Re: [ANNOUNCE] New utility: 'trace'

From: Steven Rostedt
Date: Wed Nov 17 2010 - 14:25:18 EST


On Wed, 2010-11-17 at 13:36 -0500, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote:
> * Tom Zanussi (tzanussi@xxxxxxxxx) wrote:
> [...]
> > IIRC, I think the conclusion we came to was that it could be done
> > mechanically if for example the right-hand-side of an assignment in
> > TP_fast_assign() only involved a simple variable assignment, but as
> > Steve pointed out, some assignments are more complicated than that.
>
> Yep, we came up to the same conclusions in UST.
>
> > For example, in the sched_switch tracepoint assignments:
> >
> > __entry->prev_prio = prev->prio;
> > __entry->prev_state = __trace_sched_switch_state(prev);
> >
> > so the prev_prio should be able to be tested 'in-line' but the
> > prev_state would require a temporary buffer to write the value into
> > before doing the test as mentioned by Steve. At which point you're no
> > further ahead (in that case) than the current situation...
>
> if we change all assignments to, e.g.:
>
> _tp_assign(__entry->prev_prio, prev->prio)
> _tp_assign(__entry->prev_state, __trace_sched_switch_state(prev))

I would just call it __assign().


>
> then we can redefine the macros for filtering much more easily than with the
> " = " assignment operator.
>
> About your comment above, what is the problem with evaluating
> "__trace_sched_switch_state(prev)" twice ? It will typically be cache-hot after
> the first evaluation, so I wonder if, in practice, we really save a significant
> amount of cycles by saving its result between filtering and writing into trace
> buffers. As I pointed out earlier, for my customers, having a very, very fast
> filter "out" case is more important that trying to squeeze a few cycles out of
> the filter passed case.
>
> Also, how many of these "__trace_sched_switch_state(prev)" are static inlines vs
> actual function calls ? If it's mostly static inlines to dereference a few
> pointers, doing it the second time when the filter passed won't hurt much.

Yes, something like this could work. It would require a bit more CPP
magic to handle it though.

I could write something up to do this. I just have to add it to the 100
other things I'm doing at the same time :-p

-- Steve


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