Re: [PATCH] hvc_console: returning 0 from put_chars is not an error

From: Christian Borntraeger
Date: Thu Oct 15 2009 - 07:07:21 EST


Am Mittwoch 14 Oktober 2009 23:53:46 schrieben Sie:
> hvc_console_print() calls the HVC client driver's put_chars() callback
> to write some characters to the console. If the callback returns 0, that
> indicates that no characters were written (perhaps the output buffer is
> full), but hvc_console_print() treats that as an error and discards the
> rest of the buffer.
>
> So change hvc_console_print() to just loop and call put_chars() again if it
> returns a 0 return code.
>
> This change makes hvc_console_print() behave more like hvc_push(), which
> does check for a 0 return code and re-schedules itself.

There is a difference between console and tty, if the console call does not
return, it might bring the full system to a stop. (if its the preferred console,
init will stop)

> This patch might fix drivers that return 0 to indicate that they're busy, such
> as arch/powerpc/platforms/pseries/hvconsole.c. It will break drivers that
> return 0 if their output buffer is full, but where those buffers cannot be
> emptied while the kernel is in a loop.

Yep. I think it really depends on the backend if looping will result in any
progress or not. My experience wth hvc_console is, that its quite hard to get
changes tested on all backends. (e.g. XEN, pseries, iseries, virtio_console,
s390_iucv...), so even if this change turns out to be correct, it should
probably sit in linux-next for a while. In additon I really dont oversee, what
backends wil break due to this patch.

The fact that struct console->write returns void indicates that the console
layer is not interested in errors. We have two policies we can implement:

1. drop console messages if case of congestion but keep the system going
2. dont drop messages and wait, even if the system might come to a complete stop

Looking at drivers/char/vt.c
/* console busy or not yet initialized */
if (!printable)
return;
if (!spin_trylock(&printing_lock))
return;
could mean that Linux consoles should not block.

Maybe its time to ask some of the elder magicians (CCing Alan Cox and linux-
kernel) about blocking and error handling in console code.


> --- a/drivers/char/hvc_console.c
> +++ b/drivers/char/hvc_console.c
> @@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ static void hvc_console_print(struct console *co, const
> char *b, }
> } else {
> r = cons_ops[index]->put_chars(vtermnos[index], c, i);
> - if (r <= 0) {
> + if (r < 0) {
> /* throw away chars on error */
> i = 0;
> } else if (r > 0) {
>
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