Re: [PATCH] x86: numa: setup_node_data(): drop dead code and rename function

From: Luiz Capitulino
Date: Wed Jul 02 2014 - 23:43:00 EST


On Wed, 2 Jul 2014 16:20:47 -0700 (PDT)
David Rientjes <rientjes@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Wed, 2 Jul 2014, Luiz Capitulino wrote:
>
> > > With this patch, the dmesg changes break one of my scripts that we use to
> > > determine the start and end address of a node (doubly bad because there's
> > > no sysfs interface to determine this otherwise and we have to do this at
> > > boot to acquire the system topology).
> > >
> > > Specifically, the removal of the
> > >
> > > "Initmem setup node X [mem 0xstart-0xend]"
> > >
> > > lines that are replaced when each node is onlined to
> > >
> > > "Node 0 memory range 0xstart-0xend"
> > >
> > > And if I just noticed this breakage when booting the latest -mm kernel,
> > > I'm assuming I'm not the only person who is going to run into it. Is it
> > > possible to not change the dmesg output?
> >
> > Sure. I can add back the original text. The only detail is that with this
> > patch that line is now printed a little bit later during boot and the
> > NODA_DATA lines also changed. Are you OK with that?
> >
>
> Yes, please. I think it should be incremental on your patch since it's
> already in -mm with " fix" appended so the title of the patch would be
> "x86: numa: setup_node_data(): drop dead code and rename function fix" and
> then Andrew can fold it into the original when sending it to the x86
> maintainers.
>
> > What's the guidelines on changing what's printed in dmesg?
> >
>
> That's the scary part, there doesn't seem to be any. It's especially
> crucial for things that only get printed once and aren't available
> anywhere else at runtime; there was talk of adding a sysfs interface that
> defines the start and end addresses of nodes but it's complicated because
> nodes can overlap each other. If that had been available years ago then I
> don't think anybody would raise their hand about this issue.
>
> These lines went under a smaller change a few years ago for
> s/Bootmem/Initmem/. I don't even have to look at the git history to know
> that because it broke our scripts back then as well. You just happened to
> touch lines that I really care about and breaks my topology information :)
> I wouldn't complain if it was just my userspace, but I have no doubt
> others have parsed their dmesg in a similar way because people have
> provided me with data that they retrieved by scraping the kernel log.

No problem. I'll send a patch shortly as you suggested.
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