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authorSteven Rostedt <srostedt@redhat.com>2009-03-05 10:35:56 -0500
committerSteven Rostedt <srostedt@redhat.com>2009-03-05 10:35:56 -0500
commit2002c258faaa8f89543df284fdbaa9e4b171547f (patch)
tree225ad21ef3714638d67136db5a5cfc399d81c133 /include/linux/kernel.h
parent526211bc58c4b3265352801c5a7f469af5c34711 (diff)
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tracing: add tracing_on/tracing_off to kernel.h
Impact: cleanup The functions tracing_start/tracing_stop have been moved to kernel.h. These are not the functions a developer most likely wants to use when they want to insert a place to stop tracing and restart it from user space. tracing_start/tracing_stop was created to work with things like suspend to ram, where even calling smp_processor_id() can crash the system. The tracing_start/tracing_stop was used to stop the tracer from doing anything. These are still light weight functions, but add a bit more overhead to be able to stop the tracers. They also have no interface back to userland. That is, if the kernel calls tracing_stop, userland can not start tracing. What a developer most likely wants to use is tracing_on/tracing_off. These are very light weight functions (simply sets or clears a bit). These functions just stop recording into the ring buffer. The tracers don't even know that this happens except that they would receive NULL from the ring_buffer_lock_reserve function. Also, there's a way for the user land to enable or disable this bit. In debugfs/tracing/tracing_on, a user may echo "0" (same as tracing_off()) or echo "1" (same as tracing_on()) into this file. This becomes handy when a kernel developer is debugging and wants tracing to turn off when it hits an anomaly. Then the developer can examine the trace, and restart tracing if they want to try again (echo 1 > tracing_on). This patch moves the prototypes for tracing_on/tracing_off to kernel.h and comments their use, so that a kernel developer will know how to use them. Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt <srostedt@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'include/linux/kernel.h')
-rw-r--r--include/linux/kernel.h29
1 files changed, 28 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/include/linux/kernel.h b/include/linux/kernel.h
index 08bf5da86676..d4614a8a034b 100644
--- a/include/linux/kernel.h
+++ b/include/linux/kernel.h
@@ -369,8 +369,35 @@ static inline char *pack_hex_byte(char *buf, u8 byte)
/*
* General tracing related utility functions - trace_printk(),
- * tracing_start()/tracing_stop:
+ * tracing_on/tracing_off and tracing_start()/tracing_stop
+ *
+ * Use tracing_on/tracing_off when you want to quickly turn on or off
+ * tracing. It simply enables or disables the recording of the trace events.
+ * This also corresponds to the user space debugfs/tracing/tracing_on
+ * file, which gives a means for the kernel and userspace to interact.
+ * Place a tracing_off() in the kernel where you want tracing to end.
+ * From user space, examine the trace, and then echo 1 > tracing_on
+ * to continue tracing.
+ *
+ * tracing_stop/tracing_start has slightly more overhead. It is used
+ * by things like suspend to ram where disabling the recording of the
+ * trace is not enough, but tracing must actually stop because things
+ * like calling smp_processor_id() may crash the system.
+ *
+ * Most likely, you want to use tracing_on/tracing_off.
*/
+#ifdef CONFIG_RING_BUFFER
+void tracing_on(void);
+void tracing_off(void);
+/* trace_off_permanent stops recording with no way to bring it back */
+void tracing_off_permanent(void);
+int tracing_is_on(void);
+#else
+static inline void tracing_on(void) { }
+static inline void tracing_off(void) { }
+static inline void tracing_off_permanent(void) { }
+static inline int tracing_is_on(void) { return 0; }
+#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_TRACING
extern void tracing_start(void);
extern void tracing_stop(void);
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