On 6/12/19 1:00 PM, Petr Mladek wrote: > On Wed 2019-06-12 17:36:43, Sergey Senozhatsky wrote: >> On (06/06/19 09:10), Petr Mladek wrote: >>> Just to be sure. I wanted to say that I like the idea with >>> KERN_UNSUPRESSED. So, I think that we are on the same page. >> >> I understand. All I wanted to say is that KERN_UNSUPRESSED is >> per-message, while the most interesting (and actually broken) >> cases, IMHO, are per-context, IOW things like this one >> >> console_loglevel = NEW >> foo() >> dump_stack() >> printk >> ... >> printk >> console_loglevel = OLD >> >> KERN_UNSUPRESSED does not help here. We probably can't convert >> dump_stack() to KERN_UNSUPRESSED. > > I agree. I take KERN_UNSUPRESSED like a nice trick how to pass > the information about the unsupressed printk context via > printk_safe and printk_nmi per-CPU buffers. > > The single line in sysrq __handle_sysrq() seems to be the only > location where KERN_UNSUPRESSED can be used directly.
I likely don't understand all the reasons why it's not possible. Looking at kdb - prints those can't be converted straight-away are show_regs() and show_stack().. could we add helpers those take a loglevel to show the info? (having as an example show_trace_log_lvl() that can "eat" a modifier already). Not that I want to sell the idea of KERN_UNSUPRESSED, but to my mind the alternative patches were kind of too intricate and bring more complexity to printk.. and there are only ~3(?) places those manipulate console_loglevel directly in the kernel tree (so we might want something simple and dumb as hell). Thanks, Dima