Re: [PATCH 4.19 regression fix] printk: For early boot messages check loglevel when flushing the buffer

From: Hans de Goede
Date: Wed Sep 05 2018 - 00:53:23 EST


Hi,

On 05-09-18 04:35, Sergey Senozhatsky wrote:
Hi,

On (09/04/18 20:01), Hans de Goede wrote:
Commit 375899cddcbb ("printk: make sure to print log on console."), moved
the checking of the loglevel of messages from flush time to the actual
log time.

This introduces one problem, some early boot messages are printed before
parse_early_param() gets called and thus before kernel commandline options
such as quiet, loglevel and ignore_loglevel are parsed.

Do you use earlycon?

No, I'm seeing this with the regular/normal console stuff.

This causes e.g. the following messages to get printed on x86 systems,
despite the presence of the "quiet" option:

[ 0.000000] BIOS-provided physical RAM map:
[ 0.000000] BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000000000000-0x0000000000057fff] usable
...
[ 0.000000] BIOS-e820: [mem 0x0000000100000000-0x0000000874ffffff] usable

This commit fixes this by setting a new LOG_CHK_LEVEL on early boot
messages and doing the loglevel check for these while flushing as before.


Hmm, OK, chances are we need to re-think 375899cddcbb. It might be
the case that we sort of broke CON_PRINTBUFFER handling.

console_loglevel = CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_MOTORMOUTH
register CON_PRINTBUFFER console
-> no debug output

So I think that when console_unlock() re-flushes already seen logbuf
messages to a newly registered exclusive [CON_PRINTBUFFER] console we
probably need to look at the current console_loglevel in console_unlock()
loop.

So if it breaks quiet and the above use-case maybe we should revert
375899cddcbb for now?

Regards,

Hans