Re: printk: Add process name information to printk() output.
From: John Ogness
Date: Fri Sep 04 2020 - 19:27:19 EST
On 2020-09-04, Petr Mladek <pmladek@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> I am currently playing with support for all three timestamps based
>>> on https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20200814101933.574326079@xxxxxxxxxxxxx/
>>>
>>> And I got the following idea:
>>>
>>> 1. Storing side:
>>>
>>> Create one more ring/array for storing the optional metadata.
>>> It might eventually replace dict ring, see below.
>>>
>>> struct struct printk_ext_info {
>>> u64 ts_boot; /* timestamp from boot clock */
>>> u64 ts_real; /* timestamp from real clock */
>>> char process[TASK_COMM_LEN]; /* process name */
>>> };
>>>
>>> It must be in a separate array so that struct prb_desc stay stable
>>> and crashdump tools do not need to be updated so often.
>>>
>>> But the number of these structures must be the same as descriptors.
>>> So it might be:
>>>
>>> struct prb_desc_ring {
>>> unsigned int count_bits;
>>> struct prb_desc *descs;
>>> struct printk_ext_info *ext_info
>>> atomic_long_t head_id;
>>> atomic_long_t tail_id;
>>> };
>>>
>>> One huge advantage is that these extra information would not block
>>> pushing lockless printk buffer upstream.
>>>
>>> It might be even possible to get rid of dict ring and just
>>> add two more elements into struct printk_ext_info:
>>>
>>> char subsystem[16]; /* for SUBSYSTEM= dict value */
>>> char device[48]; /* for DEVICE= dict value */
>
> From my POV, if we support 3 timestamps then they must be stored
> reliably. And dict ring is out of the game.
Agreed. I am just trying to think of how to better manage the strings,
which currently are rare and optional. That is where the dict_ring
becomes interesting.
Perhaps we should use both the fixed structs with the variable
dict_ring. printk_ext_info could look like this:
struct struct printk_ext_info {
u64 ts_boot;
u64 ts_real;
char *process;
char *subsystem;
char *device;
};
And @process, @subsystem, @device could all point to null-terminated
trings within the dict_ring. So printk.c code looks something like this:
size_t process_sz = strlen(process) + 1;
size_t subsystem_sz = strlen(subsystem) + 1;
size_t device_sz = strlen(device) + 1;
struct prb_reserved_entry e;
struct printk_record r;
char *p;
prb_rec_init_wr(&r, text_len, process_sz + subsystem_sz + device_sz);
prb_reserve(&e, prb, &r);
memcpy(r.text_buf, text, text_len);
r.info->text_len = text_len;
/* guaranteed ext data */
r.ext_info->ts_boot = time_boot();
r.ext_info->ts_real = time_real();
/* optional ext data */
if (r.dict_buf) {
p = r.dict_buf;
memcpy(p, process, process_sz);
r.ext_info->process = p;
p += process_sz;
memcpy(p, subsystem, subsystem_sz);
r.ext_info->subsystem = p;
p += subsystem_sz;
memcpy(p, device, device_sz);
r.ext_info->device = p;
r.info->dict_len = process_sz + subsystem_sz + device_sz;
}
> And I am not comfortable even with the current dictionary handling.
> I already wrote this somewhere. The following command is supposed
> to show all kernel messages printed by "pci" subsystem:
>
> $> journalctl _KERNEL_SUBSYSTEM=pci
>
> It will be incomplete when the dictionary metadata were not saved.
In that case, perhaps @subsystem should be a static array in
printk_ext_info instead.
> Regarding the waste of space. The dict ring currently has the same
> size as the text ring. It is likely a waste of space as well. Any
> tuning is complicated because it depends on the use case.
The whole point of the dict_ring is that it allows for variable length
_optional_ data to be stored. If we decide there is no optional data,
then dict_ring is not needed.
> The advantage of the fixed @ext_info[] array is that everything is
> clear, simple, and predictable (taken space and name length limits).
> We could easily tell users what they will get for a given cost.
Agreed. For non-optional data (such as your timestamps), I am in full
agreement that a fixed array is the way to go. And it would only require
a couple lines of code added to the ringbuffer.
My concern is if we need to guarantee space for all possible dictionary
data of all records. I think the dict_ring can be very helpful here.
John Ogness