Re: How the kernel printk works before do console_setup.

From: Michael Ellerman
Date: Thu Jun 25 2009 - 02:37:37 EST


On Thu, 2009-06-25 at 14:27 +0800, Johnny Hung wrote:
> 2009/6/25 Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
> >
> >> Before the console is set up, the printk data is formatted
> >> and put into the kernel log buffer, but not sent to any console.
> >> Any messages printk'ed before that are buffered but do not
> >> appear. When the console is initialized, then all buffered
> >> messages are sent to the console, and subsequent printks cause
> >> the message to go to the log buffer, but then immediately
> >> get sent from there to the console.
> >>
> >> Under certain conditions you can examine the log buffer of
> >> a kernel that failed to initialize it's console, after a
> >> warm reset of the machine, using the firmware memory dump
> >> command.
> >
> > On ppc, we have tricks to display things earlier :-)
> >
> > We can initialize the serial ports way before console_setup() (and we do
> > in most cases) and we use what we call the "udbg" console until the real
> > one takes over. The "udbg" console is a very small layer which outputs
> > via a provided "putc" routine. Platforms can provide their own here, we
> > have a collection of standard ones for legacy UARTs (it should be
> > automatically setup in that case by the code in legacy_serial), Apple
> > ESCCs, etc... We even have compile time options that allow that stuff to
> > be initialized before start_kernel...
>
> Thank you. This is what I described and want to understand. The
> arch/powerpc/kernel/legacy_serial.c
> do find_legacy_serial_ports then take a default serial port by using
> open firmware device tree
> information. The find_legacy_serial_ports() called form setup_arch but
> I don't know who call
> setup_arch (setup_32.c)function. Can you give me a hint ? Thanks in advanced.

setup_arch() is called from start_kernel() in init/main.c

cheers

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