Re: [PATCH 04/10][RFC] tracing: Remove per event trace registering
From: Mathieu Desnoyers
Date: Fri Apr 30 2010 - 12:52:03 EST
* Steven Rostedt (rostedt@xxxxxxxxxxx) wrote:
> On Thu, 2010-04-29 at 09:36 -0400, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote:
>
> > > Instead of calling register_trace_##name that is created for each
> > > tracepoint, we now call the tracepoint_probe_register() directly in the
> > > C file with the generated probe.
> > >
> > > Both the probe and the tracepoint are created from the same data. I'm
> > > not seeing where you want to add this check.
> >
> > So if they are created from the same data, we can expect this test to
> > always pass, which is good (and expected).
> >
> > I'd add this extra check before casting the callback to (void *) before
> > it is passed to tracepoint_probe_register(). Let's just call this
> > internal preprocessing macro integrity check. As long as it does not add
> > a runtime cost, there is no reason not to put this extra check.
>
> The problem is, the cast is now performed in a C file for all events.
> There's no way to know what to cast it to there. This is out of the
> automation of the macro.
>
> We use to have the cast check by creating code that would create the
> "register_trace_##call", and the typecheck was doing by passing the data
> to this function. But we removed this code out of the per event, it was
> adding lots of text footprint, and moved it to one single function that
> handles all events. It is just expected that the callback created
> matches the function it was done.
>
> If you are overly paranoid, we could create a special function that
> tests that the callback format that is created matches the tracepoint
> that is created, and make it so GCC sees that nothing calls it and
> removes it at final link. But I still see this as a waste.
>
>
> The tracepoint is created in include/linux/tracepoint.h:
>
> #define TRACE_EVENT(name, proto, args, struct, assign, print) \
> DECLARE_TRACE(name, PARAMS(proto), PARAMS(args))
Can we add something like this to DECLARE_TRACE ? (not convinced it is
valid though)
static inline void check_trace_##name(cb_type)
{
BUILD_BUG_ON(!__same_type(void (*probe)(TP_PROTO(proto), void *data),
cb_type));
}
>
> The callback is created in include/trace/ftrace.h:
>
> #undef TRACE_EVENT
> #define TRACE_EVENT(name, proto, args, tstuct, assign, print) \
> DECLARE_EVENT_CLASS(name, \
> PARAMS(proto), \
> PARAMS(args), \
> PARAMS(tstruct), \
> PARAMS(assign), \
> PARAMS(print)); \
> DEFINE_EVENT(name, name, PARAMS(proto), PARAMS(args));
>
> #undef DECLARE_EVENT_CLASS
> #define DECLARE_EVENT_CLASS(call, proto, args, tstruct, assign, print) \
> \
> static notrace void \
> ftrace_raw_event_##call(proto, \
> struct ftrace_event_call *event_call) \
> [...]
>
Either within this callback, or in a dummy static function after, we
could add:
check_trace_##call(ftrace_raw_event_##call);
So.. you are the preprocessor expert, do you think this could fly ? ;)
Thanks,
Mathieu
>
> Thus the "proto" field of the TRACE_EVENT() is used to make both the
> tracepoint and the callback. We add the struct ftrace_event_call
> *event_call which is the data we pass to the callback.
>
> Now, where this gets called is in kernel/trace/trace_events.c:
>
> tracepoint_probe_register(call->name,
> call->class->probe,
> call);
>
> This is where we lose the typecheck. So my question is... where do you
> want to put in a check?
>
> -- Steve
>
>
>
>
--
Mathieu Desnoyers
Operating System Efficiency R&D Consultant
EfficiOS Inc.
http://www.efficios.com
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