Hello Steven, On (04/19/17 13:13), Steven Rostedt wrote: > > printk() takes some locks and could not be used a safe way in NMI context. > > I just found a problem with this solution. It kills ftrace dumps from > NMI context :-( > > [ 1295.168495] <...>-67423 10dNh1 382171111us : do_raw_spin_lock <-_raw_spin_lock > [ 1295.168495] <...>-67423 10dNh1 382171111us : sched_stat_runtime: comm=cc1 pid=67423 runtime=96858 [ns] vruntime=11924198270 [ns] > [ 1295.168496] <...>-67423 10dNh1 382171111us : lock_acquire: ffffffff81c5c940 read rcu_read_lock > [ 1295.168497] > [ 1295.168498] Lost 4890096 message(s)! > [ 1296.805063] ---[ end Kernel panic - not syncing: Hard LOCKUP > [ 1296.811553] unchecked MSR access error: WRMSR to 0x83f (tried to write 0x00000000000000f6) at rIP: 0xffffffff81046fc7 (native_apic_msr_write+0x27/0x40) > [ 1296.811553] Call Trace: > [ 1296.811553] <NMI> > > I was hoping to see a cause of a hard lockup by enabling > ftrace_dump_on_oops. But as NMIs now have a very small buffer that > gets flushed, we need to find a new way to print out the full ftrace > buffer over serial. > > Thoughts? hmmm... a really tough one. well, someone has to say this: the simplest thing is to have a bigger PRINTK_SAFE_LOG_BUF_SHIFT value :) just thinking (well, sort of) out loud. the problem is that we can't tell if we already hold any printk related locks ("printk related locks" is not even well defined term). so printk from NMI can deadlock or it can be OK, we never know. but looking and vprintk_emit() and console_unlock() it seems that we have some sort of a hint now, which is this_cpu_read(printk_context) - if we are not in printk_safe context then we can say that _probably_ (and that's a Russian roulette) doing "normal" printk() will work. that is a *very-very* risky (and admittedly dumb) thing to assume, so we will move in a slightly different direction. checking this_cpu_read(printk_context) only assures us that we don't hold `logbuf_lock' on this CPU. and that is sort of something, at least we can be sure that doing printk_deferred() from this CPU is safe. printk_deferred() means that your NMI messages will end up in the logbuf, which is a) bigger in size than per-CPU buffer and b) some other CPU can immediately print those messages (hopefully). we also switch to printk_safe mode for call_console_drivers() in console_unlock(). but we can't make any solid assumptions there - serial console lock can already be acquired, we don't have any markers for that. it may be reasonable to assume that if we are not in printk_safe mode on this CPU then serial console is not locked from this CPU, but there is nothing that can assure us. so at the moment what I can think of is something like -- check this_cpu_read(printk_context) in NMI prink -- if we are NOT in printk_safe on this CPU, then do printk_deferred() and bypass `nmi_print_seq' buffer -- if we are in printk_safe -- well... bad luck... have a bigger buffer. .... or there are some other options here, but I'd prefer not to list them, because people will hate me :) so this shifts the purpose of `nmi_print_seq' buffer: use it only when you can't use logbuf. otherwise, do printk_deferred(). need to think more. -ss -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-s390" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html