forked from Minki/linux
tracepoints: Add helper to test if tracepoint is enabled in a header
As tracepoints are discouraged from being added in a header because it can cause side effects if other tracepoints are in headers, as well as bloat the kernel as the trace_<tracepoint>() function is not a small inline, the common workaround is to add a function call that calls a wrapper function in a C file that then calls the tracepoint. But as function calls add overhead, this function should only be called when the tracepoint in question is enabled. To get around this overhead, a static_branch can be used to only have the tracepoint wrapper get called when the tracepoint is enabled. Add a tracepoint_enabled(tp) macro that gets passed the name of the tracepoint, and this becomes a static_branch that is enabled when the tracepoint is enabled and is a nop when the tracepoint is disabled. Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt (VMware) <rostedt@goodmis.org>
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@ -146,3 +146,30 @@ with jump labels and avoid conditional branches.
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define tracepoints. Check http://lwn.net/Articles/379903,
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http://lwn.net/Articles/381064 and http://lwn.net/Articles/383362
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for a series of articles with more details.
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If you require calling a tracepoint from a header file, it is not
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recommended to call one directly or to use the trace_<tracepoint>_enabled()
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function call, as tracepoints in header files can have side effects if a
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header is included from a file that has CREATE_TRACE_POINTS set, as
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well as the trace_<tracepoint>() is not that small of an inline
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and can bloat the kernel if used by other inlined functions. Instead,
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include tracepoint-defs.h and use tracepoint_enabled().
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In a C file::
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void do_trace_foo_bar_wrapper(args)
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{
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trace_foo_bar(args);
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}
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In the header file::
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DECLARE_TRACEPOINT(foo_bar);
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static inline void some_inline_function()
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{
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[..]
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if (tracepoint_enabled(foo_bar))
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do_trace_foo_bar_wrapper(args);
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[..]
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}
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@ -48,4 +48,38 @@ struct bpf_raw_event_map {
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u32 writable_size;
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} __aligned(32);
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/*
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* If a tracepoint needs to be called from a header file, it is not
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* recommended to call it directly, as tracepoints in header files
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* may cause side-effects and bloat the kernel. Instead, use
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* tracepoint_enabled() to test if the tracepoint is enabled, then if
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* it is, call a wrapper function defined in a C file that will then
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* call the tracepoint.
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*
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* For "trace_foo_bar()", you would need to create a wrapper function
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* in a C file to call trace_foo_bar():
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* void do_trace_foo_bar(args) { trace_foo_bar(args); }
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* Then in the header file, declare the tracepoint:
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* DECLARE_TRACEPOINT(foo_bar);
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* And call your wrapper:
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* static inline void some_inlined_function() {
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* [..]
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* if (tracepoint_enabled(foo_bar))
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* do_trace_foo_bar(args);
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* [..]
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* }
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*
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* Note: tracepoint_enabled(foo_bar) is equivalent to trace_foo_bar_enabled()
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* but is safe to have in headers, where trace_foo_bar_enabled() is not.
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*/
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#define DECLARE_TRACEPOINT(tp) \
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extern struct tracepoint __tracepoint_##tp
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#ifdef CONFIG_TRACEPOINTS
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# define tracepoint_enabled(tp) \
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static_key_false(&(__tracepoint_##tp).key)
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#else
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# define tracepoint_enabled(tracepoint) false
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#endif
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#endif
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