On Fri, Feb 15, 2019 at 11:06 PM Andy Shevchenko <andriy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Feb 15, 2019 at 12:31:17AM +0800, xiang xiao wrote: > > On Thu, Feb 14, 2019 at 9:09 PM Andy Shevchenko > > <andriy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On Thu, Feb 14, 2019 at 02:02:38PM +0800, Xiang Xiao wrote: > > > > > This driver allows the remote processor to redirect the output of > > > > syslog or printf into the kernel log, which is very useful to see > > > > what happen in the remote side. > > > > > > > +struct rpmsg_syslog_header { > > > > + u32 command; > > > > + s32 result; > > > > +} __packed; > > > > > > Isn't packed already? > > > > > > > But, I want to make it more explicitly and prepare for struct expansion later. > > How? Why it's not in this patch / patch series? Just for future, not now:). Since this structure is shared by the different CPU/OS, it's better to indicate the packed explicitly. > > > > > + /* output the message before '\n' to the kernel log */ > > > > + nl = memrchr(msg->data, '\n', msg->count); > > > > > > Hmm... To me it sounds somehow fragile. > > > > > > If your text contains binary data, how can you guarantee that it would be not > > > in the middle of two \n:s? > > > > This driver is just for log/printf redirection, so we could safely > > assume the data is pure text. > > Then I don't see a point to use memrchr() at all here. > > Use strchr or strrchr(). Yes, use strnchr is enough, I will remove memrchr in the next review. > > > > OTOH, if it text data, why do you need to take all strings at once? > > > > Remote side may decide to buffer more log to reduce the IPC number > > since IPC is a time consuming operation. > > So, you always can do something like > > p = msg->data; > while (...strsep(..., "\n")) { > pr_info("%s\n", token); > ... > } Can't use strsep here, since log come from remote isn't terminated by '\0'. > > > > > > It might be worse from performance prospective (if you know how and when printk() supplies buffer to the console). > > > > Yes, it's very slow if the log send to serial console. But in > > production environment, printk normally just save in ram and viewed by > > dmesg which is very fast. > > You may not do such assumptions. For someone it would be RAM, for some > customers it might be a slow channel. But we need reduce the IPC number, so both fast/slow channel could get the benefit. > > > > > > + strncpy(priv->buf + priv->next, msg->data + printed, copied); > > > > > > Hmm... shouldn't be memcpy()? > > > > I use memcpy initially, but found that the unaligned exception happen randomly. > > To avoid the cache issue, the IPC memory normally map as device memory, but > > ARM just allow the alignment access to this type of memory. > > So, than it's an architecture level issue. With strncpy() here you will get a > pretty rightful GCC warning. > Why GCC warning strncpy here? > > > > + /* flush the buffered log if need */ > > > > + if (priv->next) > > > > + pr_info("%.*s\n", priv->next, priv->buf); > > > > + kfree(priv->buf); > > > > > > I don't see how it's serialized. Does rpmsg core take care of this? > > > > Yes, the callback come from a dedicated work thread. > > Please, add a comment explaining that. > Will add in the next review. > -- > With Best Regards, > Andy Shevchenko > >