Re: [PATCH 3/6] dax: add tracepoint infrastructure, PMD tracing
From: Dave Chinner
Date: Thu Nov 24 2016 - 22:01:20 EST
On Wed, Nov 23, 2016 at 11:44:19AM -0700, Ross Zwisler wrote:
> Tracepoints are the standard way to capture debugging and tracing
> information in many parts of the kernel, including the XFS and ext4
> filesystems. Create a tracepoint header for FS DAX and add the first DAX
> tracepoints to the PMD fault handler. This allows the tracing for DAX to
> be done in the same way as the filesystem tracing so that developers can
> look at them together and get a coherent idea of what the system is doing.
>
> I added both an entry and exit tracepoint because future patches will add
> tracepoints to child functions of dax_iomap_pmd_fault() like
> dax_pmd_load_hole() and dax_pmd_insert_mapping(). We want those messages to
> be wrapped by the parent function tracepoints so the code flow is more
> easily understood. Having entry and exit tracepoints for faults also
> allows us to easily see what filesystems functions were called during the
> fault. These filesystem functions get executed via iomap_begin() and
> iomap_end() calls, for example, and will have their own tracepoints.
>
> For PMD faults we primarily want to understand the faulting address and
> whether it fell back to 4k faults. If it fell back to 4k faults the
> tracepoints should let us understand why.
>
> I named the new tracepoint header file "fs_dax.h" to allow for device DAX
> to have its own separate tracing header in the same directory at some
> point.
>
> Here is an example output for these events from a successful PMD fault:
>
> big-2057 [000] .... 136.396855: dax_pmd_fault: shared mapping write
> address 0x10505000 vm_start 0x10200000 vm_end 0x10700000 pgoff 0x200
> max_pgoff 0x1400
>
> big-2057 [000] .... 136.397943: dax_pmd_fault_done: shared mapping write
> address 0x10505000 vm_start 0x10200000 vm_end 0x10700000 pgoff 0x200
> max_pgoff 0x1400 NOPAGE
Can we make the output use the same format as most of the filesystem
code? i.e. the output starts with backing device + inode number like
so:
xfs_ilock: dev 8:96 ino 0x493 flags ILOCK_EXCL....
This way we can filter the output easily across both dax and
filesystem tracepoints with 'grep "ino 0x493"'...
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx