Re: [PATCH 0/2 v2] Syscalls tracing

From: Mathieu Desnoyers
Date: Mon Mar 23 2009 - 16:38:20 EST


* Ingo Molnar (mingo@xxxxxxx) wrote:
>
> * Frederic Weisbecker <fweisbec@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > And actually I don't think two copy_from_user will really change a
> > lot the tracing throughput.
>
> Correct. It's already in the CPU cache so it is a performance
> non-issue and essentially for free. Copy avoidance is only an issue
> when touchig cache-cold data.
>
> ( Yes, a few cycles could be shaven off but the beauty of
> all-encompassing non-source-code-invasive syscall tracing covering
> hundreds of syscalls straight away trumps those concerns. )
>

I agree. I just wanted to make sure we agreed on the tradeoff here. I
also think hitting data already in cache-lines a second time with
copy_from_user should not be a big concern.

> > The idea would be now to join the syscalls metadata with such
> > quick handlers. We will have to think about how to join these in a
> > proper way.
>
> We could allow per syscall tracepoints via the attribute table. The
> call signature could be a standard:
>
> long sys_call(unsinged long arg1, unsigned long arg2,
> unsigned long arg3, unsigned long arg4,
> unsigned long arg5, unsigned long arg6);
>
> This would allow interested plugins/tools to install a system call
> specific callback. (we might allow two tracepoints - one before and
> one after the syscall)
>
> The registration API could be driven by the name or by the syscall
> index - NR_sys_open or so.

Hrm, given the syscalls are defined with their number of arguments
with the SYSCALL_DEFINE* macros, then we could create, in syscalls.h
(example from open.c) :

SYSCALL_DECLARE2(statfs, const char __user *, pathname, struct statfs __user *, buf))

SYSCALL_DECLARE3(statfs64, const char __user *, pathname, size_t, sz, struct statfs64 __user *, buf)

creating SYSCALL_DECLARE0 to 6, which would map to a tracepoint
declaration _and_ a syscall prototype, e.g.

#define __SC_ARGS1(t1, a1) a1
#define __SC_ARGS2(t2, a2, ...) a2, __SC_ARGS1(__VA_ARGS__)
#define __SC_ARGS3(t3, a3, ...) a3, __SC_ARGS2(__VA_ARGS__)
#define __SC_ARGS4(t4, a4, ...) a4, __SC_ARGS3(__VA_ARGS__)
#define __SC_ARGS5(t5, a5, ...) a5, __SC_ARGS4(__VA_ARGS__)
#define __SC_ARGS6(t6, a6, ...) a6, __SC_ARGS5(__VA_ARGS__)

#define SYSCALL_DECLARE2(name, ...) SYSCALL_DECLAREx(2, _##name, __VA_ARGS__)

#define SYSCALL_DECLAREx(x, name, ...) \
long sys##name(__SC_DECL##x(__VA_ARGS__)); \
DECLARE_TRACE(sys_##name, \
TP_PROTO(__SC_DECL##x(__VA_ARGS__)), \
TP_ARGS(__SC_ARGS##x(__VA_ARGS__)))

Those could be declared in a system-wide header (syscalls.h ?) which
would be included by each files using SYSCALL_DEFINE*. Those
declarations would declare the tracepoints and therefore make sure we
spot any SYSCALL_DEFINE* change at compile-time, and we could create a
tracing module which would contain the callbacks that would register on
those syscall tracepoint declarations. This would all be type-safe,
which is a very nice thing to have, even if we don't expect the system
calls to change often at all.

Mathieu

>
> Ingo

--
Mathieu Desnoyers
OpenPGP key fingerprint: 8CD5 52C3 8E3C 4140 715F BA06 3F25 A8FE 3BAE 9A68
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