> > >> + > > >> if (mp && mp->m_fsname) { > > > > > > mp->m_fsname is the name of the device we use everywhere for log > > > messages, it's set up at mount time so we don't have to do runtime > > > evaulation of the device name every time we need to emit the device > > > name in a log message. > > > > > > So, if you have some sooper speshial new device naming scheme, it > > > needs to be stored into the struct xfs_mount to replace mp->m_fsname. > > > > I don't think we want to replace mp->m_fsname with the vpd 0x83 device > > identifier. This proposed change is adding a key/value structured data > > to the log message for non-ambiguous device identification over time, > > not to place the ID in the human readable portion of the message. The > > existing name is useful too, especially when it involves a partition. > > Oh, if that's all you want to do, then why is this identifier needed > in every log message? It does not change over the life of the > filesystem, so it the persistent identifier only needs to be emitted > to the log once at filesystem mount time. i.e. instead of: > > [ 2.716841] XFS (dm-0): Mounting V5 Filesystem > > It just needs to be: > > [ 2.716841] XFS (dm-0): Mounting V5 Filesystem on device <persistent dev id> > > If you need to do any sort of special "is this the right device" > checking, it needs to be done immediately at mount time so action > can be taken to shutdown the filesystem and unmount the device > immediately before further damage is done.... > > i.e. once the filesystem is mounted, you've already got a unique and > persistent identifier in the log for the life of the filesystem (the > m_fsname string), so I'm struggling to understand exactly what > problem you are trying to solve by adding redundant information > to every log message..... > Log rotation loses that identifier though; there are plenty of setups where a mount-time message has been rotated out of all logs by the time something goes wrong after a month or two.