On Mon, Sep 10, 2018 at 12:33:33PM +0300, Mika Westerberg wrote: > The reason for making the driver less verbose comes from direct feedback > from the community. For example: > > https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/10/31/864
I am not opposed to muting messages to KERN_DEBUG severity which merely report what the driver is doing such as: "control channel created" "control channel starting..." However messages should NOT be muted which report register contents or register changes unless those registers are *fully* documented and register changes are known to work *reliably*. The URL you're referring to above provides an example where that's not the case: "disabling interrupt at register 0x38200 bit 12 (0xffffffff -> 0xffffefff)" Something is broken here, the register was read as "all ones". This doesn't seem to work as reliable as it should and in that case please don't mute the message until we know it's fixed and always works. Also, it is quite customary and serves a useful purpose to report devices at KERN_INFO severity as they're enumerated. E.g. the PCI bus logs messages for each enumerated device, pciehp logs the port's capabilities on probe, and so on. Therefore please do not mute the enumeration of switches and their ports. If you find the messages too noisy, feel free to condense the data reported for each port to 1 or 2 lines. We currently print "Port ..." on enumeration, but use the syntax "<route string>:<port number>" for other port-related messages printed with tb_port_*(). It might be beneficial to use a single syntax consistently. In one of the patches I've posted yesterday, I'm logging unknown data that is stashed in the DROM for PCI ports. To make sense of that data, at least one line for each port needs to be logged. (Such that we know which data pertains to which port.) I don't really like spamming the log with this unknown data that needs to be reverse-engineered. I hate it. You would do everyone a favor if you could divulge the meaning of such unknown registers. Then we don't need to log it in the first place. Thanks, Lukas