[1/1] powerpc/xmon: Paged output for paca display

Sam Bobroff sam.bobroff at au1.ibm.com
Thu Aug 20 10:42:47 AEST 2015


On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 04:26:32PM +1000, Michael Ellerman wrote:
> On Fri, 2015-14-08 at 02:55:14 UTC, Sam bobroff wrote:
> > The paca display is already more than 24 lines, which can be problematic
> > if you have an old school 80x24 terminal, or more likely you are on a
> > virtual terminal which does not scroll for whatever reason.
> > 
> > This adds an optional letter to the "dp" and "dpa" xmon commands
> > ("dpp" and "dppa"), which will enable a "per-page" display (with 16
> > line pages): the first page  will be displayed and if there was data
> > that didn't fit, it will display a message indicating that the user can
> > use enter to display the next page. The intent is that this feels
> > similar to the way the memory display functions work.
> > 
> > This is implemented by running over the entire output both for the
> > initial command and for each subsequent page: the visible part is
> > clipped out by checking line numbers. Handling the empty command as
> > "more" is done by writing a special command into a static buffer that
> > indicates where to move the sliding visibility window. This is similar
> > to the approach used for the memory dump commands except that the
> > state data is encoded into the "last_cmd" string, rather than a set of
> > static variables. The memory dump commands could probably be rewritten
> > to make use of the same buffer and remove their other static
> > variables.
> > 
> > Sample output:
> > 
> > 0:mon> dpp1
> > paca for cpu 0x1 @ c00000000fdc0480:
> >  possible         = yes
> >  present          = yes
> >  online           = yes
> >  lock_token       = 0x8000            	(0x8)
> >  paca_index       = 0x1               	(0xa)
> >  kernel_toc       = 0xc000000000eb2400	(0x10)
> >  kernelbase       = 0xc000000000000000	(0x18)
> >  kernel_msr       = 0xb000000000001032	(0x20)
> >  emergency_sp     = 0xc00000003ffe8000	(0x28)
> >  mc_emergency_sp  = 0xc00000003ffe4000	(0x2e0)
> >  in_mce           = 0x0               	(0x2e8)
> >  data_offset      = 0x7f170000        	(0x30)
> >  hw_cpu_id        = 0x8               	(0x38)
> >  cpu_start        = 0x1               	(0x3a)
> >  kexec_state      = 0x0               	(0x3b)
> > [Enter for next page]
> > 0:mon>
> >  __current        = 0xc00000007e696620	(0x290)
> >  kstack           = 0xc00000007e6ebe30	(0x298)
> >  stab_rr          = 0xb               	(0x2a0)
> >  saved_r1         = 0xc00000007ef37860	(0x2a8)
> >  trap_save        = 0x0               	(0x2b8)
> >  soft_enabled     = 0x0               	(0x2ba)
> >  irq_happened     = 0x1               	(0x2bb)
> >  io_sync          = 0x0               	(0x2bc)
> >  irq_work_pending = 0x0               	(0x2bd)
> >  nap_state_lost   = 0x0               	(0x2be)
> > 0:mon>
> > 
> > (Based on a similar patch by Michael Ellerman <mpe at ellerman.id.au>
> > "[v2] powerpc/xmon: Allow limiting the size of the paca display".
> > This patch is an alternative and cannot coexist with the original.)
> 
> 
> So this is nice, but ... the diff is twice the size of my version, plus 128
> bytes of BSS, so I'm not sure the added benefit is sufficient to justify the
> added code complexity.
> 
> But you can convince me otherwise if you feel strongly about it.
> 
> cheers

I do think the output is a lot better paged like this :-)

The 128 byte buffer is a lot more than it needs for this particular command; it
could quite comfortably be lowered to about 32 (I was leaving space for other
commands to use it but there aren't any so far). I'll do this and repost.

Also, because the last_cmd_buf system is not specific to the paca display, it
could be used by the other paged commands (like the memory dumps). If we did
this we could (probably) remove ndump, nidump and ncsum which are all longs,
although I haven't worked out how much buffer space would be needed in
last_cmd_buf to support these (they have their own paging code but the
positional information could be stored in the string buffer). It's probably not
much work but might be a bit tricky. Do you think it's worth doing?

Since we're looking at memory usage, it looks like "tmpstr[128]" could be
removed without much work, saving 128 bytes and removing an unnecessary global
variable. If it actually turns out to be easy to do I'll post a separate patch.

Thanks for the revew,
Sam.



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