| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ |
| .. Copyright (c) 2017 Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org> |
| |
| Logging in U-Boot |
| ================= |
| |
| Introduction |
| ------------ |
| |
| U-Boot's internal operation involves many different steps and actions. From |
| setting up the board to displaying a start-up screen to loading an Operating |
| System, there are many component parts each with many actions. |
| |
| Most of the time this internal detail is not useful. Displaying it on the |
| console would delay booting (U-Boot's primary purpose) and confuse users. |
| |
| But for digging into what is happening in a particular area, or for debugging |
| a problem it is often useful to see what U-Boot is doing in more detail than |
| is visible from the basic console output. |
| |
| U-Boot's logging feature aims to satisfy this goal for both users and |
| developers. |
| |
| Logging levels |
| -------------- |
| |
| There are a number logging levels available. |
| |
| See enum :c:type:`log_level_t` |
| |
| Logging category |
| ---------------- |
| |
| Logging can come from a wide variety of places within U-Boot. Each log message |
| has a category which is intended to allow messages to be filtered according to |
| their source. |
| |
| See enum :c:type:`log_category_t` |
| |
| Enabling logging |
| ---------------- |
| |
| The following options are used to enable logging at compile time: |
| |
| * CONFIG_LOG - Enables the logging system |
| * CONFIG_LOG_MAX_LEVEL - Max log level to build (anything higher is compiled |
| out) |
| * CONFIG_LOG_CONSOLE - Enable writing log records to the console |
| |
| If CONFIG_LOG is not set, then no logging will be available. |
| |
| The above have SPL and TPL versions also, e.g. CONFIG_SPL_LOG_MAX_LEVEL and |
| CONFIG_TPL_LOG_MAX_LEVEL. |
| |
| If logging is disabled, the default behaviour is to output any message at |
| level LOGL_INFO and below. If logging is disabled and DEBUG is defined (at |
| the very top of a C file) then any message at LOGL_DEBUG will be written. |
| |
| Temporary logging within a single file |
| -------------------------------------- |
| |
| Sometimes it is useful to turn on logging just in one file. You can use this |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| #define LOG_DEBUG |
| |
| to enable building in of all logging statements in a single file. Put it at |
| the top of the file, before any #includes and any message in the file will be |
| written, regardless of the value of CONFIG_LOG_DEFAULT_LEVEL. |
| |
| Using DEBUG |
| ----------- |
| |
| U-Boot has traditionally used a #define called DEBUG to enable debugging on a |
| file-by-file basis but LOG_DEBUG are intended to replace it with the logging |
| facilities; DEBUG is activated when LOG_DEBUG is activated. |
| |
| With logging enabled, debug() statements are interpreted as logging output |
| with a level of LOGL_DEBUG and a category of LOG_CATEGORY. |
| |
| With logging disabled, the debug() macro compiles to a printf() statement |
| if DEBUG is enabled and to an empty statement if not. |
| |
| Logging statements |
| ------------------ |
| |
| The main logging function is: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| log(category, level, format_string, ...) |
| |
| Also debug() and error() will generate log records - these use LOG_CATEGORY |
| as the category, so you should #define this right at the top of the source |
| file to ensure the category is correct. |
| |
| Generally each log format_string ends with a newline. If it does not, then the |
| next log statement will have the LOGRECF_CONT flag set. This can be used to |
| continue the statement on the same line as the previous one without emitting |
| new header information (such as category/level). This behaviour is implemented |
| with log_console. Here is an example that prints a list all on one line with |
| the tags at the start: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| log_debug("Here is a list:"); |
| for (i = 0; i < count; i++) |
| log_debug(" item %d", i); |
| log_debug("\n"); |
| |
| Also see the special category LOGL_CONT and level LOGC_CONT. |
| |
| You can also define CONFIG_LOG_ERROR_RETURN to enable the log_ret() macro. This |
| can be used whenever your function returns an error value: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| return log_ret(uclass_first_device_err(UCLASS_MMC, &dev)); |
| |
| This will write a log record when an error code is detected (a value < 0). This |
| can make it easier to trace errors that are generated deep in the call stack. |
| |
| The log_msg_ret() variant will print a short string if CONFIG_LOG_ERROR_RETURN |
| is enabled. So long as the string is unique within the function you can normally |
| determine exactly which call failed: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| ret = gpio_request_by_name(dev, "cd-gpios", 0, &desc, GPIOD_IS_IN); |
| if (ret) |
| return log_msg_ret("gpio", ret); |
| |
| Some functions return 0 for success and any other value is an error. For these, |
| log_retz() and log_msg_retz() are available. |
| |
| Convenience functions |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| A number of convenience functions are available to shorten the code needed |
| for logging: |
| |
| * log_err(_fmt...) |
| * log_warning(_fmt...) |
| * log_notice(_fmt...) |
| * log_info(_fmt...) |
| * log_debug(_fmt...) |
| * log_content(_fmt...) |
| * log_io(_fmt...) |
| |
| With these the log level is implicit in the name. The category is set by |
| LOG_CATEGORY, which you can only define once per file, above all #includes, e.g. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| #define LOG_CATEGORY LOGC_ALLOC |
| |
| or |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| #define LOG_CATEGORY UCLASS_SPI |
| |
| Remember that all uclasses IDs are log categories too. |
| |
| Logging destinations |
| -------------------- |
| |
| If logging information goes nowhere then it serves no purpose. U-Boot provides |
| several possible determinations for logging information, all of which can be |
| enabled or disabled independently: |
| |
| * console - goes to stdout |
| * syslog - broadcast RFC 3164 messages to syslog servers on UDP port 514 |
| |
| The syslog driver sends the value of environmental variable 'log_hostname' as |
| HOSTNAME if available. |
| |
| Filters |
| ------- |
| |
| Filters are attached to log drivers to control what those drivers emit. FIlters |
| can either allow or deny a log message when they match it. Only records which |
| are allowed by a filter make it to the driver. |
| |
| Filters can be based on several criteria: |
| |
| * minimum or maximum log level |
| * in a set of categories |
| * in a set of files |
| |
| If no filters are attached to a driver then a default filter is used, which |
| limits output to records with a level less than CONFIG_MAX_LOG_LEVEL. |
| |
| Log command |
| ----------- |
| |
| The 'log' command provides access to several features: |
| |
| * level - list log levels or set the default log level |
| * categories - list log categories |
| * drivers - list log drivers |
| * filter-list - list filters |
| * filter-add - add a new filter |
| * filter-remove - remove filters |
| * format - access the console log format |
| * rec - output a log record |
| |
| Type 'help log' for details. |
| |
| Log format |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| You can control the log format using the 'log format' command. The basic |
| format is:: |
| |
| LEVEL.category,file.c:123-func() message |
| |
| In the above, file.c:123 is the filename where the log record was generated and |
| func() is the function name. By default ('log format default') only the message |
| is displayed on the console. You can control which fields are present, but not |
| the field order. |
| |
| Adding Filters |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| To add new filters at runtime, use the 'log filter-add' command. For example, to |
| suppress messages from the SPI and MMC subsystems, run:: |
| |
| log filter-add -D -c spi -c mmc |
| |
| You will also need to add another filter to allow other messages (because the |
| default filter no longer applies):: |
| |
| log filter-add -A -l info |
| |
| Log levels may be either symbolic names (like above) or numbers. For example, to |
| disable all debug and above (log level 7) messages from ``drivers/core/lists.c`` |
| and ``drivers/core/ofnode.c``, run:: |
| |
| log filter-add -D -f drivers/core/lists.c,drivers/core/ofnode.c -L 7 |
| |
| To view active filters, use the 'log filter-list' command. Some example output |
| is:: |
| |
| => log filter-list |
| num policy level categories files |
| 2 deny >= DEBUG drivers/core/lists.c,drivers/core/ofnode.c |
| 0 deny <= IO spi |
| mmc |
| 1 allow <= INFO |
| |
| Note that filters are processed in-order from top to bottom, not in the order of |
| their filter number. Filters are added to the top of the list if they deny when |
| they match, and to the bottom if they allow when they match. For more |
| information, consult the usage of the 'log' command, by running 'help log'. |
| |
| Code size |
| --------- |
| |
| Code size impact depends largely on what is enabled. The following numbers are |
| generated by 'buildman -S' for snow, which is a Thumb-2 board (all units in |
| bytes):: |
| |
| This series: adds bss +20.0 data +4.0 rodata +4.0 text +44.0 |
| CONFIG_LOG: bss -52.0 data +92.0 rodata -635.0 text +1048.0 |
| CONFIG_LOG_MAX_LEVEL=7: bss +188.0 data +4.0 rodata +49183.0 text +98124.0 |
| |
| The last option turns every debug() statement into a logging call, which |
| bloats the code hugely. The advantage is that it is then possible to enable |
| all logging within U-Boot. |
| |
| To Do |
| ----- |
| |
| There are lots of useful additions that could be made. None of the below is |
| implemented! If you do one, please add a test in test/log/log_test.c |
| log filter-add -D -f drivers/core/lists.c,drivers/core/ofnode.c -l 6 |
| Convenience functions to support setting the category: |
| |
| * log_arch(level, format_string, ...) - category LOGC_ARCH |
| * log_board(level, format_string, ...) - category LOGC_BOARD |
| * log_core(level, format_string, ...) - category LOGC_CORE |
| * log_dt(level, format_string, ...) - category LOGC_DT |
| |
| More logging destinations: |
| |
| * device - goes to a device (e.g. serial) |
| * buffer - recorded in a memory buffer |
| |
| Convert debug() statements in the code to log() statements |
| |
| Convert error() statements in the code to log() statements |
| |
| Figure out what to do with BUG(), BUG_ON() and warn_non_spl() |
| |
| Add a way to browse log records |
| |
| Add a way to record log records for browsing using an external tool |
| |
| Add commands to add and remove log devices |
| |
| Allow sharing of printf format strings in log records to reduce storage size |
| for large numbers of log records |
| |
| Consider making log() calls emit an automatic newline, perhaps with a logn() |
| function to avoid that |
| |
| Passing log records through to linux (e.g. via device tree /chosen) |
| |
| Provide a command to access the number of log records generated, and the |
| number dropped due to them being generated before the log system was ready. |
| |
| Add a printf() format string pragma so that log statements are checked properly |
| |
| Add a command to delete existing log records. |