Re: [PATCH] printk: Make CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_QUIET configurable
From: Steven Rostedt
Date: Wed Jun 20 2018 - 10:08:02 EST
On Wed, 20 Jun 2018 13:03:35 +0200
Petr Mladek <pmladek@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> I find it a bit confusing that "quiet" would mean something different
> on different systems.
I disagree. "quiet" to me is for people that really don't care to see
anything from the kernel except for real issues that they need to
report. The first thing that I do, and many other kernel developers I
know, when installing a new distro, is to remove the "quiet" from the
command line. Because *I* care about the output.
>
> Why did not you use loglevel=<whatever_you_need> instead of "quiet"?
>
> Alternative solution would be to add "silent" or so to calm down
> everything. But I am afraid that any change in this area would
> just create a mess similar to grep -s and -q options.
>
>
> Best Regards,
> Petr
>
> PS: I will not block it if Steven and Sergey are fine with this. But
> I want to be sure that they considered the above views. It looked like
> a no-brainer to me at the beginning. I even pushed this to printk.git.
> But the pushing gave me some more time to think about it...
I prefer this patch over adding yet another kernel command line command
that will just add to the confusion. I can imagine people saying
"what's the difference between 'quiet' and 'silent'?". I would.
I think having it as a config option is the perfect solution. I imagine
that as soon as Red Hat changes the meaning of "quiet" so will all the
other distros. The alternative is for the distros to add a patch to
make the change, which honestly is a worse solution.
I've only seen "quiet" added by distros and not by average developers.
I don't think adding this option will be confusing to anyone that
tinkers with kernel command lines anyway.
I'm for the patch.
Acked-by: Steven Rostedt (VMware) <rostedt@xxxxxxxxxxx>
-- Steve