On Thu, 2012-07-19 at 09:34 -0700, Joe Perches wrote: > On Thu, 2012-07-19 at 10:15 -0600, Shuah Khan wrote: > > On Wed, 2012-07-18 at 18:38 -0600, Toshi Kani wrote: > > > > > > > > This interface is defined in acpi/acpi_bus.h, which is intended for ACPI > > > drivers which make many ACPI calls to proceed when they are called at > > > run-time today. This interface does not change that, and I believe > > > acpi_get_name() is much faster compared to ACPI method calls these ACPI > > > drivers make in their normal code path. The extra work to call > > > acpi_get_name() is simply a noise in this case (if you try to measure), > > > and the use of this interface is limited in error paths of such ACPI > > > drivers. > > > > I understand the scope of the usage of this new interface. I don't think > > I am able to explain the problem I see with this interface as it gets > > used more and more from acpi drivers. Let me try another way. > > > > If understand the this patch set, if and when acpi drivers that > > currently use pr_* interfaces switch to using acpi_pr_*, the execution > > path goes from a what printk() does to the following: > > > > acpi_pr_* > > - setup static buffer > > - calls acpi_get_name() > > - acpi_get_name() calls acpi_ut_validate_buffer() and then calls > > acpi_ns_handle_to_pathname() > > - acpi_ns_handle_to_pathname() calls acpi_ns_validate_handle() followed > > by acpi_ns_get_pathname_length() and so on. > > > > I think this should give you a good idea of my concern. I think > > acpi_pr_* full functionality should be enabled under special cases such > > as some acpi_debug level setting or some other way, and not for default > > case. I propose the following: > > > > Make acpi_pr_* versions execute the full path to do acpi_get_name() > > conditionally and not as a default case. > > or maybe cache one or two. Hi Joe, Sorry, I had overlooked this email yesterday... I agree that caching one or two is a good idea when we expect to see repeated calls to a same object. I think there may be a few repeated calls, such that callee fails and calls acpi_pr_<level>() with its error message, and then caller sees this error return and calls acpi_pr_<level>() with its own message. That said, considering additional complexity of locking cache data, etc., I'd prefer keeping the code simple for now since I do not expect this interface be called very often. > > To illustrate my point further, I currently see the following ACPI > > messages in my dmesg buffer on my laptop. I haven't taken the time to > > evaluate how many of them originate from acpi drivers, however I would > > not want to see all of these becoming acpi_pr_* versions that do more > > than what pr_* does today. I hope this explains my concern clearly. > > > > [ 0.000000] ACPI: RSDP 00000000000fc600 00024 (v02 HPQOEM) > > [ 0.000000] ACPI: XSDT 00000000bb7fe120 00084 (v01 HPQOEM SLIC-MPC > > 0000000F 01000013) > > [120+ lines of ACPI stuff] > > > [ 0.739844] ACPI: ACPI bus type pnp unregistered > > I think ACPI is the noisiest subsystem. I agree for the boot time messages. The use of ACPI is limited at run-time, such as hotplug operations, though. > I'd rather see this logging made quieter by conversion to > KERN_DEBUG or another selective mechanism. > > There just aren't many ACPI_INFO calls around and that why > I thought it reasonable to convert the macro to call a > different named function. I looked at the first two major cases as follows. Looks like there are some considerations to minimize them. ACPI_INFO is suppressed when ACPI_NO_ERROR_MESSAGES is defined. ACPI_INFO((AE_INFO, "RSDP %p %05X (v%.2d %6.6s)", ACPI_CAST_PTR (void, address), (ACPI_CAST_PTR(struct acpi_table_rsdp, header)-> revision > 0) ? ACPI_CAST_PTR(struct acpi_table_rsdp, header)->length : 20, ACPI_CAST_PTR(struct acpi_table_rsdp, header)->revision, local_header.oem_id)); LAPIC info is printed at KERN_INFO. printk(KERN_INFO PREFIX "LAPIC (acpi_id[0x%02x] lapic_id[0x%02x] %s)\n", p->processor_id, p->id, (p->lapic_flags & ACPI_MADT_ENABLED) ? "enabled" Thanks, -Toshi > > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in > the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html