Re: [PATCH] tracing/irq: use softirq_to_name instead of __print_symbolic

From: Li Zefan
Date: Mon Jun 01 2009 - 21:29:53 EST


Steven Rostedt wrote:
> On Mon, 1 Jun 2009, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Jun 01, 2009 at 04:52:23PM +0800, Li Zefan wrote:
>>> It's great to boost recording of softirq events, but why not simply
>>> use softirq_to_name in TP_printk()?
>> Because userspace programs using the binary trace buffer have no chance to
>> retrieve the values from softirq_to_name.
>>

Do you mean, by parsing the format file?

# cat events/irq/softirq_entry/format
...
print fmt: "softirq=%d action=%s", REC->vec, ({ static const struct trace_print_flags
symbols[] = { { HI_SOFTIRQ, "HI_SOFTIRQ" }, { TIMER_SOFTIRQ, "TIMER_SOFTIRQ" },
{ NET_TX_SOFTIRQ, "NET_TX_SOFTIRQ" }, { NET_RX_SOFTIRQ, "NET_RX_SOFTIRQ" },
{ BLOCK_SOFTIRQ, "BLOCK_SOFTIRQ" }, { TASKLET_SOFTIRQ, "TASKLET_SOFTIRQ" },
{ SCHED_SOFTIRQ, "SCHED_SOFTIRQ" }, { HRTIMER_SOFTIRQ, "HRTIMER_SOFTIRQ" },
{ RCU_SOFTIRQ, "RCU_SOFTIRQ" }, { -1, ((void *)0) }};
ftrace_print_symbols_seq(p, REC->vec, symbols); })

>>> The above commit has 2 flaws:
>>>
>>> - we waste memory defining local static struct trace_print_flags array
>>> in each softirq TRACE_EVENT
>> That could be solved by declaring the array manually and just passing
>> the address to __print_symbolic. Steve, would that work? (also for
>> __print_flags)
>
> I added the code to make it an array, but we still need to allocate it for
> every trace call. Otherwise, how do we export the information to
> userspace. One trace event (currently) has no way of depending on another
> trace event. If two trace events want the same array, currently they both
> must allocate it. I haven't looked too deeply into seeing how to manage
> that. It's not that much memory duplicated. I hate to make the code even
> more complex just to save a couple of hundred of bytes.
>
>>> - if someone adds/removes a softirq, he may not know show_softirq_name()
>>> needs to be updated
>> Just make sure you have the translation defined next to the actual
>> flags. This is what I do in the XFS tracer:
>>
>> typedef enum xfs_alloctype
>> {
>> XFS_ALLOCTYPE_ANY_AG, /* allocate anywhere, use rotor */
>> XFS_ALLOCTYPE_FIRST_AG, /* ... start at ag 0 */
>> XFS_ALLOCTYPE_START_AG, /* anywhere, start in this a.g. */
>> XFS_ALLOCTYPE_THIS_AG, /* anywhere in this a.g. */
>> XFS_ALLOCTYPE_START_BNO, /* near this block else anywhere */
>> XFS_ALLOCTYPE_NEAR_BNO, /* in this a.g. and near this block */
>> XFS_ALLOCTYPE_THIS_BNO /* at exactly this block */
>> } xfs_alloctype_t;
>>
>> #define XFS_ALLOC_TYPES \
>> { XFS_ALLOCTYPE_ANY_AG, "ANY_AG" }, \
>> { XFS_ALLOCTYPE_FIRST_AG, "FIRST_AG" }, \
>> { XFS_ALLOCTYPE_START_AG, "START_AG" }, \
>> { XFS_ALLOCTYPE_THIS_AG, "THIS_AG" }, \
>> { XFS_ALLOCTYPE_START_BNO, "START_BNO" }, \
>> { XFS_ALLOCTYPE_NEAR_BNO, "NEAR_BNO" }, \
>> { XFS_ALLOCTYPE_THIS_BNO, "THIS_BNO" }
>>
>>> Another issue with the above commit, that the output of softirq events
>>> becomes:
>>>
>>> X-1701 [000] 1595.220739: softirq_entry: softirq=1 action=TIMER_SOFTIRQ
>>>
>>> Compared to the original output:
>>>
>>> X-1701 [000] 1595.220739: softirq_entry: softirq=1 action=TIMER
>> Which is trivially fixable, see above :)
>
> Hmm, I thought I fixed that already. Perhaps it is in the code that Ingo
> has not pulled.
>

I guess you forgot to fix it. ;)

I made a comment on that patch, but seems you didn't update the patch:
http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/5/21/9

I'll make a patch for this.
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