Re: [PATCH v10 1/2] printk: Make printk() completely async

From: Petr Mladek
Date: Thu Aug 18 2016 - 05:33:45 EST


On Thu 2016-08-18 11:27:12, Sergey Senozhatsky wrote:
> Hello,
>
> really sorry for very long reply.
>
> On (08/12/16 11:44), Petr Mladek wrote:
> [..]
> > IMHO, this is fine. We force the synchronous mode in critical
> > situations anyway.
>
> yes, I think it makes sense to lower the priority (we also have
> briefly discussed this in private emails with Viresh). I'd still
> prefer to have forced sync-printk on suspend/hibernate/etc., though.

Sounds fine to me.

> > But I was curious if we could hit a printk from the wake_up_process().
> > The change above causes using the fair scheduler and there is
> > the following call chain [*]
> >
> > I see few possible solutions:
> >
> > 1. Replace the WARN_ONs by printk_deferred().
> >
> > This is the usual solution but it would make debugging less convenient.
>
> what I did internally was a combination of #1 and #3: I introduced a
> dump_stack_deferred() function which is basically (almost) a copy-past
> of dump_stack() from lib/dump_stack.c with the difference that it calls
> printk_deferred(). and added a WARN_ON_DEFERRED() macro.
>
>
> > 2. Force synchronous printk inside WARN()/BUG() macros.
>
> will it help? semaphore up() calls wake_up_process() regardless the context.
> not to mention that we still may have spin_dump() enabled.

Good point. That changes my preferences :-)

>
> > 3. Force printk_deferred() inside WARN()/BUG() macros via the per-CPU
> > printk_func.
> >
> > It might be elegant. But we do not want this outside the scheduler
> > code. Therefore we would need special variants of WARN_*_SCHED()
> > BUG_*_SCHED() macros.

Also we need to make sure that everything will be done on a single CPU
as the printk_func is per-CPU variable.

> > I personally prefer the 2nd solution. What do you think about it,
> > please?
>
> I personally think a combo of #1 and #3 is a bit better than plain #2.

I would need to see the code how it looks and if is really works.
But yes, it seems that this is the way to go.

Best Regards,
Petr