From: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
To: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Cc: Andrew Lunn <andrew+netdev@lunn.ch>,
"David S. Miller" <davem@davemloft.net>,
Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>,
Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>, Simon Horman <horms@kernel.org>,
Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>, Shuah Khan <shuah@kernel.org>,
netdev@vger.kernel.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org,
linux-doc@vger.kernel.org, linux-kselftest@vger.kernel.org,
kernel-team@meta.com, max@kutsevol.com, thepacketgeek@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [PATCH net-next v2 3/5] netconsole: add support for sysdata and CPU population
Date: Fri, 17 Jan 2025 18:35:20 -0800 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20250117183520.11d93f4d@kernel.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20250117-terrestrial-clam-of-satiation-cf312f@leitao>
On Fri, 17 Jan 2025 03:02:40 -0800 Breno Leitao wrote:
> > Looks like previously all the data was on the stack, now we have a mix.
>
> Not sure I followed. The data ({userdata,extradata}_complete) was always
> inside nt field, which belongs to target_list.
I mean the buffer we use for formatting. Today it's this:
static char buf[MAX_PRINT_CHUNK]; /* protected by target_list_lock */
int header_len, msgbody_len;
const char *msgbody;
right? I missed that "static" actually so it's not on the stack,
it's in the .bss section.
> > Maybe we can pack all the bits of state into a struct for easier
> > passing around, but still put it on the stack?
>
> It depends on what state you need here. We can certainly pass runtime
> (aka sysdata in this patchset) data in the stack, but doing the same for
> userdata would require extra computation in runtime. In other words, the
> userdata_complete and length are calculated at configfs update time
> today, and only read during runtime, and there is no connection between
> configfs and runtime (write_ext_msg()) except through the stack.
>
>
> On the other side, if we want to have extradata_complete in the stack, I
> still think that userdata will need to be in the stack, and create a
> buffer in runtime's frame and copy userdata + sysdata at run time, doing
> an extra copy.
>
> Trying to put this in code, this is what I thought:
>
> /* Copy to the stack (buf) the userdata string + sysdata */
> static void append_runtime_sysdata(struct netconsole_target *nt, char *buf) {
> if (!(nt->sysdata_fields & CPU_NR))
> return;
>
> return scnprintf(buf, MAX_EXTRADATA_ENTRY_LEN * MAX_EXTRADATA_ITEMS,
> "%s cpu=%u\n", nt->userdata_complete, raw_smp_processor_id());
> }
>
> /* Move complete string in the stack and send from there */
> static void send_ext_msg_udp(struct netconsole_target *nt, const char *msg,
> int msg_len) {
> ...
> #ifdef CONFIG_NETCONSOLE_DYNAMIC
> struct char buf[MAX_EXTRADATA_ENTRY_LEN * MAX_EXTRADATA_ITEMS];
> extradata_len = append_runtime_sysdata(nt, buf);
> #endif
>
> send_msg_{no}_fragmentation(nt, msg, buf, extradata_len, release_len)
> ...
> }
My thinking was to handle it like the release.
Print it at the send_msg_no_fragmentation() stage directly
into the static buffer. Does that get hairy coding-wise?
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2025-01-18 2:35 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 14+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2025-01-15 13:35 [PATCH net-next v2 0/5] netconsole: Add support for CPU population Breno Leitao
2025-01-15 13:35 ` [PATCH net-next v2 1/5] netconsole: Rename userdata to extradata Breno Leitao
2025-01-15 13:35 ` [PATCH net-next v2 2/5] netconsole: Helper to count number of used entries Breno Leitao
2025-01-15 13:35 ` [PATCH net-next v2 3/5] netconsole: add support for sysdata and CPU population Breno Leitao
2025-01-17 1:44 ` Jakub Kicinski
2025-01-17 11:02 ` Breno Leitao
2025-01-18 2:35 ` Jakub Kicinski [this message]
2025-01-20 17:30 ` Breno Leitao
2025-01-20 19:06 ` Jakub Kicinski
2025-01-24 15:28 ` Breno Leitao
2025-01-15 13:35 ` [PATCH net-next v2 4/5] netconsole: selftest: test for sysdata CPU Breno Leitao
2025-01-15 13:35 ` [PATCH net-next v2 5/5] netconsole: docs: Add documentation for CPU number auto-population Breno Leitao
2025-01-15 22:56 ` Randy Dunlap
2025-01-16 9:31 ` Breno Leitao
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