Date: Fri, 4 Aug 2006 16:44:07 -0400 From: John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> To: Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@xcllnt.net> Cc: Yar Tikhiy <yar@comp.chem.msu.su>, src-committers@freebsd.org, cvs-all@freebsd.org, cvs-src@freebsd.org, Sam Leffler <sam@errno.com> Subject: Re: cvs commit: src/sys/net if_vlan.c Message-ID: <200608041644.08533.jhb@freebsd.org> In-Reply-To: <20060804200154.GC31805@ns1.xcllnt.net> References: <200608030959.k739x9N6007207@repoman.freebsd.org> <200608041314.24161.jhb@freebsd.org> <20060804200154.GC31805@ns1.xcllnt.net>
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On Friday 04 August 2006 16:01, Marcel Moolenaar wrote: > On Fri, Aug 04, 2006 at 01:14:22PM -0400, John Baldwin wrote: > > > > > > So, putting the kdb_backtrace() under KDB is not a matter of said > > > function not being present without KDB, it's that we don't want > > > to emit backtraces when debugging is not enabled. Backtraces are > > > a debugging tool and it makes sense to emit them only when the > > > kernel is configured for debugging. > > > > In practice this ends up being redundant though as to have kdb_backtrace() > > actually do anything you have to have DDB in your kernel config, which > > requires KDB. > > That's really an implementation detail. What if we get a new debugger > backend that allows backtraces? What if the GDB backend is extended to > allow backtraces? In that case the user has specifically requested debugger support in their kernel (whether it be DDB, GDB, or FOODB). > The point is that kdb_backtrace() is there if you want a backtrace and > you call it based on whatever option that makes sense at the call-site > or even unconditionally if that's the right thing. > Whether there's actually a backend that can make a backtrace is really > a seperate issue. We just happen to implement backtracing and unwinding > by debuggers, but with an unwinder in the kernel on ia64, we really > don't need a debugger in order to make a backtrace and it's not that > unrealistic that I create a backend that can only do backtraces... To be honest, as someone who works with bug reports, I'd actually like backtraces up front w/o requiring the user to compile a custom kernel, etc. Having a simple backend in place and kdb_backtrace()'s where relevant would be very handy. :) > > Places that call kdb_enter() aren't all #ifdef KDB IIRC. It's > > just a feature that kdb_foo() functions become NOPs when the kernel isn't > > configured for debugging, so I think the #ifdef KDB's would be redundant. > > None of the kdb_*() functions in src/sys/kern/subr_kdb.c turn into > NOPs when option KDB is not present. They are all unconditionally > functional by design and should therefore be called conditionally > by consequence. Well, given that separation, I'm not sure KDB is the right option to make calls conditional. Rather, some specific is-debugging-enabled? option (like INARIANTS or FOO_DEBUG) should be used instead. i.e.: #ifdef FOO_DEBUG if (foo_bad) { printf("foo is bad\n"); kdb_backtrace(); } #endif I don't think that warrants an extra #ifdef KDB. -- John Baldwin
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