On Mon, Feb 21, 2011 at 06:25:08AM +1300, Charles Manning wrote: > On Friday 18 February 2011 13:58:52 Greg KH wrote: > > On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 01:55:04PM +1300, Ryan Mallon wrote: > > > On 02/18/2011 01:43 PM, Mark Brown wrote: > > > > On Thu, Feb 17, 2011 at 04:33:53PM -0800, Greg KH wrote: > > > >> On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 12:01:50AM +0000, Mark Brown wrote: > > > >>> For the proc stuff - for tracing stuff then tracepoints are likely to > > > >>> be a good option if it's useful to people. > > > >> > > > >> Then use the in-kernel tracing functionality, don't roll your own. > > > >> And that is not in /proc, so it should be there for this filesystem > > > >> either. > > > > > > > > That'd be the tracepoints I was mentioning, then... > > > > > > Are you suggesting that the yaffs_trace function should be replaced with > > > tracepoints? > > > > > > yaffs_trace is basically just a wrapper around printk, which I suggested > > > should be replaced with pr_debug so that it can be compiled out > > > completely. Other drivers and filesystems have similar custom debugging > > > functions. > > > > > > I haven't used tracepoints, but it seems like they are better suited to > > > tracing specific events than as a general printk style debugging > > > replacement? > > The procfs is not used for tracing as , it is just one of the two ways > ofsetting a trace mask to select what to trace (the other is to set a trace > mask). > > eg. echo +gc > /proc/yaffs > > turns on the garbage collector tracing. > > I will remove the /proc interface and write a userspace script to do the > equivalent. > > Realtime selection of tracing is valuable. It allows you to set up a test case > with tracing disabled then select what you want to trace to get detail as you > run the test case I agree, so please use the in-kernel tracing code which provides this infrastructure for you. > I still intend to keep the tracing printk-based tracing: > > #define yaffs_trace(msk, fmt, ...) do { \ > if (yaffs_trace_mask & (msk)) \ > printk(KERN_DEBUG "yaffs: " fmt "\n", ##__VA_ARGS__); \ > } while (0) No, please don't invent your own stuff like this, again, use the in-kernel functionality provided for this. thanks, greg k-h -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html