Hi, On Mon, Mar 22, 2021 at 9:43 AM Arnd Bergmann <a...@kernel.org> wrote: > > -#define v1printk(a...) do { \ > - if (verbose) \ > - printk(KERN_INFO a); \ > - } while (0) > -#define v2printk(a...) do { \ > - if (verbose > 1) \ > - printk(KERN_INFO a); \ > - touch_nmi_watchdog(); \ > - } while (0) > -#define eprintk(a...) do { \ > - printk(KERN_ERR a); \ > - WARN_ON(1); \ > - } while (0) > +#define v1printk(a...) do { \
nit: In addition to the indentation change you're also lining up the backslashes. Is that just personal preference, or is there some official recommendation in the kernel? I don't really have a strong opinion either way (IMO each style has its advantages). > + if (verbose) \ > + printk(KERN_INFO a); \ > +} while (0) > +#define v2printk(a...) do { \ > + if (verbose > 1) \ > + printk(KERN_INFO a); \ > + touch_nmi_watchdog(); \ This touch_nmi_watchdog() is pretty wonky. I guess maybe the assumption is that the "verbose level 2" prints are so chatty that the printing might prevent us from touching the NMI watchdog in the way that we normally do and thus we need an extra one here? ...but, in that case, I think the old code was _wrong_ and that the intention was that the touch_nmi_watchdog() should only be if "verose > 1" as the indentation implied. There doesn't feel like a reason to touch the watchdog if we're not doing anything slow. -Doug