On Apr 4, 2016 4:51 AM, "Jan Kara" <j...@suse.cz> wrote: > > On Sat 02-04-16 13:58:19, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > > [cc Jan Kara] > > > > On Sat, Apr 2, 2016 at 1:47 PM, Borislav Petkov <b...@alien8.de> wrote: > > > On Sat, Apr 02, 2016 at 01:13:37PM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > > >> Given that I this isn't really a regression with my patches (it > > >> probably never worked much better on 32-bit and the regs never would > > >> have shown at all on 64-bit), > > > > > > You're right. That thing calls printk *and* early_printk, WTF: > > > > > > #ifdef CONFIG_EARLY_PRINTK > > > > > > call early_printk > > > ... > > > > > > call dump_stack > > > > > > ... > > > > > > call __print_symbol > > > > > > those last two call printk. Great. > > > > > >> I propose a different approach: make > > >> printk work earlier. Something like: > > >> > > >> if (early) { > > >> early_printk(args); > > >> } > > >> > > >> or early_vprintk or whatever. > > >> > > >> If the cost of a branch mattered, this could be alternative-patched > > >> out later on, but that seems silly. I also bet that a more sensible > > >> fallback could be created in which printk would try to use an early > > >> console if there's no real console. > > > > > > So how about this: > > > > > > printk() does > > > > > > vprintk_func = this_cpu_read(printk_func); > > > > > > and that's > > > > > > DEFINE_PER_CPU(printk_func_t, printk_func) = vprintk_default > > > > > > I guess we can make that function be early_printk-something and once > > > printk is initialized, we overwrite it with vprintk_default. > > > > > > Elegant and no need for if branches and alternatives. > > > > > > Hmmm. > > > > Jan, IIRC you were looking at printk recently-ish. Any thoughts here? > > Sounds like a good idea to me. I've also consulted this with Petr Mladek > (added to CC) who is using printk_func per-cpu variable in his > printk-from-NMI patches and he also doesn't see a problem with this. > > I was just wondering about one thing - this way we add more early printks > if I understand your intention right. Are we guaranteed that they happen > only from a single CPU? Because currently there is no locking in > early_printk() and thus we can end up writing to early console several > messages in parallel from different CPUs. Not sure what's going to happen > in that case...
Adding locking would be easy enough, wouldn't it? But do any platforms really boot a second CPU before switching to real printk? Given that I see all the smpboot stuff in dmesg, I guess real printk happens first. I admit I haven't actually checked. --Andy > > Honza > -- > Jan Kara <j...@suse.com> > SUSE Labs, CR