Re: [PATCH] x86/efi-bgrt: Switch all pr_err() to pr_debug() for invalid BGRT

From: Josh Triplett
Date: Sat Apr 30 2016 - 19:14:03 EST


On Sat, Apr 30, 2016 at 11:35:14PM +0100, Matt Fleming wrote:
> (Adding Colin and Ricardo)
>
> On Wed, 27 Apr, at 01:23:55PM, Josh Boyer wrote:
> >
> > How is an end user supposed to see such a message and report it to the
> > people that can fix it? They can't. So they report it in their
> > distributions bug tracker and it either gets closed as "yeah, firmware
> > sucks" or it sits there and rots in the hope that some day someone
> > will do something.
> >
> > I understand where you're coming from in a pre-production, development
> > environment but to be quite clear that is not the default environment
> > Linux is run in most of the time. If this were a kernel warning, that
> > could be fixed with a kernel patch, then maybe it would be worth it.
> > It isn't though.
>
> If the error messages in the BGRT driver make it impossible for end
> users to achieve a pretty boot experience then I agree, that is a
> kernel bug. BGRT is an exception to the usual rule about complaining
> loudly when we encounter firmware bugs simply because we're dealing
> with UIs in this case.

Fine. What's the highest priority message that will *not* cause splash
screens to go into text mode? With the default boot argument of
"quiet", pr_notice or pr_info should still remain hidden, right? So,
could we make these pr_notice, rather than pr_debug? That way they'll
at least show up in logs, even though they don't show up on the console.

> That's not to say we should give up reporting these kinds of invalid
> table issues to firmware developers altogether. There are other means
> of doing it, and comprising the wants of many end users for the
> benefit of few firmware developers (relatively) is just not sensible.
>
> Colin, Ricardo, I haven't checked recently, are there ACPI BGRT
> validations tests in FWTS and LUV? Josh (Triplett), BITS would seem
> like a very good place to include these tests since it already has a
> bunch of ACPI table checks.

BITS doesn't, but should; I've added it to the TODO list.

- Josh Triplett