Re: [RFC][PATCHv4 4/6] printk: report lost messages in printk safe/nmi contexts

From: Petr Mladek
Date: Thu Dec 01 2016 - 07:50:21 EST


On Thu 2016-12-01 11:10:42, Sergey Senozhatsky wrote:
> On (11/25/16 12:07), Petr Mladek wrote:
> [..]
> > > +static void report_message_lost(atomic_t *num_lost, char *fmt)
> > > +{
> > > + int lost = atomic_xchg(num_lost, 0);
> > > +
> > > + if (lost) {
> > > + char msg[56];
>
> > I would really like to avoid a hard coded buffer size. Such things
> > are likely to bite us in the future.
>
> why would scnprintf() overflow.

Sure, it will not overflow. But still, such a small hard coded buffer
size looks too hacky to me.


> > I thought about reshuffling a lot of logic, adding more wrappers,
> > ... But the solution might be easy in the end, see below.
> >
> > > +
> > > + scnprintf(msg, sizeof(msg), fmt, lost);
> > > +
> > > + printk_safe_flush_line(msg, strlen(msg));
> >
> > This made my brain spin a lot. I wondered if it did what we wanted
> > and it was safe.
> >
> > On one hand, it is supposed to work because use exactly this
> > function in __printk_safe_flush() where you call this from.
> >
> > One question is if it does what we want in different contexts.
> > Let's look at it:
> >
> > 1. It calls printk_deferred() in NMI context. There is a risk
> > of a deadlock. But it is called only from
> > printk_safe_flush_on_panic() which is the last resort. Therefore
> > it does exactly what we want.
> >
> > 2. It calls printk()->printk_func()->vprintk_emit() in normal context.
> > It is what we want in normal context.
> >
> > 3. It calls printk()->printk_func()->v printk_safe() in printk_safe
> > context. This does not look correct. IMHO, this might happen
> > only printk_safe_flush_on_panic() and we want to use
> > printk_deferred() here as well.
> [..]
> > The easiest solution would be to simply call printk_deferred()
> > here. Everything will be deferred after the async printk() patchset
> > anyway.
> >
> > I would even use printk_deferred() in printk_safe_flush_line()
> > for each context. It is not optimal but it works very well
> > and it makes the code much more straightforward.
>
> yes, good point.
> we can call deferred printk for anything there; or replace that in_nmi()
> check with the `printk_safe_context != 0' one, and then route the message
> via printk or printk_deferred.

Yup, it might be an option and sounds good.

Anyway, I would use printk_deferred() to print the warnings about lost
messages. It is perfectly fine and you will not need the hard coded
temporary buffer.

Best regards,
Petr