On 2018/11/02 23:40, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > On Fri, Nov 02, 2018 at 10:31:55PM +0900, Tetsuo Handa wrote: >> get_printk_buffer() tries to assign a "struct printk_buffer" from >> statically preallocated array. get_printk_buffer() returns NULL if >> all "struct printk_buffer" are in use, but the caller does not need to >> check for NULL. > > This seems like a great way of wasting 16kB of memory. Since you've > already made printk_buffered() work with a NULL initial argument, what's > the advantage over just doing kmalloc(1024, GFP_ATOMIC)? Like "[PATCH 2/3] mm: Use line-buffered printk() for show_free_areas()." demonstrates, kzalloc(sizeof(struct printk_buffer), GFP_ATOMIC) can fail. And using statically preallocated buffers helps avoiding (1) out of buffers when memory cannot be allocated (2) kernel stack overflow when kernel stack is already tight (e.g. a memory allocation attempt from an interrupt handler which was invoked from deep inside call chain of a process context) . Whether (A) tuning the number of statically preallocated buffers (B) allocating buffers on caller side (e.g. kzalloc() or in .bss section) are useful is a future decision, for too much concurrent printk() will lockup the system even if there are enough buffers. I think that starting with statically preallocated buffers is (at least for now) a good choice for minimizing risk of (1) (2) while offering practically acceptable result.