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Date:      Sat, 12 Mar 2022 18:44:07 +0100
From:      Alexander Leidinger <Alexander@leidinger.net>
To:        Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com>
Cc:        FreeBSD Current <current@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: What are the in-kernel functions to print human readable timestamps (bintime)?
Message-ID:  <20220312184407.Horde.T5lVaVvzo9-ulIE4UZaKY1H@webmail.leidinger.net>
In-Reply-To: <CANCZdfoEOY6%2BokeVJLDwTF5qXxwYs-Wupn6o6JvH-OAO3oj=JQ@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <20220311105149.Horde.uO0yyQjwC3xmwZvuZWV1ADl@webmail.leidinger.net> <CANCZdfoEOY6%2BokeVJLDwTF5qXxwYs-Wupn6o6JvH-OAO3oj=JQ@mail.gmail.com>

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Quoting Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com> (from Fri, 11 Mar 2022 08:57:33 -0700)=
:

> On Fri, Mar 11, 2022 at 2:52 AM Alexander Leidinger <Alexander@leidinger.=
net>
> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm looking for a function to convert bintime to a human readable
>> format in the kernel... and what is the usual format we use?
>>
>
> Yes. We don't generally log it.

Would it be acceptable in this particular case (or should I keep this=20=20
change=20for me)?

I have to check out the kern.msgbuf_show_timestamp part in this=20=20
thread,=20which looks interesting. It may fit my needs here.

>> The use case for this is: if something throws a log from the kernel
>> about a signal, I want to know when it happened, or in terms of code
>> see below (tabs are most probably messed up).
>>
>> Do we have some kind of policy in terms of kernel messages and
>> timestamps? Like "do not commit logging with timestamps"?
>
>
> Correct. The kernel doesn't know enough to properly render timestamps,
> nor should it. It's a lot more complicated than you'd expect, and the
> simple,
> naive implementation has too many flaws...

I'm aware that it is complicated. IMO too complicated for a full=20=20
implementation=20which will satisfy all needs.

>> I have the
>> code below because I needed it at least once and think something like
>> this (in a human readably shape) would be beneficial to have in the
>> tree.
>>
>
> I really don't want to see code like that in the tree. Having it per-mess=
age
> in an ad-hoc manner strikes me as quite unwise, since how do you interpre=
t
> it after the fact, especially in the face of adjustments to boottime for =
any
> time adjustments that happen after the event.

Sorry, I was not verbose enough in my mail it seems. I do _not_ want=20=20
to=20commit this code like it is. I was looking for stuff which could=20=20
print=20something human readable, like "2022-12-03 14:23:22.45=20=20
'kernel-time'"=20(just as an example). I don't want to push the TZ into=20=
=20
the=20kernel, or the knowledge if the cmos clock is set to localtime or=20=
=20
UTC.=20I want to provide an admin with a way to determine when such a=20=20
message=20may have printed. Currently there is no way to know at which=20=
=20
time=20it was printed. The admin needs to know if the clock is set in=20=20
UTC=20or localtime, and how to calculate the wall-clock time from this,=20=
=20
which=20is less heavy on the implementation and provides a mean to=20=20
correlate=20the mesage with some action on the machine.

> Now, having said that, having good timestamps in the dmesg buffer is
> a desirable feature. 'Good' is subjective here, and there are times early
> in boot where it's simply not possible to get a time better than '0' unti=
l
> the timehands are ticking...  But the dmesg buffer has more than what
> dmesg prints: it has syslog'd things (at least some of them) as well.
> There's
> also a priority that some lines have. <3>Foo, for example. It would be
> better,
> imho, to add a timestamp to the start of the lines (perhaps optionally
> since that might be expensive in $HUGE systems, or at times of
> extreme dmesg spew and the could be omitted in those cases).
> If you are interested in just the log messages, it wouldn't be terrible
> since we already add stuff to what's printed for the priority. We could s=
ay
> <3,seconds-since-boot.fracsec> instead of just <3> and hack dmesg
> to print the right thing.

 From the other message in the thread it looks like=20=20
kern.msgbuf_show_timestamp=20is what you describe here?
And it looks like kern.msgbuf_show_timestamp is not the same as=20=20
printing=20a timestamp to the console... (it looks like the timestamp is=20=
=20
printed=20in the dmesg, but not to the console, which is what I have in=20=
=20
mind=20for this particular message... respectively could be added log()=20=
=20
with=20a sysctl to activate it or not).

Bye,
Alexander.

> Warner
>
>
>> Code:
>> ---snip---
>> diff --git a/sys/kern/kern_sig.c b/sys/kern/kern_sig.c
>> index 4a15bd45355..a83eebe0736 100644
>> --- a/sys/kern/kern_sig.c
>> +++ b/sys/kern/kern_sig.c
>> @@ -80,6 +80,7 @@ __FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
>>   #include <sys/sysent.h>
>>   #include <sys/syslog.h>
>>   #include <sys/sysproto.h>
>> +#include <sys/time.h>
>>   #include <sys/timers.h>
>>   #include <sys/unistd.h>
>>   #include <sys/wait.h>
>> @@ -3440,14 +3441,18 @@ sigexit(struct thread *td, int sig)
>>                   */
>>                  if (coredump(td) =3D=3D 0)
>>                          sig |=3D WCOREFLAG;
>> -               if (kern_logsigexit)
>> +               if (kern_logsigexit) {
>> +                       struct bintime now;
>> +
>> +                       getbintime(&now);
>>                          log(LOG_INFO,
>> -                           "pid %d (%s), jid %d, uid %d: exited on "
>> -                           "signal %d%s\n", p->p_pid, p->p_comm,
>> +                           "%zd: pid %d (%s), jid %d, uid %d: exited on=
 "
>> +                           "signal %d%s\n", now.sec, p->p_pid, p->p_com=
m,
>>                              p->p_ucred->cr_prison->pr_id,
>>                              td->td_ucred->cr_uid,
>>                              sig &~ WCOREFLAG,
>>                              sig & WCOREFLAG ? " (core dumped)" : "");
>> +               }
>>          } else
>>                  PROC_UNLOCK(p);
>>          exit1(td, 0, sig);
>> ---snip---
>>
>> Bye,
>> Alexander.
>>
>> --
>> http://www.Leidinger.net Alexander@Leidinger.net: PGP 0x8F31830F9F2772BF
>> http://www.FreeBSD.org    netchild@FreeBSD.org  : PGP 0x8F31830F9F2772BF
>>


--=20
http://www.Leidinger.net=20Alexander@Leidinger.net: PGP 0x8F31830F9F2772BF
http://www.FreeBSD.org    netchild@FreeBSD.org  : PGP 0x8F31830F9F2772BF

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