1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3 ================================== 4 relay interface (formerly relayfs) 5 ================================== 6 7 The relay interface provides a means for kernel applications to 8 efficiently log and transfer large quantities of data from the kernel 9 to userspace via user-defined 'relay channels'. 10 11 A 'relay channel' is a kernel->user data relay mechanism implemented 12 as a set of per-cpu kernel buffers ('channel buffers'), each 13 represented as a regular file ('relay file') in user space. Kernel 14 clients write into the channel buffers using efficient write 15 functions; these automatically log into the current cpu's channel 16 buffer. User space applications mmap() or read() from the relay files 17 and retrieve the data as it becomes available. The relay files 18 themselves are files created in a host filesystem, e.g. debugfs, and 19 are associated with the channel buffers using the API described below. 20 21 The format of the data logged into the channel buffers is completely 22 up to the kernel client; the relay interface does however provide 23 hooks which allow kernel clients to impose some structure on the 24 buffer data. The relay interface doesn't implement any form of data 25 filtering - this also is left to the kernel client. The purpose is to 26 keep things as simple as possible. 27 28 This document provides an overview of the relay interface API. The 29 details of the function parameters are documented along with the 30 functions in the relay interface code - please see that for details. 31 32 Semantics 33 ========= 34 35 Each relay channel has one buffer per CPU, each buffer has one or more 36 sub-buffers. Messages are written to the first sub-buffer until it is 37 too full to contain a new message, in which case it is written to 38 the next (if available). Messages are never split across sub-buffers. 39 At this point, userspace can be notified so it empties the first 40 sub-buffer, while the kernel continues writing to the next. 41 42 When notified that a sub-buffer is full, the kernel knows how many 43 bytes of it are padding i.e. unused space occurring because a complete 44 message couldn't fit into a sub-buffer. Userspace can use this 45 knowledge to copy only valid data. 46 47 After copying it, userspace can notify the kernel that a sub-buffer 48 has been consumed. 49 50 A relay channel can operate in a mode where it will overwrite data not 51 yet collected by userspace, and not wait for it to be consumed. 52 53 The relay channel itself does not provide for communication of such 54 data between userspace and kernel, allowing the kernel side to remain 55 simple and not impose a single interface on userspace. It does 56 provide a set of examples and a separate helper though, described 57 below. 58 59 The read() interface both removes padding and internally consumes the 60 read sub-buffers; thus in cases where read(2) is being used to drain 61 the channel buffers, special-purpose communication between kernel and 62 user isn't necessary for basic operation. 63 64 One of the major goals of the relay interface is to provide a low 65 overhead mechanism for conveying kernel data to userspace. While the 66 read() interface is easy to use, it's not as efficient as the mmap() 67 approach; the example code attempts to make the tradeoff between the 68 two approaches as small as possible. 69 70 klog and relay-apps example code 71 ================================ 72 73 The relay interface itself is ready to use, but to make things easier, 74 a couple simple utility functions and a set of examples are provided. 75 76 The relay-apps example tarball, available on the relay sourceforge 77 site, contains a set of self-contained examples, each consisting of a 78 pair of .c files containing boilerplate code for each of the user and 79 kernel sides of a relay application. When combined these two sets of 80 boilerplate code provide glue to easily stream data to disk, without 81 having to bother with mundane housekeeping chores. 82 83 The 'klog debugging functions' patch (klog.patch in the relay-apps 84 tarball) provides a couple of high-level logging functions to the 85 kernel which allow writing formatted text or raw data to a channel, 86 regardless of whether a channel to write into exists or not, or even 87 whether the relay interface is compiled into the kernel or not. These 88 functions allow you to put unconditional 'trace' statements anywhere 89 in the kernel or kernel modules; only when there is a 'klog handler' 90 registered will data actually be logged (see the klog and kleak 91 examples for details). 92 93 It is of course possible to use the relay interface from scratch, 94 i.e. without using any of the relay-apps example code or klog, but 95 you'll have to implement communication between userspace and kernel, 96 allowing both to convey the state of buffers (full, empty, amount of 97 padding). The read() interface both removes padding and internally 98 consumes the read sub-buffers; thus in cases where read(2) is being 99 used to drain the channel buffers, special-purpose communication 100 between kernel and user isn't necessary for basic operation. Things 101 such as buffer-full conditions would still need to be communicated via 102 some channel though. 103 104 klog and the relay-apps examples can be found in the relay-apps 105 tarball on http://relayfs.sourceforge.net 106 107 The relay interface user space API 108 ================================== 109 110 The relay interface implements basic file operations for user space 111 access to relay channel buffer data. Here are the file operations 112 that are available and some comments regarding their behavior: 113 114 =========== ============================================================ 115 open() enables user to open an _existing_ channel buffer. 116 117 mmap() results in channel buffer being mapped into the caller's 118 memory space. Note that you can't do a partial mmap - you 119 must map the entire file, which is NRBUF * SUBBUFSIZE. 120 121 read() read the contents of a channel buffer. The bytes read are 122 'consumed' by the reader, i.e. they won't be available 123 again to subsequent reads. If the channel is being used 124 in no-overwrite mode (the default), it can be read at any 125 time even if there's an active kernel writer. If the 126 channel is being used in overwrite mode and there are 127 active channel writers, results may be unpredictable - 128 users should make sure that all logging to the channel has 129 ended before using read() with overwrite mode. Sub-buffer 130 padding is automatically removed and will not be seen by 131 the reader. 132 133 sendfile() transfer data from a channel buffer to an output file 134 descriptor. Sub-buffer padding is automatically removed 135 and will not be seen by the reader. 136 137 poll() POLLIN/POLLRDNORM/POLLERR supported. User applications are 138 notified when sub-buffer boundaries are crossed. 139 140 close() decrements the channel buffer's refcount. When the refcount 141 reaches 0, i.e. when no process or kernel client has the 142 buffer open, the channel buffer is freed. 143 =========== ============================================================ 144 145 In order for a user application to make use of relay files, the 146 host filesystem must be mounted. For example:: 147 148 mount -t debugfs debugfs /sys/kernel/debug 149 150 .. Note:: 151 152 the host filesystem doesn't need to be mounted for kernel 153 clients to create or use channels - it only needs to be 154 mounted when user space applications need access to the buffer 155 data. 156 157 158 The relay interface kernel API 159 ============================== 160 161 Here's a summary of the API the relay interface provides to in-kernel clients: 162 163 TBD(curr. line MT:/API/) 164 channel management functions:: 165 166 relay_open(base_filename, parent, subbuf_size, n_subbufs, 167 callbacks, private_data) 168 relay_close(chan) 169 relay_flush(chan) 170 relay_reset(chan) 171 172 channel management typically called on instigation of userspace:: 173 174 relay_subbufs_consumed(chan, cpu, subbufs_consumed) 175 176 write functions:: 177 178 relay_write(chan, data, length) 179 __relay_write(chan, data, length) 180 relay_reserve(chan, length) 181 182 callbacks:: 183 184 subbuf_start(buf, subbuf, prev_subbuf, prev_padding) 185 buf_mapped(buf, filp) 186 buf_unmapped(buf, filp) 187 create_buf_file(filename, parent, mode, buf, is_global) 188 remove_buf_file(dentry) 189 190 helper functions:: 191 192 relay_buf_full(buf) 193 subbuf_start_reserve(buf, length) 194 195 196 Creating a channel 197 ------------------ 198 199 relay_open() is used to create a channel, along with its per-cpu 200 channel buffers. Each channel buffer will have an associated file 201 created for it in the host filesystem, which can be and mmapped or 202 read from in user space. The files are named basename0...basenameN-1 203 where N is the number of online cpus, and by default will be created 204 in the root of the filesystem (if the parent param is NULL). If you 205 want a directory structure to contain your relay files, you should 206 create it using the host filesystem's directory creation function, 207 e.g. debugfs_create_dir(), and pass the parent directory to 208 relay_open(). Users are responsible for cleaning up any directory 209 structure they create, when the channel is closed - again the host 210 filesystem's directory removal functions should be used for that, 211 e.g. debugfs_remove(). 212 213 In order for a channel to be created and the host filesystem's files 214 associated with its channel buffers, the user must provide definitions 215 for two callback functions, create_buf_file() and remove_buf_file(). 216 create_buf_file() is called once for each per-cpu buffer from 217 relay_open() and allows the user to create the file which will be used 218 to represent the corresponding channel buffer. The callback should 219 return the dentry of the file created to represent the channel buffer. 220 remove_buf_file() must also be defined; it's responsible for deleting 221 the file(s) created in create_buf_file() and is called during 222 relay_close(). 223 224 Here are some typical definitions for these callbacks, in this case 225 using debugfs:: 226 227 /* 228 * create_buf_file() callback. Creates relay file in debugfs. 229 */ 230 static struct dentry *create_buf_file_handler(const char *filename, 231 struct dentry *parent, 232 umode_t mode, 233 struct rchan_buf *buf, 234 int *is_global) 235 { 236 return debugfs_create_file(filename, mode, parent, buf, 237 &relay_file_operations); 238 } 239 240 /* 241 * remove_buf_file() callback. Removes relay file from debugfs. 242 */ 243 static int remove_buf_file_handler(struct dentry *dentry) 244 { 245 debugfs_remove(dentry); 246 247 return 0; 248 } 249 250 /* 251 * relay interface callbacks 252 */ 253 static struct rchan_callbacks relay_callbacks = 254 { 255 .create_buf_file = create_buf_file_handler, 256 .remove_buf_file = remove_buf_file_handler, 257 }; 258 259 And an example relay_open() invocation using them:: 260 261 chan = relay_open("cpu", NULL, SUBBUF_SIZE, N_SUBBUFS, &relay_callbacks, NULL); 262 263 If the create_buf_file() callback fails, or isn't defined, channel 264 creation and thus relay_open() will fail. 265 266 The total size of each per-cpu buffer is calculated by multiplying the 267 number of sub-buffers by the sub-buffer size passed into relay_open(). 268 The idea behind sub-buffers is that they're basically an extension of 269 double-buffering to N buffers, and they also allow applications to 270 easily implement random-access-on-buffer-boundary schemes, which can 271 be important for some high-volume applications. The number and size 272 of sub-buffers is completely dependent on the application and even for 273 the same application, different conditions will warrant different 274 values for these parameters at different times. Typically, the right 275 values to use are best decided after some experimentation; in general, 276 though, it's safe to assume that having only 1 sub-buffer is a bad 277 idea - you're guaranteed to either overwrite data or lose events 278 depending on the channel mode being used. 279 280 The create_buf_file() implementation can also be defined in such a way 281 as to allow the creation of a single 'global' buffer instead of the 282 default per-cpu set. This can be useful for applications interested 283 mainly in seeing the relative ordering of system-wide events without 284 the need to bother with saving explicit timestamps for the purpose of 285 merging/sorting per-cpu files in a postprocessing step. 286 287 To have relay_open() create a global buffer, the create_buf_file() 288 implementation should set the value of the is_global outparam to a 289 non-zero value in addition to creating the file that will be used to 290 represent the single buffer. In the case of a global buffer, 291 create_buf_file() and remove_buf_file() will be called only once. The 292 normal channel-writing functions, e.g. relay_write(), can still be 293 used - writes from any cpu will transparently end up in the global 294 buffer - but since it is a global buffer, callers should make sure 295 they use the proper locking for such a buffer, either by wrapping 296 writes in a spinlock, or by copying a write function from relay.h and 297 creating a local version that internally does the proper locking. 298 299 The private_data passed into relay_open() allows clients to associate 300 user-defined data with a channel, and is immediately available 301 (including in create_buf_file()) via chan->private_data or 302 buf->chan->private_data. 303 304 Buffer-only channels 305 -------------------- 306 307 These channels have no files associated and can be created with 308 relay_open(NULL, NULL, ...). Such channels are useful in scenarios such 309 as when doing early tracing in the kernel, before the VFS is up. In these 310 cases, one may open a buffer-only channel and then call 311 relay_late_setup_files() when the kernel is ready to handle files, 312 to expose the buffered data to the userspace. 313 314 Channel 'modes' 315 --------------- 316 317 relay channels can be used in either of two modes - 'overwrite' or 318 'no-overwrite'. The mode is entirely determined by the implementation 319 of the subbuf_start() callback, as described below. The default if no 320 subbuf_start() callback is defined is 'no-overwrite' mode. If the 321 default mode suits your needs, and you plan to use the read() 322 interface to retrieve channel data, you can ignore the details of this 323 section, as it pertains mainly to mmap() implementations. 324 325 In 'overwrite' mode, also known as 'flight recorder' mode, writes 326 continuously cycle around the buffer and will never fail, but will 327 unconditionally overwrite old data regardless of whether it's actually 328 been consumed. In no-overwrite mode, writes will fail, i.e. data will 329 be lost, if the number of unconsumed sub-buffers equals the total 330 number of sub-buffers in the channel. It should be clear that if 331 there is no consumer or if the consumer can't consume sub-buffers fast 332 enough, data will be lost in either case; the only difference is 333 whether data is lost from the beginning or the end of a buffer. 334 335 As explained above, a relay channel is made of up one or more 336 per-cpu channel buffers, each implemented as a circular buffer 337 subdivided into one or more sub-buffers. Messages are written into 338 the current sub-buffer of the channel's current per-cpu buffer via the 339 write functions described below. Whenever a message can't fit into 340 the current sub-buffer, because there's no room left for it, the 341 client is notified via the subbuf_start() callback that a switch to a 342 new sub-buffer is about to occur. The client uses this callback to 1) 343 initialize the next sub-buffer if appropriate 2) finalize the previous 344 sub-buffer if appropriate and 3) return a boolean value indicating 345 whether or not to actually move on to the next sub-buffer. 346 347 To implement 'no-overwrite' mode, the userspace client would provide 348 an implementation of the subbuf_start() callback something like the 349 following:: 350 351 static int subbuf_start(struct rchan_buf *buf, 352 void *subbuf, 353 void *prev_subbuf, 354 unsigned int prev_padding) 355 { 356 if (prev_subbuf) 357 *((unsigned *)prev_subbuf) = prev_padding; 358 359 if (relay_buf_full(buf)) 360 return 0; 361 362 subbuf_start_reserve(buf, sizeof(unsigned int)); 363 364 return 1; 365 } 366 367 If the current buffer is full, i.e. all sub-buffers remain unconsumed, 368 the callback returns 0 to indicate that the buffer switch should not 369 occur yet, i.e. until the consumer has had a chance to read the 370 current set of ready sub-buffers. For the relay_buf_full() function 371 to make sense, the consumer is responsible for notifying the relay 372 interface when sub-buffers have been consumed via 373 relay_subbufs_consumed(). Any subsequent attempts to write into the 374 buffer will again invoke the subbuf_start() callback with the same 375 parameters; only when the consumer has consumed one or more of the 376 ready sub-buffers will relay_buf_full() return 0, in which case the 377 buffer switch can continue. 378 379 The implementation of the subbuf_start() callback for 'overwrite' mode 380 would be very similar:: 381 382 static int subbuf_start(struct rchan_buf *buf, 383 void *subbuf, 384 void *prev_subbuf, 385 size_t prev_padding) 386 { 387 if (prev_subbuf) 388 *((unsigned *)prev_subbuf) = prev_padding; 389 390 subbuf_start_reserve(buf, sizeof(unsigned int)); 391 392 return 1; 393 } 394 395 In this case, the relay_buf_full() check is meaningless and the 396 callback always returns 1, causing the buffer switch to occur 397 unconditionally. It's also meaningless for the client to use the 398 relay_subbufs_consumed() function in this mode, as it's never 399 consulted. 400 401 The default subbuf_start() implementation, used if the client doesn't 402 define any callbacks, or doesn't define the subbuf_start() callback, 403 implements the simplest possible 'no-overwrite' mode, i.e. it does 404 nothing but return 0. 405 406 Header information can be reserved at the beginning of each sub-buffer 407 by calling the subbuf_start_reserve() helper function from within the 408 subbuf_start() callback. This reserved area can be used to store 409 whatever information the client wants. In the example above, room is 410 reserved in each sub-buffer to store the padding count for that 411 sub-buffer. This is filled in for the previous sub-buffer in the 412 subbuf_start() implementation; the padding value for the previous 413 sub-buffer is passed into the subbuf_start() callback along with a 414 pointer to the previous sub-buffer, since the padding value isn't 415 known until a sub-buffer is filled. The subbuf_start() callback is 416 also called for the first sub-buffer when the channel is opened, to 417 give the client a chance to reserve space in it. In this case the 418 previous sub-buffer pointer passed into the callback will be NULL, so 419 the client should check the value of the prev_subbuf pointer before 420 writing into the previous sub-buffer. 421 422 Writing to a channel 423 -------------------- 424 425 Kernel clients write data into the current cpu's channel buffer using 426 relay_write() or __relay_write(). relay_write() is the main logging 427 function - it uses local_irqsave() to protect the buffer and should be 428 used if you might be logging from interrupt context. If you know 429 you'll never be logging from interrupt context, you can use 430 __relay_write(), which only disables preemption. These functions 431 don't return a value, so you can't determine whether or not they 432 failed - the assumption is that you wouldn't want to check a return 433 value in the fast logging path anyway, and that they'll always succeed 434 unless the buffer is full and no-overwrite mode is being used, in 435 which case you can detect a failed write in the subbuf_start() 436 callback by calling the relay_buf_full() helper function. 437 438 relay_reserve() is used to reserve a slot in a channel buffer which 439 can be written to later. This would typically be used in applications 440 that need to write directly into a channel buffer without having to 441 stage data in a temporary buffer beforehand. Because the actual write 442 may not happen immediately after the slot is reserved, applications 443 using relay_reserve() can keep a count of the number of bytes actually 444 written, either in space reserved in the sub-buffers themselves or as 445 a separate array. See the 'reserve' example in the relay-apps tarball 446 at http://relayfs.sourceforge.net for an example of how this can be 447 done. Because the write is under control of the client and is 448 separated from the reserve, relay_reserve() doesn't protect the buffer 449 at all - it's up to the client to provide the appropriate 450 synchronization when using relay_reserve(). 451 452 Closing a channel 453 ----------------- 454 455 The client calls relay_close() when it's finished using the channel. 456 The channel and its associated buffers are destroyed when there are no 457 longer any references to any of the channel buffers. relay_flush() 458 forces a sub-buffer switch on all the channel buffers, and can be used 459 to finalize and process the last sub-buffers before the channel is 460 closed. 461 462 Misc 463 ---- 464 465 Some applications may want to keep a channel around and re-use it 466 rather than open and close a new channel for each use. relay_reset() 467 can be used for this purpose - it resets a channel to its initial 468 state without reallocating channel buffer memory or destroying 469 existing mappings. It should however only be called when it's safe to 470 do so, i.e. when the channel isn't currently being written to. 471 472 Finally, there are a couple of utility callbacks that can be used for 473 different purposes. buf_mapped() is called whenever a channel buffer 474 is mmapped from user space and buf_unmapped() is called when it's 475 unmapped. The client can use this notification to trigger actions 476 within the kernel application, such as enabling/disabling logging to 477 the channel. 478 479 480 Resources 481 ========= 482 483 For news, example code, mailing list, etc. see the relay interface homepage: 484 485 http://relayfs.sourceforge.net 486 487 488 Credits 489 ======= 490 491 The ideas and specs for the relay interface came about as a result of 492 discussions on tracing involving the following: 493 494 Michel Dagenais <michel.dagenais@polymtl.ca> 495 Richard Moore <richardj_moore@uk.ibm.com> 496 Bob Wisniewski <bob@watson.ibm.com> 497 Karim Yaghmour <karim@opersys.com> 498 Tom Zanussi <zanussi@us.ibm.com> 499 500 Also thanks to Hubertus Franke for a lot of useful suggestions and bug 501 reports.
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