Re: [PATCH v3 0/6] allow ramoops to collect all kmesg_dump events

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On Tue 2020-05-12 10:03:44, Pavel Tatashin wrote:
> > OK, I personally see this as two separate problems:
> >
> >    1. Missing support to set loglevel per console.
> >    2. Missing support to dump messages for other reasons.
> >
> > I would remove the paragraph about console log levels completely.
> 
> OK, I see your point, this paragraph can be removed, however, I think
> it makes it clear to understand the rationale for this change. As I
> understand, the per console loglevel has been proposed but were never
> accepted.

The proposal was not accepted because there were more requirements:

   + add console device into sysfs so that it can be modified there
   + make a reasonable backward compatible behavior

I guess that the sysfs interface discouraged the author to continue
on it.

Note that console loglevel handling is very complicated. There are
already four variables, see console_printk array in
kernel/printk/printk.c. Per console loglevel would make it even
more complicated.

It is a nighmare. And introducing max_reason parameter goes the same way.

> > Now, the max_reason logic makes sense only when all the values
> > have some ordering. Is this the case?
> >
> > I see it as two distinct sets:
> >
> >    + panic, oops, emerg: describe how critical is an error situation
> >    + restart, halt, poweroff: describe behavior when the system goes down
> >
> > Let's say that panic is more critical than oops. Is restart more
> > critical than halt?
> >
> > If you want the dump during restart. Does it mean that you want it
> > also during emergency situation?
> >
> > My fear is that this patchset is going to introduce user interface
> > (max_reason) with a weird logic. IMHO, max_reason is confusing even
> > in the code and we should not spread this to users.
> >
> > Is there any reason why the existing printk.always_kmsg_dump option
> > is not enough for you?
> 
> printk.always_kmsg_dump is not working for me because ramoops has its
> own filtering based on dump_oops boolean, and ignores everything but
> panics and conditionally oops.
> max_reason makes the ramoops internal logic cleaner compared to using dump_oops.

I see. Just to be sure. Is the main reason to add max_reason parameter
to keep complatibility of the deprecated dump_oops parameter? Or is
there any real use case for this granularity?

I made some arecheology. ramoops.dump_oops parameter was added in 2010 by the
initial commit 56d611a04fb2db77334e ("char drivers: RAM oops/panic
logger."

Note that the initial implementation printed Oops reason only when
dump_oops was set. It printed all other reasons otherwise. It seems
that there were only the two reasons at that time.

Now, printk.always_kmsg_dump parameter was added later in 2012 by
the commit c22ab332902333f8376601 ("kmsg_dump: don't run on non-error
paths by default").

IMHO, the later commit actually fixed the default behavior of ramoops.

I wonder if anyone is actually using the ramoops.dump_oops parameter
in reality. I would personally make it deprecated and change the
default behavior to work according to printk.always_kmsg_dump parameter.

IMHO, ramoops.dump_oops just increases complexity and should not have
been introduced at all. I would try hard to avoid introducing even bigger
complecity and mess.

I know that there is the "do not break existing userspace" rule. The
question is if there is any user and if it is worth it.

> I agree, the reasons in kmsg_dump_reason do not order well  (I
> actually want to add another reason for kexec type reboots, and where
> do I put it?), so how about if we change the ordering list to
> bitfield/flags, and instead of max_reason provide: "reasons" bitset?

It looks too complicated. I would really try hard to avoid the
parameter at all.

Best Regards,
Petr



[Index of Archives]     [Device Tree Compilter]     [Device Tree Spec]     [Linux Driver Backports]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Linux PCI Devel]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]     [XFree86]     [Yosemite Backpacking]


  Powered by Linux