On Mon, 2024-10-21 at 16:17 +0206, John Ogness wrote: > On 2024-10-21, Petr Mladek <pmladek@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > That will not work because migrate_enable() can only be called > > > from > > > can_sleep context. Instead, the migrate_disable()/enable() should > > > be at > > > the few (one?) call sites where > > > printk_loud_console_enter()/exit() is > > > used from task context. > > > > Hmm, if I get it correctly, we could not use migrate_disable() in > > __handle_sysrq() because it can be called also in atomic context, > > I am talking about callers of __handle_sysrq() and/or their callers. > > For example write_sysrq_trigger() could do: > > migrate_disable(); > __handle_sysrq(c, false); > migrate_enable(); > > Or a new wrapper could be introduced for this purpose: > > static inline void wrapper handle_sysrq_task(u8 key, bool check_mask) > { > migrate_disable(); > __handle_sysrq(key, check_mask); > migrate_enable(); > } > > A quick grep shows about 25 call sites to check. > > > I do not see any easy way how to distinguish whether it was called > > in > > an atomic context or not. > > There is no clean way to do that. If this information is needed, it > must > be tracked by the call chain. > > > So, I see three possibilities: > > > > 1. Explicitly call preempt_disable() in __handle_sysrq(). > > > > It would be just around the the single line or the help. But > > still, > > I do not like it much. > > Not acceptable for PREEMPT_RT since sysrq is exposed to external > inputs. > > > 2. Avoid the per-CPU variable. Force adding the > > LOUD_CON/FORCE_CON > > flag using a global variable, e.g. printk_force_console. > > > > The problem is that it might affect also messages printed by > > other CPUs. And there might be many. > > > > Well, console_loglevel is a global variable. The original code > > had a similar problem. > > If disabling migration is not an option for you, this would be my > second > choice. I assume tagging too many messages is better than not tagging > enough. And, as you say, this is effectively what the current code is > trying to do. Thanks for your input John. I talked with Petr and he suggested to follow this option. I'll prepare the changes and send them after reviewing them with Petr. Thanks, Marcos > > > 3. Add the LOUD_CON/FLUSH_CON flag via a parameter. For example, > > by a special LOGLEVEL_FORCE_CON, similar to LOGLEVEL_SCHED. > > > > I might work well for __handle_sysrq() which calls the > > affected > > printk() directly. > > > > But it won't work, for example, for kdb_show_stack(). It wants > > to show messages printed by a nested functions. > > Right, this has limited usefulness and might miss the important > things, > which tend to be within helper functions. > > John