On 2019/07/26 20:29, Tetsuo Handa wrote: > On 2019/07/25 23:25, Dmitry Safonov wrote: >> Yes, also current distributions already using the counter to print >> warnings number of times and then silently ignore. I.e., on my Arch >> Linux setup: >> hung_task_warnings:10 > > You can propose changing the default value of hung_task_warnings to -1. > > Current patch might be inconvenient because printk() from hung_task_warning(t, false) > fails to go to consoles when that "t" was blocked for more than "timeout" seconds, for > > if (sysctl_hung_task_panic) { > console_verbose(); > hung_task_show_lock = true; > hung_task_call_panic = true; > } > > path which is intended to force printk() to go to consoles is ignored by > > /* Don't print warings twice */ > if (!sysctl_hung_task_interval_warnings) > hung_task_warning(t, true); > > when panic() should be called. (The vmcore would contain the printk() output which > was not sent to consoles if kdump is configured. But vmcore is not always available.) > >> Yes, that's why it's disabled by default (=0). >> I tend to agree that printing with KERN_DEBUG may be better, but in my >> point of view the patch isn't enough justification for patching >> sched_show_task() and show_stack(). > > You can propose sched_show_task_log_lvl() and show_stack_log_lvl() like show_trace_log_lvl(). > > I think that sysctl_hung_task_interval_warnings should not be decremented automatically. > I guess that that variable should become a boolean which controls whether to report threads > (with KERN_DEBUG level) which was blocked for more than sysctl_hung_task_check_interval_secs > seconds (or a tristate which also controls whether the report should be sent to consoles > (because KERN_DEBUG level likely prevents sending to consoles)), and > hung_task_warning(t, false) should be called like > > if (time_is_after_jiffies(t->last_switch_time + timeout * HZ)) { > if (sysctl_hung_task_interval_warnings) > hung_task_warning(t, false); > return; > } > > rather than > > if (sysctl_hung_task_interval_warnings) > hung_task_warning(t, false); > if (time_is_after_jiffies(t->last_switch_time + timeout * HZ)) > return; > > . > Well, another direction is to disassociate sysctl_hung_task_panic from sysctl_hung_task_timeout_secs. Since nobody would want to call panic() when a thread was blocked for only one second, allow sysctl_hung_task_panic to specify larger than 1, and interpret it as sysctl_hung_task_timeout_secs for calling panic(). Roughly speaking: - if (sysctl_hung_task_panic) { + unsigned long panic_timeout = READ_ONCE(sysctl_hung_task_panic) + if (panic_timeout == 1 || (panic_timeout > 1 && + (jiffies - t->last_switch_time) / HZ >= panic_timeout)) { console_verbose(); hung_task_show_lock = true; hung_task_call_panic = true; } If use of different loglevel is not a requirement for you, this would be the simplest.