----- On Sep 24, 2020, at 2:30 PM, rostedt rostedt@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > On Thu, 24 Sep 2020 13:42:25 -0400 (EDT) > Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt (VMware) <rostedt@xxxxxxxxxxx> >> > --- >> > Documentation/trace/tracepoints.rst | 25 ++++++++++++++++++++++ >> > include/linux/tracepoint-defs.h | 33 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >> > 2 files changed, 58 insertions(+) >> > >> > diff --git a/Documentation/trace/tracepoints.rst >> > b/Documentation/trace/tracepoints.rst >> > index 6e3ce3bf3593..833d39ee1c44 100644 >> > --- a/Documentation/trace/tracepoints.rst >> > +++ b/Documentation/trace/tracepoints.rst >> > @@ -146,3 +146,28 @@ with jump labels and avoid conditional branches. >> > define tracepoints. Check http://lwn.net/Articles/379903, >> > http://lwn.net/Articles/381064 and http://lwn.net/Articles/383362 >> > for a series of articles with more details. >> > + >> > +If you require calling a tracepoint from a header file, it is not >> > +recommended to call one directly or to use the trace_<tracepoint>_enabled() >> > +function call, as tracepoints in header files can have side effects if a >> > +header is included from a file that has CREATE_TRACE_POINTS set. Instead, >> > +include tracepoint-defs.h and use trace_enabled(). >> >> Tracepoints per-se have no issues being used from header files. The TRACE_EVENT >> infrastructure seems to be the cause of this problem. We should fix trace events >> rather than require all users to use weird work-arounds thorough the kernel code >> base. > > That's like saying "let's solve include hell". Note, in the past there has > also been issues with the headers included also having issues including > other headers and cause a dependency loop. AFAIU, there are a few scenarios we care about here: 1) Includes done by tracepoint.h (directly and indirectly). Some additional includes may have crept in and bloated tracepoint.h since its original implementation. We should identify and fix those. 2) Includes done by trace event headers when CREATE_TRACE_POINTS is defined. define_trace.h already takes care of #undef/#define CREATE_TRACE_POINTS to prevent recursion, so it should not be an issue. 3) Includes done by a compile unit after #define CREATE_TRACE_POINTS, but which are not meant to create trace point probes. For this case, requiring to #undef CREATE_TRACE_POINTS after all the relevant headers are included should solve it. So what additional issues am I missing here ? > > But the magic of trace events (for both perf and ftrace, sorry if you > refused to use it), I cannot not use it to this day because changes I needed to upstream in order to make it useful to me were rejected. > is that people who add tracepoints do not need to know > how tracepoints work. There's no adding of registering of them, or anything > else. The formats and everything they record appear in the tracefs file > system. That's all fine by me. > > How are your trace events created? All manual, or do you have helper > macros. I suspect you mean LTTng's trace events. Those are created with helper macros (LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT) which have a few improvements over TRACE_EVENT, namely: - Ability to create arrays of events (because lots of semicolons are removed), removing the need to dynamically register each event at init time, - Ability to do pre-filtering of events, before they hit the ring buffer, allowed by combining TP_struct and TP_fast_assign into a single structured TP_FIELDS. LTTng also has an include pass which uses TRACE_EVENT from the kernel to perform tracepoint prototype signature validation of LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT against TRACE_EVENT prototypes. > Would these be safe if a bunch were included? Can you elaborate on this question ? I have a hard time figuring out what scenario(s) you are after. > >> >> I am not against the idea of a tracepoint_enabled(tp), but I am against the >> motivation behind this patch and the new tracepoint user requirements it >> documents. > > It removes the open coded code that has been in the kernel for the last 4 > years. There are indeed many cases where a tracepoint_enabled() macro makes sense. In some situations we encounter in user-space for lttng-ust, there is need to prepare data before it is passed as tracepoint arguments. Having this "enabled" macros allows to only prepare the data when needed. > >> >> > + >> > +In a C file:: >> > + >> > + void do_trace_foo_bar_wrapper(args) >> > + { >> > + trace_foo_bar(args); >> > + } >> > + >> > +In the header file:: >> > + >> > + DECLEARE_TRACEPOINT(foo_bar); >> > + >> > + static inline void some_inline_function() >> > + { >> > + [..] >> > + if (trace_enabled(foo_bar)) >> >> Is it trace_enabled() or tracepoint_enabled() ? There is a mismatch >> between the commit message/code and the documentation. > > Yes, it should be tracepoint_enabled(). Thanks for catching that. > > Anyway, this shouldn't affect you in any way, as it's just adding wrappers > around locations that have been doing this for years. > > If you want, I can change the name to trace_event_enabled() and put the > code in trace_events-defs.h instead. Which would simply include > tracepoints-defs.h and have the exact same code. I'm ok with tracepoint_enabled(). However, I would have placed it in tracepoint.h rather than tracepoint-defs.h, and we should figure out why people complain that tracepoint.h is including headers too eagerly. Thanks, Mathieu > > -- Steve -- Mathieu Desnoyers EfficiOS Inc. http://www.efficios.com