Hello, On (08/29/17 10:52), Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Tue, Aug 29, 2017 at 10:33 AM, Sergey Senozhatsky > <sergey.senozhat...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > ok. that's something several people asked for -- some sort of buffered > > printk mode; but people don't want to use a buffer allocated on the stack > > (or kmalloc-ed, etc.) to do sprintf() on it and then feed it to > > printk("%s"), > > because this adds some extra cost: > [..] > Introduce a few helper functions for it: > > init_line_buffer(&buf); > print_line(&buf, fmt, args); > vprint_line(&buf, fmt, vararg); > finish_line(&buf); > > or whatever, and it sounds like it should be pretty easy to use.
ok, I was short on details (sorry, it was almost 3am). what I was talking/thinking about is not just a single complete continuation line, but a whole bunch of printk calls (including continuation lines). like OOM report with backtraces, and so on. the problem people are having (well, according to emails I have got in my inbox) is the fact that printk("a"); printk("b"); can appear in the logbuf (and serial console) pretty far; no one knows what can happen between those calls. so the buffered-printk buffer is supposed to be big enough for N lines and, more importantly, it stores those lines in logbuf in consequent entries. so the difference here is while (buffer->whatever) printk("%s\n", buffer->msg[i]); vs spin_lock(&logbuf_lock); while (buffer->whatever) log_store(buffer->msg[i]); spin_unlock(&logbuf_lock); a dynamic buffer with resizing probably may not work good enough in some OOM cases. -ss