flexible, >> but slightly less usable. >> * add a new cmdline_file_<something>_new function to echo to stdout. >> * add a new cmdline_file_<something>_new function to write to a filehandle. >> >> I don't like breaking the cmdline API (and ABI), so I didn't want to do >> either #1 or #2, which would be the cleanest solutions. For #3 and #4, >> naming is hard, and deciding between them is even harder. Given the choice, >> I prefer #3, as I can't see #4 being very common and we always have >> cmdline_new as a fallback anyway. >> >> Overall, though, I threw away that work, because it didn't seem worth it, >> for the sake of having the user to do an extra "open" call. >> > I vote to option #1, but agree that it may not worth breaking API and ABI. Is 'cmdline_file_new_v2()' too bad a name, perhaps better to go with testpmd implementation, as you did in this patch. > And also to add: > If there is clear consensus on what the correct option for this case is, > I'm happy enough to go back and extend the cmdline library as agreed. > :-)