Re: [Patch 2/2] tracepoints for softirq entry/exit - tracepoints

From: Mathieu Desnoyers
Date: Mon Mar 16 2009 - 15:23:31 EST


* Steven Rostedt (rostedt@xxxxxxxxxxx) wrote:
>
> On Mon, 16 Mar 2009, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote:
> > > >
> > > > The softirq tracepoints are a good idea indeed (I have similar ones in
> > > > the LTTng tree). My main concern is about the fact that you output the
> > > > softirq name in plain text to the trace buffers. I would rather prefer
> > > > to save only the softirq (h-vec) into the trace and dump the mapping
> > > > (h-vec) to name only once, so we can save precious trace bytes.
> > >
> > > The TP_FMT is only used by those tracers that want to use it. Any tracer
> > > can still hook directly to the trace point and do what every they want.
> > >
> > > -- Steve
> > >
> >
> > By doing so, you are removing the ability to use the TP_FMT information
> > to perform high-speed system-wide tracing. I thought the goal was to
> > create a unified buffering, but sadly I don't see the high-speed
> > requirements being part of that plan.
>
> TP_FMT has nothing to do with the unified buffering. The unified buffer
> does not even know about it. But if you want high-speed event tracing,
> that is what the TRACE_EVENT was created for.
>
> The TRACE_FORMAT was made for things that will be recording string
> information anyway, and recording a string into the buffer via memcpy or a
> sprintf format (binary printk) doesn't make much difference.
>

Are you saying that dynamically parsing a format string in a binary
printk has the same performance impact as a memcpy ? I would be very
interested to see your benchmarks.

Mathieu

> Then trace points for entry and exit does not fall into that category, and
> should be represented by a TRACE_EVENT instead.
>
> -- Steve
>

--
Mathieu Desnoyers
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