Re: [PATCH] lib/vsprintf: add %pT[C012] format specifier

From: Andrew Morton
Date: Fri Dec 27 2013 - 18:02:41 EST


On Wed, 25 Dec 2013 21:37:33 +0900 Tetsuo Handa <penguin-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Some examples for converting direct ->comm users are shown below.
>
> pr_info("comm=%s\n", p->comm); => pr_info("comm=%pTC\n", p);
> pr_info("%s[%u]\n", p->comm, p->pid); => pr_info("%pT0\n", p);
> pr_info("%s[%u]\n", p->comm, task_pid_nr(p)); => pr_info("%pT0\n", p);
> pr_info("%s/%u\n", p->comm, p->pid); => pr_info("%pT1\n", p);
> pr_info("%s,%u\n", p->comm, p->pid); => pr_info("%pT2\n", p);

Places where one task accesses a different tasks's ->comm are rare, and
those places damn well better have a lot of locking in place -
otherwise they are racy against much more serious things than prctl().

The vast majority of ->comm accesses are accessing current->comm, for
debug reasons. I'm counting 350-odd sites. At all these sites it's
pointless passing `current' to the printk function at all!

I wonder if there's some way in which we can invent a vsprintf token
which means "insert corrent->comm here" and which doesn't require that
the caller pass in the additional argument?



That being said.....

current->comm isn't a terribly good way of identifying a task - it's
unaware of namespaces, is non-unique, userspace can overwrite ->comm[]
to anything it wants and evil users can probably write silly stuff into
->comm[] to confuse sysadmin tools.

So perhaps the world would be a better place if we were to invent a
standard kernel-wide way of identifying a process within a debug
printk. Presumably it would include ->comm and the pid, but other
things can be added later if needed.

So a usage site would look like:

pr_warn("%s: hair on fire\n", this_task_id());

but we need storage so it's really

char b[THIS_TASK_ID_SIZE];

pr_warn("%s: hair on fire\n", this_task_id(b));

which is painful, so we also provide the new vsprintf token as a
convenience:

pr_warn("%|: hair on fire\n");

but I don't know what we can use in place of %|.



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