On Wed, May 3, 2023 at 1:00 PM Tejun Heo <tj@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hello, > > On Wed, May 03, 2023 at 09:48:55AM -1000, Tejun Heo wrote: > > > If so, that's the idea behind the context capture feature so that we > > > can enable it on specific allocations only after we determine there is > > > something interesting there. So, with low-cost persistent tracking we > > > can determine the suspects and then pay some more to investigate those > > > suspects in more detail. > > > > Yeah, I was wondering whether it'd be useful to have that configurable so > > that it'd be possible for a user to say "I'm okay with the cost, please > > track more context per allocation". Given that tracking the immediate caller > > is already a huge improvement and narrowing it down from there using > > existing tools shouldn't be that difficult, I don't think this is a blocker > > in any way. It just bothers me a bit that the code is structured so that > > source line is the main abstraction. > > Another related question. So, the reason for macro'ing stuff is needed is > because you want to print the line directly from kernel, right? The main reason is because we want to inject a code tag at the location of the call. If we have a code tag injected at every allocation call, then finding the allocation counter (code tag) to operate takes no time. > Is that > really necessary? Values from __builtin_return_address() can easily be > printed out as function+offset from kernel which already gives most of the > necessary information for triaging and mapping that back to source line from > userspace isn't difficult. Wouldn't using __builtin_return_address() make > the whole thing a lot simpler? If we do that we have to associate that address with the allocation counter at runtime on the first allocation and look it up on all following allocations. That introduces the overhead which we are trying to avoid by using macros. > > Thanks. > > -- > tejun