Date: Tue, 19 Feb 2013 11:33:08 -0500 From: John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> To: freebsd-arch@freebsd.org Cc: Kirk McKusick <mckusick@mckusick.com>, Christoph Mallon <christoph.mallon@gmx.de>, Garance A Drosehn <gad@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: Proposal: Unify printing the function name in panic messages() Message-ID: <201302191133.08938.jhb@freebsd.org> In-Reply-To: <51194D73.2010804@FreeBSD.org> References: <51141E33.4080103@gmx.de> <51194D73.2010804@FreeBSD.org>
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On Monday, February 11, 2013 2:58:43 pm Garance A Drosehn wrote: > On 2/7/13 4:35 PM, Christoph Mallon wrote: > > > > currently the style for printing panic messages varies greatly. > > Here are some examples of the most common styles: > > panic("just a message"); > > panic("function_name: message"); > > panic("wrong_function_name: message"); > > panic("%s: message", __func__); > > Especially the third -- a wrong function name being shown -- is annoying > > and quite common. I propose a simple macro, which wraps panic() and > > ensures that the right name is shown always by using __func__. > > > Do you have suggestions to improve this proposal? > > > > Chrsopth > > While I'm replying to the first message in the thread, I've read > most of the messages up to this point. I do very little development > in the kernel, but as it happens I've spent the last three weeks > untangling a somewhat large C-based project which has similar > messages, and due to the nature of the project it's nearly impossible > to run debuggers on it. So I can't just pop into the debugger and > get some kind of stack trace. > > That project uses __func__ on some printf()s, and __FILE__ on others. > I found it quite useful there. When tracking down a few specific > bugs there were multiple places which could generate the error > message I was looking for, so I added __LINE__ to those printf()s. > This was helpful, particularly in one case where the entire message > was specified as a constant string in one place, but the same error > *could* be printed out by a different printf which built the message > via format specifiers. So scanning for the message would pick up > the first case as an obvious hit, and never notice the second case. > And, of course, it turned out that the message in my log file was > coming from that second case. > > So maybe it'd be good to have two panic options. One with the > __LINE__ number, and one without. Here's a (possibly) useful suggestion. Rather than having a macro that alters the format string, perhaps change panic() to be this: static void dopanic(const char *func, const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, ...); #define panic(...) do_panic(__func__, __FILE__, __LINE__, __VA_ARGS__) You could then use a runtime sysctl to decide if you want to log the extra metadata along with a panic. Keeping the "raw" format string works better for my testing stuff since I have a hook at the start of panic() and it can use the string without the extra metadata (and even possibly supply the metadata in the 'catch' phase so I can ignore panics based on that metadata. However, one consideration with this is how much bloat comes from having the various __func__ and __FILE__ strings (esp. the latter). You may want to have an option to strip them out (see LOCK_FILE/LOCK_LINE where we use NULL instead in production kernels when calling locking primitive routines to avoid the bloat of filenames). Also, if you want to use __FILE__ at all you will likely need something akin to 'fixup_filename()' from subr_witness.c. I think that one is tailored more to old style kernel builds and probably doesn't DTRT for the 'make buildkernel' case. It maybe that fixup_filename() should just be basename() at this point. -- John Baldwin
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