svn commit: r278479 - in head: etc sys/kern
Adrian Chadd
adrian at freebsd.org
Tue Feb 10 15:06:04 UTC 2015
On 10 February 2015 at 06:16, John Baldwin <jhb at freebsd.org> wrote:
> On Monday, February 09, 2015 11:13:51 PM Rui Paulo wrote:
>> Author: rpaulo
>> Date: Mon Feb 9 23:13:50 2015
>> New Revision: 278479
>> URL: https://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/278479
>>
>> Log:
>> Notify devd(8) when a process crashed.
>>
>> This change implements a notification (via devctl) to userland when
>> the kernel produces coredumps after a process has crashed.
>> devd can then run a specific command to produce a human readable crash
>> report. The command is most usually a helper that runs gdb/lldb
>> commands on the file/coredump pair. It's possible to use this
>> functionality for implementing automatic generation of crash reports.
>>
>> devd(8) will be notified of the full path of the binary that crashed and
>> the full path of the coredump file.
>
> I think this is a very useful feature and I think this is fine to be in the
> tree as-is for now. My only note is that this is a bit of feature creep for
> devd (this isn't a device notification, this is a system event notification).
> As such, I think it might be worth thinking if we (collectively) want to think
> about having a separate framework at all for system event notification. You
> could possibly publish other interesting events this way. For example, Isilon
> currently has a patch to log(9) Witness LORs. I personally think it's a bit
> hackish and potentially unreliable. A much nicer interface if you want to
> capture such things would be to publish an event for each logged LOR instead.
> Machine checks are another example of something that might be nice to publish
> (though you could possibly make the case that those would not be inappropriate
> to publish via devd since actual hardware is involved). Disk and PCI errors
> are another class of thing that it would be nice to publish in an easier to
> programmaticaly parse manner.
Cool, so someone's going to add multi-subscriber support to /dev/devctl ?
I think devd grows these things because it's easier than teaching the
devctl interface to support multiple listeners.
-adrian
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