On Mon, Mar 19, 2012 at 06:59:01PM -0700, Joe Perches wrote: > > Changing to pr_err() is pointless, because it doesn't do anything > > functional. You *have* to have an interface like ext4_msg(sb, ...) if > > you're going to send a semi-structured notification, or include > > relevant information about which ext4 file system was responsible for > > issuing the warning. > > Umm, ext4_msg does call printk. Sure, but most of the code doesn't *use* printk. Instead they use ext4_msg(). That's the point. Changing printk() to ext4_msg() adds value. Changing printk() to pr_info() doesn't. > > > If you're going to change huge numbers of lines of code, you might as > > well do it in a way that significantly improves things. The change to > > pr_foo() is just syntactic sugar, and that's a whitespace-level change > > in my book. Adding a struct super * or or a struct block device *, > > which gets passed to the notification functions? That's ***far*** > > more interesting. > > It's hard to say that's true. > Look at the the trace_<foo> mechanisms. > Very useful stuff but once set, there's > been a strong desire to set the output > as an unchangeable ABI. > > So I think defining the output correctly > _first_ is the most important element of > any notification mechanism. But you can't set the output correctly if you don't pass the correct information. And you're right that there will be resistance in changing the output; which is why it's important that before a new file system like, say, btrfs goes into production, it has a way of providing a standardized printk output. Right now I'm very careful about changing certain ext4 error messages specifically because I *know* there are log scraping programs that are assume a certain format. So the sooner you standardize things, the better --- but in order to do that, you need to have the information so the output can include the critical information. What's important in other words is not the "EXT4-fs error" prefix; what's important is what follows it: EXT4-fs error (device %s): ... ^^^^^^^^^ ... because that's what the log scrapers are looking for. But you can't print that part of the message unless you pass in the struct super * parameter to ext4_error(). And this, by the way, is why we have ext4_msg() and ext4_error(). The log scrapers which look for "EXT4-fs error (device %s)" know that these messages are serious. But ext4_msg() log messages, which look like this: "EXT4-fs (%s): ..." are not things that log scrapers need to worry in terms of "the file system has been corrupted". > TLV use in > the output generally isn't human parsable > and there's value in that readability. Sure, that's why today we ext4_msg() and ext4_error() send human-readable messages to dmesg. I've never argued that we should replace that with something which is semi-structured; instead, we should *supplement* it with something which is more friendly to computer programs. But you can't supplement it, and you can't print messages such as: EXT4-fs error (device sda3): ... ^^^^^^^^^^^ ... if you don't have a standardized way of passing the struct super * to a standardized log function. Once you do that, it becomes much easier to do semi-custom things with the information. Someone could write a kernel module that sends out the information in XML. Another person could write a kernel module that sends out the information in protobufs (http://code.google.com/p/protobuf/). Still another person could use that information to more easily translate messages into Japanese, if that is what floats their boat. But if you don't pass the information into a standardized log function, you can't do any of this. Of course, the body of the message needs to be standardized too. But that's orthogonal to the problem of passing the kernel structure which identifies the object which the log message is about. That part is completely and utterly necessary if you're going to standardize the *first* part of the printable dmesg log, which contains the structured information. - Ted -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html