(2014/06/27 1:52), Steven Rostedt wrote: > * Request for Acks * > >>From the time I created the use of function_trace_stop, I hated it. > There was two reasons to create this, one was to try to lower the > function tracing overhead when debugfs file tracing_enable was set to zero > (note, tracing_enable no longer exists), the other was a way to stop > function tracing when going down into suspend and resume. > > Some function was causing suspend and resume to reboot the kernel. In > debugging this I found that an empty callback from mcount would work. > That is, instead of running the tracing code, I would just have the > function trace callback be a nop: > > void function_trace_call(unsigned long ip, unsigned long parent_ip) > { > } > > This worked. That means the code in mcount wasn't an issue. I started > bisecting the contents of the function_trace_call and found that this > would cause the system to reboot! > > void function_trace_call(unsigned long ip, unsigned long parent_ip) > { > smp_processor_id(); > } > > That is, just calling smp_processor_id() was enough to trigger a triple > fault on resume of the system. > > Today, this big hammer approach of disabling the function tracer is starting > to show its issues. It can't help out in debugging suspend and resume, > and there's other function trace callbacks that should still work. > > I also have learned ways to bisect functions that cause bugs in function > tracing. I finally got some time to do so with a box that would reboot > on suspend and resume. This led me down to a single function: > > restore_processor_state() > > This made perfect sense, as this function is called from assembly on a > CPU startup. One of the jobs of this function was to set up the GS register. > That register is also the register that is used by smp_processor_id() > to find what CPU the task is running on. With it not set up it will offset > into some random location and fault. As the fault handlers can also be > traced, those will fault too and finally the system will reset due to a > triple fault. Uh, from the same reason, I must list it in the kprobe blacklist too... BTW, as far as I can review, x86 and generic parts of the series seems OK to me. :) Thank you, -- Masami HIRAMATSU Software Platform Research Dept. Linux Technology Research Center Hitachi, Ltd., Yokohama Research Laboratory E-mail: masami.hiramatsu.pt@xxxxxxxxxxx -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-arch" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html