On (09/05/17 10:54), Steven Rostedt wrote: > On Mon, 4 Sep 2017 14:22:46 +0900 > Sergey Senozhatsky <sergey.senozhatsky.w...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > like I said in another email, printk-safe buffer > > is per-CPU and is also used for actual printk-safe, hence it must be > > used with local IRQs disabled when we "borrow" the buffer for pr_line > > (disabled preemption is not enough due to possible IRQ printk-safe > > print out). this can be a bit annoying. > > You can do what I did with trace_printk(). I have a buffer per context. > Then you only need to use preempt_disable() to do the print. That is, > trace_printk() has 4 buffers: > > 1. Normal context > 2. softirq context > 3. irq context > 4. NMI context
thanks. looks interesting. > It determines which context it is in, disables preemption, and uses the > corresponding buffer. This way I don't need to worry about being > preempted by an interrupt or NMI. > > Grant it, it does make the memory needed 4x bigger. yep. that's a concern. buffered printk must come with a sound number of users in this case. otherwise people will just see a massive bump (x2) in memory usage for no particular reason. > I have an array of 4 buffers, and the following code: > > static char *get_trace_buf(void) > { > struct trace_buffer_struct *buffer = this_cpu_ptr(trace_percpu_buffer); > > if (!buffer || buffer->nesting >= 4) > return NULL; > > return &buffer->buffer[buffer->nesting++][0]; > } > > Hmm, I probably need to add a "barrier()" before the return, or use a > this_cpu_inc() on nesting. As long as the nesting variable is updated > before the return of the buffer being used, then everything is fine. > Because we have: > > static void put_trace_buf(void) > { > this_cpu_dec(trace_percpu_buffer->nesting); > } > > And anything that preempts this call will have returned it back to its > original state before returning. there is a tiny-tiny-tiny chance of losing some very specific messages from the top most context. consider the following trace_printk("fat fingers %o\n", 100); from the NMI (nesting 3) context. vscnprintf() must WARN_ONCE(1, "Unsupported flags modifier: %c\n", fmt[1]); which will be lost - we are above the nesting limit buffer->nesting >= 4. // vscnprintf()->... has several more recursion entry points. -ss