On Fri 17-04-15 09:23:35, Austin S Hemmelgarn wrote: > On 2015-04-17 09:04, Beata Michalska wrote: > >On 04/17/2015 01:31 PM, Jan Kara wrote: > >>On Wed 15-04-15 09:15:44, Beata Michalska wrote: > >>... > >>>+static const match_table_t fs_etypes = { > >>>+ { FS_EVENT_INFO, "info" }, > >>>+ { FS_EVENT_WARN, "warn" }, > >>>+ { FS_EVENT_THRESH, "thr" }, > >>>+ { FS_EVENT_ERR, "err" }, > >>>+ { 0, NULL }, > >>>+}; > >> Why are there these generic message types? Threshold messages make good > >>sense to me. But not so much the rest. If they don't have a clear meaning, > >>it will be a mess. So I also agree with a message like - "filesystem has > >>trouble, you should probably unmount and run fsck" - that's fine. But > >>generic "info" or "warning" doesn't really carry any meaning on its own and > >>thus seems pretty useless to me. To explain a bit more, AFAIU this > >>shouldn't be a generic logging interface where something like severity > >>makes sense but rather a relatively specific interface notifying about > >>events in filesystem userspace should know about so I expect relatively low > >>number of types of events, not tens or even hundreds... > >> > >> Honza > > > >Getting rid of those would simplify the configuration part, indeed. > >So we would be left with 'generic' and threshold events. > >I guess I've overdone this part. > > For some filesystems, it may make sense to differentiate between a > generic warning and an error. For BTRFS and ZFS for example, if > there is a csum error on a block, this will get automatically > corrected in many configurations, and won't require anything like > fsck to be run, but monitoring applications will still probably want > to be notified. Sure, but in that case just create an event CORRECTED_CHECKSUM_ERROR and use that. Then userspace knows what it should do with the event. No need to hide it behind warning / error category. Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR -- 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