[PATCH 19/30] panic: Add the panic hypervisor notifier list
Guilherme G. Piccoli
gpiccoli at igalia.com
Wed May 18 06:24:39 PDT 2022
On 18/05/2022 04:33, Petr Mladek wrote:
> [...]
> Anyway, I would distinguish it the following way.
>
> + If the notifier is preserving kernel log then it should be ideally
> treated as kmsg_dump().
>
> + It the notifier is saving another debugging data then it better
> fits into the "hypervisor" notifier list.
>
>
Definitely, I agree - it's logical, since we want more info in the logs,
and happens some notifiers running in the informational list do that,
like ftrace_on_oops for example.
> Regarding the reliability. From my POV, any panic notifier enabled
> in a generic kernel should be reliable with more than 99,9%.
> Otherwise, they should not be in the notifier list at all.
>
> An exception would be a platform-specific notifier that is
> called only on some specific platform and developers maintaining
> this platform agree on this.
>
> The value "99,9%" is arbitrary. I am not sure if it is realistic
> even in the other code, for example, console_flush_on_panic()
> or emergency_restart(). I just want to point out that the border
> should be rather high. Otherwise we would back in the situation
> where people would want to disable particular notifiers.
>
Totally agree, these percentages are just an example, 50% is ridiculous
low reliability in my example heheh
But some notifiers deep dive in abstraction layers (like regmap or GPIO
stuff) and it's hard to determine the probability of a lock issue (take
a spinlock already taken inside regmap code and live-lock forever, for
example). These are better to run, if possible, later than kdump or even
info list.
Thanks again for the good analysis Petr!
Cheers,
Guilherme
More information about the kexec
mailing list