Re: [PATCH] printk: inject caller information into the body of message

From: Tetsuo Handa
Date: Fri Sep 28 2018 - 07:03:06 EST


On 2018/09/28 18:09, Sergey Senozhatsky wrote:
> On (09/24/18 17:11), Tetsuo Handa wrote:
>> The reason of using statically preallocated global buffers is that I think
>> that it is inconvenient for KERN_CONT users to calculate necessary bytes
>> only for avoiding message truncation. The pr_line might be passed to deep
>> into the callchain and adjusting buffer size whenever the content's possible
>> max length changes is as much painful as changing printk() to accept only
>> one "const char *" argument. Even if we guarantee that any context can
>> allocate buffer from kernel stack, we cannot guarantee that many concurrent
>> printk() won't trigger lockup. Thus, I think that trying to allocate from
>> finite static buffers with a fallback to unbuffered printk() upon failure
>> is sufficient.
>
> Yes, this makes sense. At the same time we can keep pr_line buffer
> in .bss
>
> static char buffer[1024];
> static DEFINE_PR_LINE_BUF(..., buffer);
>
> just like you have already mentioned. But that's going to require a
> case-by-case handling; so a big list of printk buffers is a simpler
> option. Fallback, tho, can be painful. On a system with 1024 CPUs can
> one have more than 16 concurrent cont printks? If the answer is yes,
> then we are looking at the same broken cont output as before.

I'm OK with making "16" configurable (at kernel configuration and/or
at kernel boot like log_buf_len= kernel command line parameter).

We could even allow each "struct task_struct" to have corresponding
"struct printk_buffer". But if there are such many concurrent callers,
the printk() would have already locked up the system to death. ;-)